Woman in the Dunes.
While the novel had some crucial detail the movie left out (obviously it comes with any adaptation; someone in class asked why the main character made his choice in the end, nice evidence right there), this is through and through a visual film. Out of all the memorable metaphors in the novel, only one made it into the movie, but the lines can't all be in monologue can they? Great interaction between those stark (yet oftentimes moving) images of sand and a nice string score that reminded me of some of Wendy Carlos's stuff in The Shining. Both films are about confinement, so its a fitting similarity.
While the novel had some crucial detail the movie left out (obviously it comes with any adaptation; someone in class asked why the main character made his choice in the end, nice evidence right there), this is through and through a visual film. Out of all the memorable metaphors in the novel, only one made it into the movie, but the lines can't all be in monologue can they? Great interaction between those stark (yet oftentimes moving) images of sand and a nice string score that reminded me of some of Wendy Carlos's stuff in The Shining. Both films are about confinement, so its a fitting similarity.
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