Brief description of perception

Juvenal 2022-03-25 09:01:15

Scenes, costumes, found that the 2013 version is basically a remake of the polished version. The performance of Daisy's character perfectly shows the characteristics of luxury, laziness, and utilitarianism, which must be a reference to Carey Mulligan. In 1974, the gorgeous green light without special effects, not the splendid, extravagant party scene in 2013, but just made the story the protagonist.

The mistress was figurative and complete in 1974, rather than the stereotypical "lover" image in the 13th edition.

Human molars act as buttons, detailing the upper-class grandiosity brought about by the times. In the 13th edition, Daisy's crying after seeing the clothes was more dramatic, and the emotional line between Daisy and Gatsby in 74 was more detailed. Daisy looked at the clippings, and the two never touched hands.

There is no direct description of the scene where Daisy kills his mistress. At the end of the 74th edition, there is a description of his father after Gatsby's death, directly showing the avoidance of Daisy and Tom, without citing the classic sentence, and inserting cheerful music after the end of the first-person narration And travel shots, a strong sense of irony. The end of the 13th edition is blurred, and there is also a role in bringing it into thinking.

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Extended Reading

The Great Gatsby quotes

  • Nick Carraway: There was music from my neighbor's house through those summer nights. In his enchanted gardens, men and girls came and went like moths, among the whispering and the champagne and the stars. I believe that few people were actually invited to these parties. They just went. They got into automobiles that bore them out to Long Island, and somehow they ended up at Gatsby's door. Come for the party with a simplicity of heart that was it's own ticket of admission.

  • Tom Buchanan: That dog's a bitch!