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The Impromptu Party Scene In The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald

Decent Essays

The scene in which the impromptu party happens in chapter 2 of The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is a scene which is a very fundamental contribution to the entirety of the story. The portrayal of this scene is in the slightest inaccurate, as are scenes in many other novelistic films. However, regardless of the reason for the inaccuracy, the portrayal of this scene visually has a multitude of important differences in terms of character portrayal, setting, and mood, which differentiates the film from the novel.The party seems to begin is described in the novel as a “small living-room, a small dining-room, a small bedroom, and a bath.”, and it was the Morningside apartment in New York City. The sole purpose for this apartment is for Tom and Myrtle to meet up, and a further description of this space includes that there are raunchy paintings, and many oversized pieces of furniture, and this explicit description is symbolical for Tom and Myrtle’s affair at the time, a sexually fueled,chaotic nightmare. In the film, the use of the camera angles affects this scene due to the fact that when the camera initially enters the space, the color red immediately as a dominating presence in the relatively small space, as it is on almost every item in the apartment. Nick is portrayed as quiet and awkward, as shown through his facial expressions and motions, while sitting in a room with the dog, as Tom and Myrtle begin to engage in loud extramarital activities in the next room. The level

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