PreservingLiteraryEssence:NarratologyandCinematographic ChoicesinF.ScottFitzgerald'sTheCuriousCaseofBenjamin Button
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Faculty of Letters and Foreign Languages Department of English
Abstract
David Fincher's 2008 film adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Curious Case of Benjamin
Button is a visually stunning exploration of time, aging, and the human experience. This
analysis examines how Fincher's innovative use of digital cinematography complements and
enhances the novel's narrative structure. By analyzing the film's camera movements, lighting,
and editing techniques, this studydemonstrates howtheadaptation successfully preserves and
expands upon the core themes and emotional impact of the original source material. This
dissertation employs qualitative questionnaires to examine how the film adaptation shapes
audience perceptions and to compare the alternative narrative strategies used in the film and
novel. Findings indicate that film adaptation preserves central components of the narrative in
the novel, along with many of the details included in it, but plays an important role in
providing understanding to the audience as presented on screen and emotional understanding
through transitional scenes not present in the literary work. This thesis is intended to enhance
our understanding of literary adaptation and the representation of complex narratives into
visual form, but also to emphasize the screen image besides the problem of articulation,
marking its own set of formal qualities worthy of consideration when analyzing adaptation to
screen.
