Showing posts with label Gilbert Blythe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gilbert Blythe. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 12, 2024

One Piece Live Action vs the Avatar the Last Airbender Live Action




For a while now, I have been thinking about whether it is better for an adaptation to focus on the fans or on a larger audience. Which is better for the overall story. I can think of adaptation which focused on what the fans wanted and were good properties


and adaptations which focused on the fans and were bad properties.


The same goes for the focus on the larger audience.


For me, I think the world has to feel like the same sort of world. Walden's LWW was not perfect by any means and I nitpick it a lot more readily than I did back in the day when I first watched it. I have grown to acknowledge the glaring problems although, when I watch it I can still enjoy it for the most part, and nostalgia can always take me back. Prince Caspian, I enjoy more now than I did back then, but, I still enjoy LWW more. Most of the time I cannot even watch VODT. 


These adaptations tried to give Audiences what they thought we wanted (spoiler alert they were wrong a lot of the time), but, it was not just for Narnia fans in general but, rather for generic fantasy lovers. 


Honestly, the Percy Jackson movie focused on the larger audience and cared little for the fans and although the fans bashed these movies for years, we may be seeing people warming up to these movies and them soon becoming classics (or at least the first one),  because the Percy Jackson tv show cared only about the book and made the adaptation long and drawn out somewhat boring and hard for new of casual fans to enjoy without general confusion. 


The one that confused me and started writing this post in the first place was One Piece Live Action and Avatar the Last Airbender. 

Eventhough, it seems to me that they did the same sort of things to these adaptations, it confuses me that they got completely different reactions from fans. 

I was not a fan of the Last Airbender and I loved the tv series, but, I have seen so many online who did not like it as fans. As for One Piece, I loved it and a big chunk of the first seasons of One Piece anime. And I have found no one online who did not love the series fans or not. 


But, this is what confuses me: These shows did pretty much the same things, they changed storylines, plot details, had some different character arcs and different script lines. To me, they are exactly the same in how they handled the material. So, why was general consensus different (although, my opinion was not different, I loved both.)? 


I still do not know but, I just wanted people to think about this and come up with some suggestions and ideas. Is it better to focus on the fans or stick with the larger audience, or focus on making a good story out of the adaptation or stick to the same beats as the story? 


What I would say from my research is there has to be some sort of spirit that the audience feels is close to the property the adaptation is from. In other words, it has to remind the audience of that property in a good way. 


As for Easter eggs in stories I find them completely useless unless they actually help the story in some way. (Why did they include the albatross in VODT if the albatross served no purpose to the movie story? This just seemed like an insult to fans because they took out all meaning out of that scene.) 


Some will argue that the characters for Avatar The Last airbender were not the same as the characters of the animated series, but, that cannot be the reason that it is disliked compared to other adaptations because I can point out several adaptations where the characters were different or had different character arcs and the fans and others still loved those adaptations. Walden's LWW is the first one that pops into my head, Peter was not a reluctant hero in the book like he is in that movie. In the One Piece Live action, Sanji  had quite a few different characteristics and characterizations from the anime. 



Last of all but not least,I am once again going to reference Anne of Green Gables (Kevin Sullivan 1st movie), Gilbert in this movie is not the same character in the book. He is more mature in the movie, in the book, he is teasing girls on a regular basis and calling them names not to mention pranking them. He and Anne both grow up during this book. In the movie, he starts at a different point then Gilbert. I would say that in the movie, I do not feel like he grows up and changes but, only Anne does. But, everyone praises this movie for being so book accurate.(Which is why I have another beef with the Anne with an e series, Gilbert is a perfect character in the series and can do no wrong, Anne on the other hand messes up all the time.)




Anyway, this was very interesting to note and I hope I can get others thinking about this and coming up with different theories. 


Sunday, September 22, 2019

Roy Gardner by Rebekah Walton



A character often overlooked in the Anne of Green Gables series is Roy Gardner, Anne’s perfect man. In the Kevin Sullivan movies, they disregarded him entirely and add in a Morgan Harris. It was obvious they did not understand why Roy Gardner was included in the Anne series. There are other adaptions of Anne which included Roy but, did not understand who he was suppose to be including the web series adaptations Green Gables Fables and Project Green Gables. Both of these portrayed Roy badly, and allow the audience to see this the relationship between Anne and Roy as a bad thing. This is not the case. It is important that Roy Gardner and his relationship with Anne be portrayed correctly as I believe LMM was trying to make a point by showing Anne in a relationship with Roy. Roy is not just a love rival to Gilbert for Anne.  The BBC tv series of the 1970s, did an okay impression and explanation of Roy, but, I think they lacked in making us fall in love with Roy. Roy should be by all accounts a second male lead.

Anne is proposed to by many men throughout the series, but the most important two men who proposed to her were Roy Gardner and Gilbert Blythe. Roy Gardner is about as important as Mr. Collins is to the story of Pride and Prejudice. Mr. Collins allows Elizabeth to confirm her convictions about marriage that she will only marry a man she loves. Roy Gardner on the other hand, is the character who reveals to Anne that she cannot marry a man who does not have the same humor as her. There is nothing initially wrong with Roy Gardner, the audience or the reader only dislikes Roy because of their affection for Gilbert. This is what's wrong with the two webseries that include Roy:
Roy  vs.                          Gilbert 
         




Both of these actors lacked in looks and character to Gilbert. Roy only lacks in humor to Gilbert, not in looks. As the audience, we should find Roy objectively more handsome than Gilbert. Not to mention, we should find Roy romantic. It is like those second lead guys in kdramas which everyone finds more objectively handsome than the male leads. Now, maybe I shouldn't blame the webseries too much because they did not have a lot of money coming to them and they had already picked Gilbert before they went looking for Roy. 

It is critical to cover why Roy Gardner is important to the story of Anne Shirley Blythe, and what he adds to the story.
For the Kevin Sullivan films,
The issue about giving Anne a second love interest that is not Roy Gardner, means that you are changing Anne’s character.

Anne would have never gone for Gilbert if she had not first dated Roy Gardner. Anne gets upset with Dianna over marrying Fred at first, because Fred is nothing like the man Dianna imagined marrying when they were children. Roy Gardner is to me a significant part of the story, because this is why I felt so close to Anne growing up and reading these books, this is why I defended Anne against my siblings and why at times, I am exactly like Anne.


 Anne would have never gone for anyone that wasn’t her romantic type before she realized that is not what she wanted. Before Roy, she wanted one type of man in her life, and often in the world today we are told (as girls) that our perfect man does not exist. But, that is not what Anne learned, she didn’t grow up and learn that her dream guy did not exist, instead, she found her dream guy and realized that she did not truly want to marry him. That is completely different. In this way, we can see two women who learned the same lesson but, one had to learn it by trial and error and the other learned the easy way. Dianna learned that she did not care for her dream guy when she fell in love with Fred, but Anne had to learn that Roy, her dream guy, was no longer what she dreamed of after he proposed to her.


Morgan Harris who they used as a fill in character for Roy Gardner in the Kevin Sullivan movies doesn’t really work as a replacement for Roy Gardner at all. Anne would have known that she didn’t want to marry Morgan Harris, unless she had already changed who she wanted in life. Morgan Harris is guy Anne barely knows when he proposes, Roy Gardner and her had been dating for two years when he proposed. Morgan Harris was not Anne’s ideal man and did have a sense of humor and did not write and quote poetry. Anne would have never considered Morgan Harris in the books. Morgan Harris would have been as disregarded by Anne like Billy Andrews was when had his sister proposed for him to Anne.




 Anne was very much attached to her idea of the perfect man. In fact, let’s look at what really happened with Gilbert and Anne during the first proposal.






Anne did not answer. At that moment she wished Phil were a thousand miles away.

"I suppose you've gone and refused Gilbert Blythe. You are an idiot, Anne Shirley!"

"Do you call it idiotic to refuse to marry a man I don't love?" said Anne coldly, goaded to reply.

"You don't know love when you see it. You've tricked something out with your imagination that you think love, and you expect the real thing to look like that. There, that's the first sensible thing I've ever said in my life. I wonder how I managed it?"


The problem with Anne is that she thinks that she wants to marry this perfect guy. So, when she finds the perfect guy and chooses not to marry him it becomes more impactful than finding just another guy who wanted to marry her. Anne turned down many men who proposed Gilbert and Roy were not the only ones.
In the Book of Revelation chapter, Anne realized what her love for Roy Gardner truly was as Gilbert is dying.

Oh, what a fool she had been not to realize what the bond was that had held her to Gilbert -- to think that the flattered fancy she had felt for Roy Gardner had been love. And now she must pay for her folly as for a crime

 
People may wish to think that even if Roy did not exist Anne would have still realized her love for Gilbert when Gilbert was dying. But, I would argue that Gilbert would have not been in such a serious state of sickness if it were not for Roy. Gilbert had given up all hope of marrying Anne, because of Roy. And we can see clearly from how fast he recovered later, that Gilbert’s will to live had a lot to do with if he would survive scarlet fever. When he had no will to live, Gilbert was on his deathbed. So, if Roy did not exist Gilbert would have not given up the will to live earlier and he wouldn’t have been deathly sick. Instead, Gilbert would have recovered earlier and been about and around before Anne heard about him ever being sick. Anne may have realized later the fact she loved Gilbert, but, it may have been much later in life.
 Just listen to Gilbert explain how he survived after the second proposal:
"I have a dream," he said slowly. "I persist in dreaming it, although it has often seemed to me that it could never come true. I dream of a home with a hearth-fire in it, a cat and dog, the footsteps of friends -- and YOU!"

Anne wanted to speak but she could find no words. Happiness was breaking over her like a wave. It almost frightened her.

"I asked you a question over two years ago, Anne. If I ask it again today will you give me a different answer?"

Still Anne could not speak. But she lifted her eyes, shining with all the love-rapture of countless generations, and looked into his for a moment. He wanted no other answer.

They lingered in the old garden until twilight, sweet as dusk in Eden must have been, crept over it. There was so much to talk over and recall -- things said and done and heard and thought and felt and misunderstood.

"I don't see how you could keep on loving me when I was such a little fool," said Anne.

"Well, I tried to stop," said Gilbert frankly, "not because I thought you what you call yourself, but because I felt sure there was no chance for me after Gardner came on the scene.

But I couldn't -- and I can't tell you, either, what it's meant to me these two years to believe you were going to marry him, and be told every week by some busybody that your engagement was on the point of being announced. I believed it until one blessed day when I was sitting up after the fever. I got a letter from Phil Gordon -- Phil Blake, rather -- in which she told me there was really nothing between you and Roy, and advised me to `try again.' Well, the doctor was amazed at my rapid recovery after that."

Gilbert, was sick in bed and read a letter from Phil Blake telling him to try again and he immediately got better from his fever.



"But I'll have to ask you to wait a long time, Anne," said Gilbert sadly. "It will be three years before I'll finish my medical course. And even then there will be no diamond sunbursts and marble halls."

Anne laughed.



"I don't want sunbursts and marble halls. I just want YOU. You see I'm quite as shameless as Phil about it. Sunbursts and marble halls may be all very well, but there is more `scope for imagination' without them. And as for the waiting, that doesn't matter. We'll just be happy, waiting and working for each other -- and dreaming. Oh, dreams will be very sweet now."



Gilbert drew her close to him and kissed her. Then they walked home together in the dusk, crowned king and queen in the bridal realm of love, along winding paths fringed with the sweetest flowers that ever bloomed, and over haunted meadows where winds of hope and memory blew.



Roy Gardner description in the book:

 “Tall and handsome and distinguished-looking – dark, melancholy, inscrutable eyes – melting, musical, sympathetic voice – yes, the very hero of her dreams stood before her in the flesh. He could not have more closely resembled her ideal if he had been made to order."

I have always imaged Roy Gardner as Cary Grant: (if, Cary Grant had no sense of humor)




This was Anne’s ideal perfect man but, he did not have something that she realized  that she really wanted and that Gilbert had, her sense of humor. Roy Gardner is overly serious.
‘‘But then, Gilbert could see a joke. She had once told Roy a funny story -- and he had not seen the point of it. She recalled the chummy laugh she and Gilbert had had together over it, and wondered uneasily if life with a man who had no sense of humor might not be somewhat uninteresting in the long run. But who could expect a melancholy, inscrutable hero to see the humorous side of things? It would be flatly unreasonable.’’                                         

                                         -Anne’s thoughts about Roy vs. Gilbert before Roy’s proposal.

‘‘I was swept off my feet at first by his good looks and knack of paying romantic compliments; and later on I thought I MUST be in love because he was my dark-eyed ideal."

                                                              -Anne’s thoughts about Roy after his proposal
Eventhough, Anne with an E had such great potential and yet failed to follow the book and characters at all from the book series, that show's fans are right about one thing: If the show had a Roy Gardner which so far it does not, Timothee Chalamet would make a great Roy Gardner. He has a good look for Roy Gardner and I could imagine him quoting poetry to Anne by firelight. In fact, I might consider making that fmv if no one else does. Anne and Roy Gardner.




You might ask me, what is the real difference between the looks of Gilbert Blythe and Roy Gardner. According to the books, Gilbert was tall and broad shouldered and had brown curly hair and hazel eyes. He had a splendid chin according to Anne. In other words, Roy Gardner had black hair (which does not have to be curly), and Gilbert Blythe has brown hair that has to be curly. More Roy Gardner suggestions are: BooBoo Stewart, Charles Melton, and James Reid.

(Speaking of Booboo Stewart there is a Filipino actor that really looks similar to him...Gil Cuerva, with long hair just look him up and compare to Booboo Stewart.)







If Anime continued with Anne’s story and made Anne of Anvolea and Anne of Island, Roy Gardner would probably look similar to Laurie from  the Little women anime.

Now, for a moment compare those actors to the ones that played Gilbert. I love Jonathan Crombie and I think he did play a good Gilbert. And the anime version of Gilbert was pretty good as well. The BBC Christopher Blake as Gilbert was an okay actor but, I would also loved to see what Robin Halstead did with the part in the prequel to Anne of Anvolea. But, this description easily fits Rhys Matthew Bond, Colin Firth, and Jonah Hauer-King, and/ or Orlando Bloom.





Also, I do not mind Lucas Jade Zumann, he looks like he could be  younger version of Jonathan Crombie. (Another reason why I am so upset that Anne with an E did not follow the books at all, that show had good potential with great actors.)



But, regardless Roy Gardner is an important character in the books and should be treated as such in adaptions to the story. And I wish more series would focus on the importance of Roy Gardner to the story. In fact, if I made a series about Anne, I would start with Anne of Anvolea and Anne of Island and make hundreds of women and girls fall in love with Roy Gardner. Gilbert Blythe is awesome but, he was clearly made for Anne, while Roy is the ideal guy that we fall in love with in our dreams.

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Anne Shirley Blythe by Rebekah Walton

The Anne of Green Gables series is essentially the Pride and Prejudice of Canada with Gilbert Blythe and Anne Shirley being treated like Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth Bennet in all the girls minds. Girls from England want the Mr. Darcy to marry and Canadians want Gilbert Blythe to marry. American girls look at William Jasper Collins as the perfect guy( just kidding, I guess that is just me) to marry.

There have been many portrayals of this beloved character from the Anne of Green Gables series written by Lucy Maud( without an e) Montgomery. With the new Netflix series coming out on May 12 I thought it was best to do a review on the many different actresses that have portrayed her in the past years. First let’s look at all the descriptions we have of Anne and compare the looks of the actresses to the character Anne.

A child of about eleven, garbed in a very short, very tight, very ugly dress of yellowish-gray wincey. She wore a faded brown sailor hat and beneath the hat, extending down her back, were two braids of very thick, decidedly red hair. Her face was small, white and thin, also much freckled; her mouth was large and so were her eyes, which looked green in some lights and moods and gray in others. So far, the ordinary observer; an extraordinary observer might have seen that the chin was very pointed and pronounced; that the big eyes were full of spirit and vivacity; that the mouth was sweet-lipped and expressive; that the forehead was broad and full; in short, our discerning extraordinary observer might have concluded that no commonplace soul inhabited the body of this stray woman-child of whom shy Matthew Cuthbert was so ludicrously afraid.

This is the first description we receive about her and therefore is the most trustworthy since it is from the author herself about Anne rather than another character about Anne. Rachel Lynde also has an opinion on the looks of Anne, but what Rachel says should be taken with a grain of salt since she is a nosey busybody and her opinions are usually wrong in the books.


“She’s terrible skinny and homely, Marilla. Come here, child, and let me have a look at you. Lawful heart, did any one ever see such freckles? And hair as red as carrots! Come here, child, I say.”


The other factor is that the hottest boy in school, for that is what Gilbert was thought Anne was cute and teased her to try to get close to her. A note on Gilbert, he also was a year older than everyone in school because he was held back one year.

So, although Anne may have a terrible opinion of her looks, she was not in fact, ugly even though she may have not been the one to stand out in a crowd for her looks except maybe for her red hair.

It is also commonly accepted that Anne’s illustration on the front cover of one of the original books was a drawing of Gibson Girl, Evelyn Nesbit. This lady was an actress and a model and was known for her beauty so at least in later years we can expect that Anne herself was very beautiful.

So, now on to all the actresses who portrayed this beloved character?
(1919)
Unfortunately, this silent film was lost and so no one knows how well this actress could have played Anne’s character.



Anne Shirley as Anne Shirley and Tom Brown as Gilbert Blythe (1934)
This black and white film did an okay portrayal of Anne and gilbert even though the story tried to combine too many things into one story. She is also the first portrayal I saw of Anne on film. There is now a colorized version of this film you can buy. There was a sequel to this film made in 1940 and it had Anne Shirley still play Anne Shirley but the Gilbert actor changed to Patric Knowles. (The sequel is essentially lost because there is no official copies left, but there may be some that people have because they taped it from tv, my family has a copy.)


The next film was the first one actually made by the Canadians with William Cole as Gilbert Blythe and Toby Tarnow as Anne Shirley. The film is still in existence as clips of it were used in "Lucy Maud Montgomery: The Many Mauds", an episode of the 1996 CBC Life & Times documentary.

In 1957, a French version of Anne Shirley was made and I cannot seem to find any real pictures of that film. But the actress was Mirielle Lachance and Gilbert was Hervé Brousseau.





In 1958, Kathy Willard played Anne.

In 1952, a six part tv series was released and is now thought to be lost.
Carole Lorimer played Anne and David Spenser played Gilbert.




In 1972, tv series was created by BBC with Kim Braden as Anne and there was also a sequel series called Anne of Avonlea. Anne of Green Gables the tv series was lost but the Anne of Anvolea series can still be bought. I like this series a lot because it was able to touch on other aspects that the movies missed and bring in some of my chacters who were my favorite from the books but were really over looked. So, I really treasure this sequel series and wish I could watch the original and not just the sequel. Christopher Blake played Gilbert Blythe.




In 1979, Japan made an anime based on this book series:







Up to date, it is the most faithful version to the books I can find!


Then in 1985, the Sullivan films began. Megan Follows played Anne Shirley and Jonathan Crombie played Gilbert Blythe, these two are still the best loved by fans and are the standard that most fans look to when describing the perfect Anne and Gilbert. I loved the first film and I loved the actors but the next film was only okay and the third film missed the mark. For me you need a mixture of the Sullivan films, the Kim Braden version and the black and white version to get the whole mix of Anne. Or just go watch the anime of Anne.




Because of large problems with copyright and other issues the last of the three Sullivan films with Jonathan Crombie and Megan Follows was filmed and released in 2000, which is around 15 years after the other two.
A few years later in 2008, Sullivan decided he wanted to make more Anne movies so he made a prequel called: Anne of Green Gables a New Beginning. This prequel starred two Annes, and older and younger Anne. The actresses were Hannah Endicott-Douglas as Young Anne and Barbara Hershey as old Anne. Gilbert Blythe died and Anne was thinking about old times. Since I have never watched this version I cannot say much.


In 2007, Sri Lanka decided to make their own Anne film. Since this film shows Anne growing up there are two Annes in this film as well. The two actresses were: Vinuri Ramanayake as Anne Shirley and Poorni Kamaladiwela as Older Anne Shirley.



There was even a modern version of Anne of Green Gables made and even though it is not strictly a film or tv version, but instead a web series with a twitter page and YouTube channel and a Tumblr page, I just had to include it. This modern version is not half bad and even had a second series because fans enjoyed it. The series is called Green Gables Fables.

(2014)
There is a second modern adaption made by Finland and it is called Project Green Gables. The story is conveyed in the form of vlogs. It is a modern adaptation of Anne, and many of the elements in it have been changed to better suit 21st-century culture. Laura Eklund Nhaga plays Anne.

My guess since I haven’t watched it yet is that it is like the Finnish version of Green Gables Fables.






Anne and Gilbert (note the stage musical of Anne is called this as well.) was also a themed episode of a show called Kissing in the Rain in 2014 on YouTube. Sean Persaud played Gilbert Blythe and Mary Kate Wiles played Anne of Green Gables.



L.M. Montgomery's Anne of Green Gables is a film that came out in 2016 and has a sequel coming this year. Although the film is supposedly about Anne it takes a sort of different perspective than most versions and comes off as a horrible adaptation missing most of the good parts of Anne of Green Gables by trying to make people relate to the adults of the story rather than Anne herself. Ella Ballentine plays Anne Shirley but I would not  place blame on her as an actress but rather on the script and director of this film.

Although, for the most parts up till now the Gilbert Blythe’s have all had dark hair and have been pretty handsome as he should be (for goodness sakes he is basically the Mr. Darcy of Canada), this Gilbert is neither tall, older or handsome as he was in the book. He is short and scrawny and has blond hair and not very good looking at all.

Not to mention, as my sister pointed out while watching the show there was a cute boy they could have used for Gilbert sitting right behind Anne in school but they went for this guy. Drew Haytaoglu plays Gilbert Blythe. Sorry, he was just not Gilbert, not to mention we only saw him like once or twice and we hardly knew Anne was mad at him.


In fact, I have images of the guy who should have played Gilbert Blythe in that film.


The next series which we are expecting of Anne of Green Gables is the Netflix series coming on May 12, 2017 and a musical version of Anne coming on DVD soon. The Netflix series is going to be a dark and gritty interpretation of the books including Anne getting bullied in school and that word I hate…..feminism. Anne in the books would have never gotten bullied by anyone since she hit Gilbert over the head with her chalkboard and she had tons of friends in school. Also, no one thought she couldn’t do something because she was a girl; she was one of the smartest in their class. The only girls who did something to her were just jealous because Gilbert Blythe liked her, but I would never say they bullied her. Anne Shirley is played by Amybeth McNulty and Gilbert Blythe is played by Lucas Jade Zumann.






That link is the trailer. So, in essence I think the Netflix series will be a very bad adaptation of this beloved series. Updated: Canadians already get to watch it and most of them say it is not as bad as the trailer makes it seem, so, plus there. That line,''Girls can do anything boys can do and better'' terrified me. It is such a stupid line and not something I feel like Anne would ever say, plus, they wanted someone to do farm work, Anne couldn't do that and they hired a boy to help out in the book. Strength wise boys would be better at the hard farm work then a girl that is just sense so, that line is incorrect anyway. I will update again when I have watched the show and review it myself, I hope the Canadians are right. 

What do you guys think?