Gerald
06-03-18, 07:32 AM
https://s33.postimg.cc/4viugo9q7/13_Bahrani-jumbo.jpg (https://postimages.org/)
Michael Shannon (left) and Michael B. Jordan in “Fahrenheit 451.”
No books were harmed in the making of this motion picture. There will be no such disclaimer at the end of my new film, because we burned a lot of books. We designed powerful, kerosene-spitting flamethrowers and torched books — en masse. This was not easy for me to do. I was taught at a very young age to read and respect books. Even setting a teacup on a book was considered a sin. In my parents’ household, Hafez’s book of Persian poetry, “The Divan,” was revered like a religious text.
But now I was making a film adaptation of Ray Bradbury’s seminal novel, “Fahrenheit 451,” which presents a future America where books are outlawed and firemen burn them. The protagonist, a fireman named Guy Montag, begins to doubt his actions and turns against his mentor, Captain Beatty. When I set out to adapt the novel early in 2016, I was faced with a big question: Do people still care about physical books?
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/10/books/review/fahrenheit-451-ray-bradbury.html?fb=0&recb=home-living.als1&recid=15VTt1zwdOO1l25Xz7OUIuUUfYC
The book is a classic, a vision, a future state that you want to achieve.
Michael Shannon (left) and Michael B. Jordan in “Fahrenheit 451.”
No books were harmed in the making of this motion picture. There will be no such disclaimer at the end of my new film, because we burned a lot of books. We designed powerful, kerosene-spitting flamethrowers and torched books — en masse. This was not easy for me to do. I was taught at a very young age to read and respect books. Even setting a teacup on a book was considered a sin. In my parents’ household, Hafez’s book of Persian poetry, “The Divan,” was revered like a religious text.
But now I was making a film adaptation of Ray Bradbury’s seminal novel, “Fahrenheit 451,” which presents a future America where books are outlawed and firemen burn them. The protagonist, a fireman named Guy Montag, begins to doubt his actions and turns against his mentor, Captain Beatty. When I set out to adapt the novel early in 2016, I was faced with a big question: Do people still care about physical books?
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/10/books/review/fahrenheit-451-ray-bradbury.html?fb=0&recb=home-living.als1&recid=15VTt1zwdOO1l25Xz7OUIuUUfYC
The book is a classic, a vision, a future state that you want to achieve.