The Great Gatsby -2013- [verified]
While some critics felt the film's frenetic pace and digital spectacle overshadowed the novel’s subtle irony and "exquisite prose", others praised it for making a 90-year-old story feel vital and urgent for a new generation. It ultimately serves as a vibrant, if controversial, meditation on time, change, and the inevitable disillusionment that follows a "heedless chase of material prosperity". A Letter on The Great Gatsby by Maxwell E. Perkins
At the center of this whirlwind is Leonardo DiCaprio, whose performance grounds the film’s stylistic flourishes. He captures Gatsby’s "rare smile" and the tragic vulnerability beneath the "Old Sport" persona. DiCaprio portrays Gatsby not just as a wealthy bootlegger, but as a secular believer whose "religious" devotion to Daisy Buchanan (Carey Mulligan) is both his greatest strength and his undoing. The film emphasizes the tragedy of a man who has reinvented himself so thoroughly that he no longer has a foothold in reality. The Green Light and the American Dream The Great Gatsby -2013-
Unlike the book, where Nick is a quiet observer, the film frames the story through Nick writing his memoir in a sanitarium. This emphasizes the "within and without" feeling Nick describes in the novel. Daisy Buchanan (Carey Mulligan): While some critics felt the film's frenetic pace
Baz Luhrmann’s 2013 adaptation of is a high-octane, visual feast that reimagines F. Scott Fitzgerald’s 1925 masterpiece through the lens of modern excess. Starring Leonardo DiCaprio as the enigmatic Jay Gatsby, the film is known for its polarizing blend of 1920s Art Deco opulence and contemporary hip-hop energy. A Vision of Modern Roaring Twenties Perkins At the center of this whirlwind is
are solid, though Mulligan’s Daisy lacks the ethereal, careless quality that makes her so dangerous in the book. She feels too grounded. Edgerton, however, is perfectly cast as Tom Buchanan, embodying the physical threat and "careless people" arrogance of old money.
Nick facilitates a meeting between Gatsby and Daisy, and they rekindle their romance. However, the tension peaks during a sweltering day at the Plaza Hotel, where Gatsby demands Daisy tell Tom she never loved him. Daisy, unable to erase her past with Tom, retreats, and the group leaves in a state of high emotional volatility. The Tragic Conclusion