
Oskar Werner as Guy Montag in François Truffaut’s “Fahrenheit 451”
François Truffaut, the champion of children and misfits, was the perfect writer/director to lead the way in bringing Ray Bradbury’s classic, “Fahrenheit 451,” to the screen. If Bradbury had tapped into the anxiety and conformity attached to the dawn of the television age with the publication of his novel in 1951, then by 1966, Truffaut was making the case with all the more evidence. To make the point in a fresh way, for the time, we begin with various close-ups of TV aerial antennas superimposed upon brash colors.
Continue reading →
Like this:
Like Loading...
Filed under François Truffaut, Movie Reviews, movies, Ray Bradbury, Sci-Fi, science fiction
Tagged as Book Banning, Books, dystopian fiction, dystopias, Education, Entertainment, Fahrenheit 451, François Truffaut, Guy Montag, Julie Christie, Movie Reviews, Movies, Pop Culture, Ray Bradbury, Sci-Fi, Science Fiction, Social Commentary, The '60s
Retro Movie Review: François Truffaut’s FAHRENHEIT 451
Oskar Werner as Guy Montag in François Truffaut’s “Fahrenheit 451”
François Truffaut, the champion of children and misfits, was the perfect writer/director to lead the way in bringing Ray Bradbury’s classic, “Fahrenheit 451,” to the screen. If Bradbury had tapped into the anxiety and conformity attached to the dawn of the television age with the publication of his novel in 1951, then by 1966, Truffaut was making the case with all the more evidence. To make the point in a fresh way, for the time, we begin with various close-ups of TV aerial antennas superimposed upon brash colors.
Continue reading →
Share this:
Like this:
1 Comment
Filed under François Truffaut, Movie Reviews, movies, Ray Bradbury, Sci-Fi, science fiction
Tagged as Book Banning, Books, dystopian fiction, dystopias, Education, Entertainment, Fahrenheit 451, François Truffaut, Guy Montag, Julie Christie, Movie Reviews, Movies, Pop Culture, Ray Bradbury, Sci-Fi, Science Fiction, Social Commentary, The '60s