Advice for Writing, Editing, Reading, and Life.

New posts on Mondays (for non-fiction) or Fridays (for fiction)

A Case Study on Character: The Jungle Book (1967 vs. 2016)
Non-fiction, Character, Critique, Storytelling, Writing Sam "One-Wheel" O'Neil Non-fiction, Character, Critique, Storytelling, Writing Sam "One-Wheel" O'Neil

A Case Study on Character: The Jungle Book (1967 vs. 2016)

With the recent release of Disney’s “live-action” Pinocchio remake, it would be too easy to simply point out all the issues with stripping a character of agency and regurgitating a colorful mess onto a streaming platform.

Instead, I want to look at what happens when you take a listless character and breathe life into them. That’s right, we’re finally tackling The Jungle Book, the only remake that I would argue wasn’t just good, but better than the animated classic it drew inspiration from.

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A Case Study on Theme: Beauty and the Beast (1991 vs. 2017)
Non-fiction, Theme, Critique, Writing, Storytelling Sam "One-Wheel" O'Neil Non-fiction, Theme, Critique, Writing, Storytelling Sam "One-Wheel" O'Neil

A Case Study on Theme: Beauty and the Beast (1991 vs. 2017)

Obviously, any great work of fiction can have more than one theme, but there is usually one central theme that any other themes hang on; a trunk from which other themes can branch. The themes of 1991’s Beauty and the Beast deal with prejudice, freedom, love, and forgiveness. And the 2017 remake fumbles basically all of those. But none more egregiously than the “trunk” that made ‘91 so great.

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