Tag Archive: John Huston


MOBY DICK directed by John Huston (USA, 1956)

220px-moby_dick434There’s is some dispute about screenwriter Ray Bradbury’s experience of Herman Melville’s epic novel. According to Wiki he confessed to John Huston that he’d never managed to get through the whole book, echoing the feelings of many readers, including me.

However, a strongly contradictory perspective is given by Philip Hoare. Writing in Leviathan, Hoare claims that Bradbury “read the book nine times and wrote fifteen hundred pages of script to reach a final one hundred and fifty”.

I suspect the truth may lie someway in between these two accounts. Huston is credited as co-writer and my gut feeling is that the director had a more intuitive grasp of the source material than the Sci-Fi author.

Either way, reducing the scope and complexity of the novel to a feature length film is a daunting and nigh on impossible task. Continue reading

THE BEST SHORT STORY EVER WRITTEN

What is the best short story ever written?

For me the answer is James Joyce’s The Dead, the closing story in Dubliners, written in 1907.

You can read the complete story online and it is the closing paragraphs that make it so memorable as Gabriel contemplates love and death and the motif of falling snow is somehow in synchrony with his own melancholy thoughts.

John Huston’s 1987 film version of The Dead starred his daughter Anjelica and was released posthumously.

Huston wisely opted to keep most of the words from this moving sequence as they were written by Joyce.

I remember when I saw the movie in a London cinema, it is one of the few movies where practically everyone stayed to watch all the closing credits. It would have seemed disrespectful to make a quick exit and I think the audience wanted time to properly absorb the beauty and the sadness of the words. Continue reading