On the novella that’s explicitly about the “fall from innocence,” and the
film adaptation that’s less so.
In 1982, frustrated by his inability to publish works that weren’t part of
the horror genre in which he had risen to fame, Steven King decided to release
four such novellas as one collection, Different
Seasons, with each novella linked to one of the four seasons. The most
famous, thanks to its cult classic film adaptation, is
almost certainly the collection’s first piece, Rita
Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption (seasonal subtitle: Hope Springs Eternal). But nearly as
well-known, thanks in large measure to its own popular film adaptation Stand By Me (1986), is
the collection’s third piece, The Body (seasonal
subtitle: Fall from Innocence). (The
collection’s summer novella, Apt Pupil:
Summer of Corruption, has also been made into a recent film, and is, in
its portrayal of a teenage boy corrupted by a former Nazi war criminal, a
candidate for this week’s series in its own right.)
On the surface, The Body and Stand By Me are almost identical: in
each forty-something novelist Gordie Lachance narrates the story of a teenage
adventure with his three best friends, a trip that the four boys take after
hearing about a dead body out in the woods near their hometown. Moreover, each
ends with (among other things) Gordie informing the audience that his best best
friend, Chris Chambers, worked his way out of a poor and violent upbringing to reach
college and law school, only to die in a random and tragic stabbing, a detail
that certainly symbolizes the loss of childhood innocence as the protagonists
move into the often brutal and cold adult world. Yet the change in title from
the novella to the film illustrates a broader thematic shift: Rob Reiner’s
movie is far more centrally concerned with the camaraderie and joys of teenage
friendship (its last line is “I never had any friends like the ones I had when
I was twelve. Jesus, does anyone?”, which appears in the middle of King’s book
and is thus emphasized far more in the film); while King’s novella depicts the
world’s brutalities much more consistently, including a savage beating that all
four boys receive at the hands of an older brother and his friends.
Which is to say, at the risk of oversimplifying the two works, Reiner’s
film is ultimately pretty nostalgic
about the world of childhood, while King’s novella complicates and to my
mind ultimately rejects that kind of nostalgia. Concurrently, the two could be
read as depicting the loss of innocence in very different ways: Reiner’s film
portraying it as a moment of genuine shift, from one kind of life and world to
another; and King’s as more of a realization about the darkness of the world we
have always inhabited, even as young people. I think there’s a place in our
narratives and images for both stories, and that they complement each other
nicely; but I also think that King’s story is a bit truer to the world of young
adulthood, which while certainly free of various adult responsibilities and
pressures can still be (as the Knowles and Cormier books from Monday’s post
illustrate) as fraught and perilous as the darkest realities of adult life.
Next fall tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you think? Images of fall, or The Fall, you’d share?
Two groups of kids in literature have always represented the fall season for me, most likely because I have fond memories of exploring the neighborhood during the beginning months of school, in the fall, as a child with my friends. Coincidentally, one group of them being the kids you mentioned from The Body, the other being a similar group of boys in a much more paranormal situation in "It". I think the parallels between them regarding a loss of innocence are relatively clear. The situations they encounter are wildly different, but both involve them dealing with as you put, perilous situations, not only of the physical realm, but of the mental realm. How are young people expected to cope with what they're seeing in these stories? It is a total loss of innocence, regardless of the completely unreal events of one story.
ReplyDeleteSo while the loss of innocence is more predominant in a literature sense, the feeling of a close knit group of friends literally reminds me of the fall months. I'm enjoying this group of postings solely based on that, it's a deep look something I always looked at so simply.
Great stuff, Dan, thanks! I'll add that into the weekend post as well,
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