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Woolf
‘I am coming across the divide to you,’ sings and angel, toward the end of Sally Potter’s film of Orlando. The angel is poised above Orlando and her daughter, resplendent and androgynous, pealing out the ecstasy of being ‘neither a woman nor a man,’ its exuberance inviting the audience to celebrate the eradication of chronology, distance and gendered characteristics. The mins opens out not only to consider Orlando’s previous incarnations within the film, but also the previous incarnation of the film itself, in the form of Virginia Woolf’s novel. But the angel continues to croon: ‘I am born and I am dying.’ For the purposes of this essay I will be exploring the question of whether or not the formalities of literature have to be expunged so that adaptations can translate convincingly to cinema or can we see a much more fruitful relationship between these two texts, and one in which can grant Woolf a degree of prescience with which she is rarely credited. Many critics have observed that in Orlando Woolf absorbs cinematic devices, adapting zooms, change-in-focus, close-ups, flashbacks, dissolves and tracking shots. Although coinciding with contemporary modernist writing, Woolf’s Orlando has been described as almost
Approximate Word count = 1793
Approximate Pages = 7 (250 words per page double spaced)
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