Adaptation: A drama film directed by Spike Jonze and written by Charlie Kaufman. The film is based on Susan Orlean’s non-fiction book The Orchid Thief, with numerous self-referential events.
First of all we must comment the name of the
title: Adaptation in which the director yens to draw a parallelism between the
Darwinist concept (ability to adapt to the environment) and the work of a
scriptwriter who must transfer any book to the big screen, in other words: ‘to
adapt it’.
The plot starts with the desperation of a twin
brother, Charlie, who should write a script from a really boring book based on
an orchid’s thief. Concerned with the
weak storyline and leaving him with a serious case of writer’s block, Charlie
decides to travel to New York looking for advice
from the author, Susan. Once there, he feels unable to face her and call his
brother Donald to pitch in.
While the plot is taking place, we can see as an audience, the other
point of view; Susan Orlean's point of view: Her sadness, melancholy, her work
and implication to write her book. Susan starts meeting with the ‘orchid thief’
and soaks up his style-life. She got impressed with the worship that that man
cares about his flowers; she wants to know how it feels to care about something
passionately, that’s why she got more and more interested on that man.
When Donald pretends to be Charlie on an interview
with Susan Orlean, he immediately suspects of her because she has all the
answers to his questions studied by heart. He and his brother Charlie follow
Orlean to Florida where she meets Laroche, the
orchid thief.
Once there, Charlie realized they don’t want
the Ghost Orchid as a flower to idolize, but to manufacture a drug that causes
fascination; Laroche introduced that to Orlean who was needed of love, and she
fall at his feet. Charlie was spying
them outside the window while they were having sex and taking the drug, in that
moment Orlean saw him and she wants him to die.
At that point of the film we can see how one of
the central characters changes from being a sympathetic, sweet-tempered woman
to a fiercely tightfisted and dangerous woman because of the effects of the
drugs, and how Laroche take advantage of that condition.
Susan force Charlie at gunpoint to drive to a
swamp, where she intend to kill him but the twins manage to run away and hide
among the undergrowth. The next morning they escape with a car but they have a
car accident and Donald dies. Charlie run again into the swamp (that’s quite
repetitive and wearisome) but this time Laroche is attacked by a crocodile
(pretty fanciful).
At this juncture the plot starts to be a bit
contrived and personally, I was annoyed by the choppiness of the film, the
overwhelming storyline and unrealistic details.
At the end Orlean is arrested, Charlie opens
his heart and tells to her true love that he desires her and finally he
finishes his script. (The closing scenes seem to progress too quickly).
In general, the film deals with the topic of
the drugs, very present in our current society, the anger of finding new and
powerful drugs that let us to other world, escape from our daily problems, be
happy… but just for a moment, afterwards we need more and more and it becomes a
vicious circle we can’t get rid off it.
The opening scenes are really searing: wildlife
in fast motion; how plants and animals grow up and then die; how life slips
through our fingers.
Actually, I really don’t recommend this film at
all, because it has some awkward moments with no sense but on the other hand,
it has really poignant phrases such this one that I want let you to think about:



Good work. Just try to work on making your next blog more personal and analytical
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