Abstract

Several Hollywood adaptations of comic books have attempted to emulate source comics very closely, with substantial portions of their dialogue and mise-en-scène transposed directly from the panels of the original comics. Directors such as Zack Snyder (300, Watchmen) and Robert Rodriguez with Frank Miller (Sin City) have, to a significant extent, utilised the panels of the source graphic novels as story boards for the film productions. These films raise a number of potential issues regarding intermedial adaptation, one of the most intriguing of which is the fundamental relationship between time, space and movement in cinema as opposed to within the sequential art characteristic of comic books. Using the film theory of Gilles Deleuze and the structural-semiotic analysis of comics by Thierry Groensteen, among other critical sources, this paper argues that one cannot conceptualise the cinematic frame in terms of the comics panel, or vice versa. Instead, one must attend to the divergent acts of framing constitutive of each medium, and the highly different manifestations of rhythm that are thereby produced.

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