
But what about Mr. Utterson? In my edition of the novella, which is 103 pages long, Dr. Utterson is the protagonist, and our source for the narrative, for 70 of those pages (after which point the story makes one of those awkward shifts familiar to readers of Victorian literature, and we get the rest of the story through letters being read by Utterson). What happened to Utterson over the years? Why, in film adaptations, for instance, did he either fall away entirely or become absorbed into another character?
One thing I didn't know about the story (and I don't know if this carries over into any of the films, because I sort of haven't seen any of them) is that it is structured as a mystery, with Mr. Utterson -- friend to Dr. Jekyll -- playing the role of detective.
It's a measure of Stevenson's skill that, even though I knew the solution to his mystery, I still found the book to be pretty thrilling. Utterson is an engaging character, even though he is almost completely free of any of the flamboyant affectations -- he only eats sandwiches, or he must take a nap at precisely noon, or he collects mice -- that would be bestowed on him if the story were written today. In fact, as described, Utterson sounds like a pretty dull guy, but Stevenson makes him live on the page, and that's good enough. And a good mystery is going to be a good story, regardless of your knowledge of the outcome, and that's what we have here.
The last thirty pages, or so, of the novella follows the storyline I expected to be the main thread of the entire novel; this is where we learn about Dr. Jekyll, and what drove him to create a chemical solution which, when consumed, would transform him, body and soul, into a flesh-and-blood manifestation of his darkest desires and impulses. Jekyll's motivation seems to have been a desire to rid himself of guilt, and his rationalization for the whole thing is pretty asinine. Fundamentally, he's a good person, but his desire for (what I gathered to be relatively unshocking) temporal pleasures met

Frankenstein suffers from similar problems of logic and reasoning, and I don't care. Both are still fascinating, occasionally brilliant (moreso Frankenstein, but Stevenson has his moments as well) and highly entertaining (moreso Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde). It's famous for a reason, you know.
* * * *
Sorry for the brevity on this one, but I'm not sure there's much that I can say about this book that hasn't been said a million times before.
3 comments:
Bill, what's up with thinking your posts are too brief? A brief post is a one paragraph quickie, not a six paragraph breakdown of a work.
I've seen the Frederic March and Spencer Tracy versions of this, and if you get the DVD they're both on it so it's hard not to see them both. I prefer March's more feral performance to Tracy's more sinister one, but I do enjoy the horsewhipping fantasy scenes in the Tracy one (that's in Frames of Reference where you see Ingrid Bergman and Lana Turner bridled like horses carting Tracy who is whipping them to go faster. Of course, I would have preferred Bergman or Turner whipping him but you can't have everything.
I just didn't feel like I said much with this post, that's all. I don't know...I just feel like apologizing for things nobody cares about.
I do have that DVD, and I plan on watching both soon.
The March one is interesting. He comes off as incredibly wooden when playing Dr. Jekyl. The thing is I've seen other early work of March and he isn't wooden. Formal yes but not wooden or stagy. His Mr. Hyde is feral and played naturalistically so I think he was choosing to overdue the wooden staginess of Jekyl to show a pronounced difference between the two characters.
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