"Skin" is a word that I would like to describe the difference with, before I talk about my single difference that I thought was most prominent (mostly because I'm sure someone else will write the same thing, and this first part might be somewhat original). When I say that the stories are the same, but the skin is different, I mean that the superficial details have been changed, but the overall meaning and story are nearly identical. Like two guitars that are identical, sound the same, and are made of the same components, but one has a clear-coat finish that allows you to see the flame of the maple wood that it is made of, while the other has a thicker, white lacquer that fades into grey, and then black around the edges. Or, perhaps a West Point lanyard and a UCSC lanyard; they both accomplish the same job, but look entirely different, and could even possibly carry a different meaning to them (I say this because I'm not sure if Apocalypse Now could be used as anti-Vietnam War type propaganda). For what it's worth, these are nearly identical stories told in two different mediums, and the war aspect of Apocalypse Now lends itself to more of a movie medium.
The difference I selected was the effect on the native population. In Heart of Darkness, Conrad portrays the natives as objects and they die from overwork and guns and other things by a conquering people. In the movie, the natives seem to be viewed as more of a people, than objects. Although they still are slaughtered by guns and trigger-happy folks high on LSD, because the setting is much more modern. Comparing the Belgian Congo over a hundred years ago to a war zone in Vietnam that is still in recent memory for some living people will present major differences, simply because the technology available to the men at the time is so much greater. No native killed in Apocalypse Now died because of overwork, no, they all died because of a gun, or a sword, or a bomb, or an explosion. I believe it is the seriousness of the novel that forces the movie to portray the vicious deaths in this manner.
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