The Speech

The Speech

2020 • Comedy
Meet Adrien! He's 35. He's stuck in a mid-life crisis. He's neurotic and hypochondriac. Tonight he's stuck in an endless family dinner and his girlfriend is not answering his texts. On top of that, his dumb brother-in-law asks him to prepare a speech for his wedding. Could it get even worse?
Runtime: 1h 27m

Why you should read the novel

If you enjoyed the warmth and awkward humor of 'The Speech,' you owe it to yourself to delve into Fabrice Caro's novel, 'Speech to the Nation.' The book offers an intimate, unfiltered look into the protagonist’s psyche, allowing readers to explore his anxieties and quirky perspective with a depth that the movie can only hint at. Caro’s writing style infuses the story with a tender sense of irony, making every page a uniquely engaging experience. Unlike the film’s condensed depiction, the novel masterfully uses internal monologue and blends absurdist humor with honest self-reflection. It invites you to witness every twist and turn of the main character’s overthinking and hopefulness. The book reveals his fears and comic ruminations in vivid detail, letting you fully immerse in his world. Reading the novel instead of watching the film guarantees a richer understanding of Fabrice Caro’s wit and themes. The book’s structure and pacing captivate with their originality, offering an emotional connection and literary delight that transcends the screen.

Adaptation differences

One major difference between the adaptation and the book is the shift in narrative style. While the novel is driven by the protagonist’s engaging, stream-of-consciousness inner monologue, the film translates much of this introspection into visual gags, dialogue, and voice-over. As a result, the book provides a more intimate viewpoint into the main character’s head, while the movie relies on conventional dramatic devices to express his anxieties and humor. Another difference lies in the pacing and structure. Fabrice Caro’s novel stretches out time, with lengthy, detailed digressions that explore the protagonist’s neuroses in depth. The film, on the other hand, condenses these mental voyages to fit movie runtime constraints, sometimes sacrificing nuance for clarity and forward momentum. This leads to a brisker, more linear narrative onscreen than the book’s layered, contemplative narrative. Characterization also diverges between formats. The novel delves into the supporting cast’s quirks and histories through the lens of the protagonist’s observations, giving them a richer, more subjective presence. The film necessarily streamlines or sidelines certain supporting characters and subplots, focusing primarily on the main family conflict and the protagonist’s romantic dilemma, which reduces some of the book’s idiosyncratic charm. Finally, the emotional payoff in the adaptation is more pronounced and straightforward, as films often need to resolve tension visually and succinctly. The book, however, lingers on life’s uncertainty and the discomfort of inaction, making its resolution more open-ended and thought-provoking. The transition from page to screen inevitably smooths out the novel’s subtle, comic melancholy in favor of crowd-pleasing closure.

The Speech inspired from

Speech to the Nation (original French: Le Discours)
by Fabrice Caro