Isabella Rossellini's version in Wild at Heart is apathetic and sardonic, unreacting and uncaring. I'm not sure if it's possible to rationalize these two characters as the same person. Rosie Perez as Perdita Durango in Dance with the Devil Isabella Rossellini as Perdita in Wild at Heart So the main character who carries over between Wild at Heart and Dance with the Devil is Perdita herself: Sailor and Lula, the stars of every other novel in the series, do not actually appear in Perdita Durango. The books aren't exactly sequels per se Perdita Durango is a side character in Wild at Heart, who gets her own adventure in the second book. Though recently I've been watching most any film adaptations of books I read, my motivation for watching these films back to back was mostly to see to what extent they could be perceived to go together. (I liked the X-Men version better.)Įarlier this year I read the first seven Sailor & Lula novels by Barry Gifford, and I grew curious about the film adaptations, because the first two books, Wild at Heart: The Story of Sailor and Lula and Perdita Durango, have both been adapted into films, but by completely different directors with completely different casts: David Lynch's Wild at Heart (1990) and Álex de la Iglesia's Dance with the Devil (1997). ![]() The Marvel character of Quicksilver, a mutant whose real name is Pietro Maximoff, appeared in both 2014's X-Men: Days of Future Past and 2015's Avengers: Age of Ultron played by completely different actors in completely different circumstances.
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