From Page to Screen: Runaway/Julieta

About the Book: Runaway by Alice Munro

Runaway is a collection of stories about love and betrayal. It includes three stories about a woman named Juliet – ‘Chance’, ‘Soon’ and ‘Silence’. ‘Chance’ introduces us to Juliet, a rather introverted young woman, who is travelling to visit a married man, Eric Porteous, she met in a chance encounter on a train six months earlier.   ‘Soon’ is set several years later when Juliet has given birth to a daughter, Penelope, by Eric. On this occasion she is travelling to her parents’ home. Whilst there Juliet becomes unsettled by her father’s admiration for Irene, employed to help in the house since Juliet’s mother, Sara, is an invalid. ‘Silence’ moves us on almost twenty years. Juliet is again travelling, this time to see her daughter, Penelope, who has been staying on an island retreat for six months. However, when she gets there, Juliet is told her daughter has left and the retreat leader is either unable or unwilling to reveal her whereabouts.   Juliet reflects on what might have caused this breach.

Read my review of the book here.

About the Film: Julieta (2016)

Julieta is written and directed by Pedro Almodovar inspired by three short stories from the collection Runaway by Alice Munro.   The film is in Spanish with subtitles. It stars Emma Suarez as the adult Julieta, Adriana Ugarte as the young Julieta and Daniel Grao as Xoan.

More information about the film can be found here.

Book v Film

In Julieta, Almodovar transposes the location of the story from Canada to Madrid, Spain, changes the names of the characters and alters the sequence of events. In a Guardian interview, Almodovar admitted, ‘It’s not a faithful adaptation, but once I moved it to Spain, I had to make it really mine’. He also explains his decision to have two different actresses play the young and older Julieta.

Almodovar effectively reverses the order of the stories by starting with the older Julieta’s chance encounter with an old friend of her estranged daughter who gives her the news that her daughter, Antia (Penelope in Runaway), is living in Switzerland with her three children. Almodovar introduces a boyfriend, Lorenzo, for the older Julieta who she is about to move to Portugal to live with. However, having learned about her daughter, Julieta decides to stay in Madrid and return to the apartment where they once lived in case Antia should try to get in touch.

Using the device of Julieta writing a journal, a lengthy flashback sequence takes the viewer back to Julieta’s first meeting with Antia’s father, Xoan (Eric in Runaway), on a train – the starting point of Munro’s first story, ‘Chance’. The encounter follows largely the sequence of events in ‘Chance’ but Julieta’s character is not the introverted, unsure character created by Munro.   In fact, Xoan and Julieta’s relationship is immediately more intense than in the book.

As in Munro’s story, Julieta travels to Xoan’s home prompted by a letter from him that she takes as an invitation. In Xoan’s absence, she is greeted by his housekeeper, played with great humour by Almodovar stalwart, Rossy de Palma. Xoan returns and he and Julieta begin a relationship. The film skips forward to the start of Munro’s second story, ‘Soon’.   Events largely follow the original story although the nature of Julieta’s mother’s illness is different and Almodovar chooses to spell out the relationship between Julieta’s father and the assistant, which is left ambiguous in the book.

For those who have not read the stories or seen the film, I will not reveal what happens next except that we eventually find Julieta and Antia living in an apartment in Madrid. It is at this point that Almodovar manages the transition between the actresses playing the younger and older Julieta. In a cinematic flourish, a towel is removed from Julieta’s head to reveal the older actress (as featured on the film’s poster).

Moving on to the final story, ‘Silence’, again the film is largely faithful to the narrative. There are some moving and evocative scenes showing Julieta’s reaction to the estrangement from her daughter although the mental affect on Julieta is more extreme than in the book.  Unlike the book, the film ends on a note that suggests a more positive future.

The Verdict

Julieta is a stylish movie with engaging performances, clearly inspired by but not wedded to the events in Munro’s three short stories. I feel Almodovar’s Julieta is a more dynamic, less introverted character than Munro’s Juliet and the film, although very emotional and dramatic at points, has a slightly more positive outlook. The film makes good use of its locations and Madrid in particular looks wonderful. I found the book a little bleak so on this occasion I think the film wins out over the book.


What do you think? Have you read the book or seen the film?

Book Review: Runaway by Alice Munro

runaway Well-crafted short stories about love, guilt and betrayal

About the Book

Synopsis (courtesy of Goodreads): Alice Munro’s bestselling and rapturously acclaimed Runaway is a book of extraordinary stories about love and its infinite betrayals and surprises, from the title story about a young woman who, though she thinks she wants to, is incapable of leaving her husband, to three stories about a woman named Juliet and the emotions that complicate the lustre of her intimate relationships. In Munro’s hands, the people she writes about – women of all ages and circumstances and their friends, lovers, parents, and children – become as vivid as our own neighbours. It is her miraculous gift to make these stories as real and unforgettable as our own.


Book Facts

  • Format: Hardback
  • Pages: 335
  • Publication date: 2005
  • Genre: Literary, Short Stories

My Review (3.5 out of 5)

Runaway is a collection of short stories published in 2005. My review focuses on three linked stories from the collection – ‘Chance’, ‘Soon’ and ‘Silence’ – which were the inspiration for the 2016 film Julieta, which I will be reviewing separately as part of my From Page to Screen Reading challenge. Spoiler alert: Since the stories follow on from one another, it is impossible to summarise them without giving away key events from earlier stories.

Chance’ introduces us to Juliet, a rather introverted young woman, who is travelling to visit a married man, Eric Porteous, she met in a chance encounter on a train six months earlier. Eric is a fisherman who is caring for his wife paralysed as a result of a car accident. Juliet recalls the circumstances of their meeting following a tragic event which occurred on the train. At the time, her response to Eric’s advances had been confused but now, on the basis of a letter he sent her, she believes there is a chance of something more. Arriving at his house, she finds his wife has died and Eric is staying with a female friend, Christa. Against the wishes of his housekeeper, Ailo, Juliet decides to stay until he returns.

Soon’ is set several years later when Juliet has given birth to a daughter, Penelope. On this occasion she is travelling to her parents’ home. Sara, her mother, is in poor health due to heart trouble. Juliet’s father, Sam, an ex-teacher, is now running a market garden business. Juliet is perturbed to find a third person in the household – Irene – employed to help around the house and garden.   Juliet feels discomfited by Irene, who she feels treats her as if she is an ‘intruder’.   Juliet becomes unsettled by her father’s admiration for Irene and Irene’s influence within the household, wondering about the true nature of their relationship. Sara’s physical frailty makes her dependent on Sam and Irene, unwilling or unable to influence whatever is going on: ‘Irene is – he’s careful of her. She’s very valuable to us, Irene.’   Sara’s mental frailty is clear as well: “When it gets really bad for me – when it gets so bad I – you know what I think then? I think, all right. I think – Soon. Soon I’ll see Juliet.’ Heartbreakingly, Juliet turns away without reply and it is only later that she regrets her failure to respond.

Silence’ moves us on almost twenty years. Juliet is again travelling, this time to see her daughter, Penelope, who has been staying on an island retreat for six months. However, when she gets there, Juliet is told her daughter has left and the retreat leader is either unable or unwilling to reveal her whereabouts.   Juliet reflects on what might have caused this breach. She recalls the circumstances of Penelope’s father’s death, which took place while Penelope was at a summer camp. Juliet never revealed the full facts to her daughter – their argument and its causes and his subsequent death in a storm.   Aside from a few birthday cards sent (she presumes by Penelope) on her daughter’s birthday, Juliet hears nothing further from her. However, one day many years later, Juliet runs into one of Penelope’s childhood friends and learns from her that Penelope is living in northern Canada with her five children.

‘She keeps on hoping for a word from Penelope, but not in a strenuous way. She hopes as people who know better hope for underserved blessings, spontaneous remissions, things of that sort.’

Alice Munro is undoubtedly a talented writer and I admired the way these stories were crafted without actually loving them. They have a rather bleak, depressing quality. I also found Juliet a difficult character to empathise or engage with. So much of what happened seemed to stem from her failure to understand and respond to the needs of those around her, such as her daughter, and her guilt at this inaction never provoked her to remedy her omissions.

To buy a copy of Runaway from Amazon, click here

In three words: Insightful, poignant, introspective

Try something similar…In A German Pension: 13 Stories by Katherine Mansfield


munroAbout the Author

Alice Munro is a Canadian short-story writer who is widely considered one of the world’s premier fiction writers. Munro is a three-time winner of Canada’s Governor General’s Award for fiction. Her stories focus on human relationships looked at through the lens of daily life. She has thus been referred to as “the Canadian Chekhov”. She is the winner of the 2013 Nobel Prize in Literature.