5 Best Ernest Hemingway Adaptations

MENTAL FLOSS

5 Best Ernest Hemingway Adaptations

While Hemingway wasn’t generally a fan of the adaptations of his works, these five films are must-watches.

ByTim Brinkhof, Nov 12, 2025

‘For Whom the Bell Tolls’ | United Archives/GettyImages

Ernest Hemingway wasn’t a huge fan of cinema. According to his son Patrick, “pictures on the silver screen were nothing but pure illusion (…) and not to be taken seriously.” 

His relationship with the screen, which over the course of his lifetime developed from a technological curiosity into a cultural force, was undoubtedly shaped by his identity as a writer—as an artist who expressed himself not in images but in words, and by the time of his death saw his age-old trade swept aside by a new, different medium.

While the author himself would probably have begged to differ, the following five films are considered some of the best Hemingway adaptations out there. 

A Farewell to Arms (1932) 

https://www.youtube.com/embed/YYdYkHQie6M?feature=oembed

Originally published in 1929 and based on his experience serving as an American ambulance driver during the First World War, A Farewell to Armsfollows a wounded lieutenant who falls in love with the nurse who nurses him back to health, culminating in the couple’s ill-fated attempt to leave the war behind.

This adaptation, directed by Frank Borzage and starring Gary Cooper and Helen Hayes in the two leading roles, was nominated for four Academy Awards and ended winning two: one for Best Cinematography, and another for Best Sound. Made before the existence of codes, the film was—for a time—banned on account of its portrayal of sexuality and violence.

For Whom the Bell Tolls (1943)

https://www.youtube.com/embed/ZKB-Suz_2DQ?feature=oembed

Like A Farewell to Arms, this novel was released only a few years before its big screen adaptation, in 1940. Also steeped in personal experience, it follows an American volunteer fighting against fascist forces during the Spanish Civil War. This soldier, too, falls in love, forcing him to choose between duty and happiness.

Directed by Sam Wood, this adaptation was nominated for Best Picture. Gary Cooper returns to play the leading role, this time starring alongside Ingrid Bergman—seen for the first time in Technicolor. Aside from faithfully adapting the story, it sticks close to its themes of pacifism and the futility of war.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: 5 Best Ernest Hemingway Adaptations

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Remembering the last – and perhaps favorite – of Ernest Hemingway’s sons – Cognoscenti

Patrick Hemingway, left, looks at his father, Ernest Hemingway, in Tanzania in 1940 (Nair, File / AP) Editor’s Note: Featured image at top created by WP AI.
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    Remembering the last — and perhaps favorite — of Ernest Hemingway’s sons

    By Tom Putnam, October 30, 2025, Cognoscenti contributor

    Tom Putnam is the former director of the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and the Concord Museum. More…

    Few people can claim their birth informed the ending to one of the 20th century’s most iconic novels. But that was the case for Patrick Hemingway.

    Patrick was born in 1928, just as his father, Ernest, was writing “A Farewell to Arms,” including the final scene in which the American lieutenant, Frederic Henry, loses his wife, an English WWI nurse named Catherine Barkley, and their baby in childbirth.  As Hemingway wrote in the introduction to the 1948 re-issue of the novel:

    During the time I was writing the first draft my second son Patrick was delivered in Kansas City by Caesarean section and while I was rewriting my father killed himself in Oak Park, Illinois. I was not quite 30 years old when I finished the book … I remember all of these things happening and the places we lived in and the fine times and the bad times we had in that year.  But much more vividly I remember living in the book and making up what happened in it every day. Making the country and the people and the things that happened I was happier than I have ever been.

    –Ernest Hemingway (Introduction to the 1948 re-issue of the novel)

    I will be thinking of Patrick — who died on September 3 at age 97 — this weekend when the 49th Annual PEN/Hemingway Award Celebration takes place on Columbia Point.  (Usually, the ceremony is held at the Kennedy Library, but this year it will be at UMass Boston due to the federal government shutdown).

    For years, Patrick and his wife, Carol, traveled to Boston from their home in Montana for this ceremony so that Patrick could personally present these honors.

    Patrick Hemingway, center, watches as Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, right, talks to reporters at ceremonies marking the opening of the Ernest Hemingway Room at the John F. Kennedy Memorial Library in Boston on July 18, 1980. (Stu Rosner / AP)

    According to the literary historian Sandra Spanier, [Ernest Hemingway] loved all three of his sons, but he really felt a special affinity and closeness with Patrick.”

    In fact, one of Patrick’s last literary adventures was to publish “Dear Papa: The Letters of Patrick and Ernest Hemingway.”

    In one of those letters, Ernest wrote: You were the only brother I had among my sons.”

    In his introduction, Patrick joked that the book was his attempt to answer the question he had often been asked by friends and strangers alike: Did you know your father?

    There are many references to hunting and fishing in the letters and Patrick often recalled their happiest times together were in such sporting pursuits.

    But he insisted that the letters’ true significance resides in the light they cast on the person he grew to know over time – someone quite different from the normal portrayal of Papa Hemingway: The man I knew tried very hard to be a good family man…intimately connected with his wives and his children all his life.”

    Professor Spanier, an expert on Hemingway letters, indicates that Ernest was clearly proud of Patrick’s intellect.

    And looking back at their exchanges, Patrick noted, as my maturity developed, I could use my letters to create something similar to his and in certain fields, such as poetry and hunting, I could openly compete.”

    Many scholars believe Hemingway was paying tribute to Patrick in his novel, “Islands in the Stream”, with this description of the protagonist’s second son: “The middle boy had a lovely, small, animal quality, and he had a good mind and a life of his own. He was affectionate and had a good sense of justice and was good company.”

    Patrick was the firstborn son of Hemingway’s second wife, Pauline Pfeiffer, but it was Hemingway’s fourth wife, Mary Welsh, who (after an outreach from Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis) decided to donate the Hemingway materials to the Kennedy Library.

    Unfortunately, she was unable to travel to Boston for the dedication of the Hemingway Room, just months after the JFK Library opened in 1979.  So Patrick represented his family at the ceremony with Kennedy Onassis.

    Since that time, no one has been more stalwart in supporting Hemingway’s literary legacy and the Library’s efforts to preserve this remarkable collection than Patrick. He always insisted that any Hemingway-related programming focus not only on his father’s oeuvre, but also promote literature writ large.

    That might have been best accomplished at the Hemingway Centennial Conference, held in Boston in 1999, featuring scores of renowned authors including four Nobel Prize laureates: Saul Bellow, Nadine Gordimer, Kenzaburo Oe, and Derek Walcott, who all spoke of their debt to Hemingway.

    Patrick Hemingway with unidentified students and a game department official at the Wildlife Management College on the slopes of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tanzania in 1969. (Nair / AP)

    Another powerful example are the annual PEN/Hemingway Awards which have honored authors such as Marilynne Robinson, Jhumpa Lhari, Edward P. Jones, and Yiyun Li for their debut novels and story collections.

    As the former director of the Kennedy Library, I introduced Patrick at many of these events.  Once, when I used the term “Hemingway’s sole surviving son” he responded with a twinkle in his eye, saying that means I get to have the last word!

    And so, fittingly, let me allow him the penultimate word here.

    In his preface to the library edition of “Green Hills of Africa,”Hemingway’s memoir of his 1933 safari across the Serengeti, Patrick noted that the book is divided into four parts, specifically four pursuits, of which the last is titled “pursuit as happiness.”

    This pursuit was, in many ways, what informed Patrick’s decision at age 23, in the wake of his mother’s death and after graduating from Harvard, to follow his father’s footsteps to East Africa, where he would live, work and start his own family.

    When Patrick was a child, his mother had distributed Hemingway’s African trophy mounts of lion, kudu and other antelope throughout their home in Key West.

    “In the bedroom I shared with my younger brother, Gregory, it was a wildebeest,” he wrote, “making East Africa my promised land.”

    “But then,” he continued, “who of us hasn’t a promised land, caught up with happiness, the constant nymph, and run with her swiftly through the green birch forest of Arden only to trip and fall and watch her disappear into the trees without a backward glance?  So light a candle, love the light, and face the darkness when the candle fails.”

    While not unexpected, Patrick’s final disappearance into death’s green birch forest has left our world a darker place. Yet, for me, it will be forever lit by warm memories of times shared with Hemingway’s middle son and of his good mind and good company.

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    Publishing A Farewell to Arms, in the form Hemingway intended

      We’ll soon make a proper announcement about our first fiction title under our JY&A Media imprint: Ernest Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms. I was drawn to this title, more than any other that had recently entered the public domain. This one has a difference: we’ve restored all of Hemingway’s words, so it appears as

    Jack Yan: the Persuader Blog

    Fuck, shit, cocksucker and balls. Finally we’re releasing Ernest Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms in the form that he intended, with his choice of words. (The original editors took out those four words.)

    https://lucire.biz/product/a-farewell-to-arms-uncensored-and-unabridged/ #PublicDomain #novel #fiction #book #bookstodon #ErnestHemingway #AFarewellToArms

    A Farewell to Arms (uncensored and unabridged) – Libriz

    Since A FAREWELL TO ARMS is an obvious influence I can't shake for what I'm now writing (and since a friend recently found it and gave me huge compliments on my analysis, in which I pointed out that Hem was a lot more sensitive and nowhere nearly as macho in this novel as his critics have suggested), what the hell, I'm reupping my 2019 essay.

    http://www.edrants.com/a-farewell-to-arms-modern-library-74/

    #books #Hemingway #afarewelltoarms

    A Farewell to Arms (Modern Library #74) - Reluctant Habits

    It's quite fashionable to rag on Hemingway these days, but his World War I love story is a stylistic masterpiece: deep romance blossoming beneath razor-sharp sentences.

    Reluctant Habits - a cultural forum in ever-shifting standing

    John Steinbeck may be my favorite novelist but Hemingway obviously did some fantastic work, too.
    #AFarewellToArms

    “The best people possess a feeling for beauty, the courage to take risks, the discipline to tell the truth, the capacity for sacrifice. Ironically, their virtues make them vulnerable; they are often wounded, sometimes destroyed.” - Ernest Hemingway from “A Farewell To Arms.”

    Tom Blyth to Star in Hemingway's 'A Farewell to Arms' Film Adaptation

    'Hunger Games' breakout Tom Blyth has found his next starring role in a new film adaptation of Ernest Hemingway's 'A Farewell to Arms.'

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    Tom Blyth Signs For Michael Winterbottom’s 'A Farewell To Arms'

    Tom Blyth is set to follow in the footsteps of Gary Cooper, Rock Hudson and George Hamilton to star in Michael Winterbottom’s new adaptation of Ernest Hemingway’s classic novel A Farewell to …

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