The three movie adaptations of A Midsummer Night’s Dream, from 1935, 1968, and 1999, are all unique, despite showing the same scene, the introduction to the fairy world. The 1968 version, which was directed by Peter Hall, is not remastered, which makes the quality very poor. The 1935 version seems more like a ballet than a movie, and utilizes Felix Mendelssohn’s Overture and Incidental Music to A Midsummer Night’s Dream. However, the best adaptation is the one from 1999, for not only does it have better costumes, sets, and special effects, but it is also for a more modern audience, something the first two could not capture. That is partially due to this version being filmed more recently than the others, but mostly because the director, Michael Hoffman, changed and added to the original play. Also, the actors in this adaptation seemed to do more than speak the lines; they put in feeling and emotion, something that was lacking in the other versions. Because of this, the video clip in 1999 adaptation of A…
David Fallon’s film, Call of the Wild, is movie surrounding the adventures of a young man and his dog. I watched the film on my computer on July 1st, 2015. The movie begins with a kidnapped dog, named Buck, being auctioned off. Buck immediately steals the attention of young Miles, the other protagonist in the movie. Buck initially works as a sled dog for a Yukon mail carrier. On his first job, Buck faces severe weather, wolf attacks, and a fight with Spitz, the team’s lead dog. The harsh conditions kill every dog except for Buck and leaves the mail carrier in a near-death condition. Buck saves the mail carrier, but is sold again to two travelers, Hal and Mercedes. Miles is hired as a travel guide for the duo. Hal mistreats the dogs, refuses to listen to Miles, and eventually causes his own death. Mercedes and Miles are able to survive the journey with Buck’s aid.…
High Noon, one of the best movie pictures of all time, is very similar, but different to the short story The Most Dangerous Game. The setting in both stories shows isolation, and how there is no escape. But, they take place in two completely different places physically. The tone of the two stories shows darkness, being alone, and having to go into survival mode. But, the patterns are completely different. Although both High Noon and The Most Dangerous Game have similarities about isolation, their patterns are completely different.…
The film Death of a Salesman and the play Fences both contain similar themes and plot. Even though both are very similar, there are glaring different in their stories. The film Death of a salesman is about a man name Willy Loman who is struggling in making a living with his current job as a salesman. He has a loving a wife name Linda and two adult sons, Biff and Happy. Willy share and unstable relationship both his son (primary Happy) as he believe they are not making the most out of themselves. In the play Fences, tell the story of a garbage man name Troy Maxson. Like Willy, Troy as a loving wife (Rose) and two sons (Cory and Lyon). In both story, father figure is shown to have cheated on their wives and argued with one of their sons to the…
Part A. In the story “To Build a Fire” it provides a great amount of writing devices, such as:…
I have recently watched a movie called High Noon and just read a short story called "The Most Dangerous Game." High Noon came out in theaters in 1952 and is about a Marshall who has four criminals who want revenge on him for putting one of them in jail. It has cowboys and gun fights in the Old West. "The Most Dangerous Game" came out in 1924 and is about hunting and the main character surviving all by himself. Both of these stories are very well told and partly have suspense. They might have a lot of similarities but they also have many differences in the two main characters, conflict, and the theme.…
“Identity cannot be found or fabricated, but emerges from within when one has the courage...,” Doug Cooper. A major theme in Jack London’s classic book, The Call of the Wild, is a quest to find one’s identity/journey, which is what Buck is doing throughout the whole story. Buck cannot just find his identity, he has to have the courage and strength to get through his journey to find it.…
The triumph of love over death and destruction is at once an inspiring and timeless theme. This theme is thoroughly examined in both Khaled Hosseini’s A Thousand Splendid Suns and Sarah Gruen’s Water for Elephants. Despite their subtle differences in writing style, both novels have protagonists who undergo similar experiences and have similar settings.…
Fighting against someone is never easy, especially when they have advantages. This happens in the short story "The Most Dangerous Game" when the main character, Sanger Rainsford, gets stranded on Ship-Trap Island. He ends up battling the man who lives there, General Zaroff. This also happens in the movie High Noon. Will Kane, the marshal of Hadleyville, is being hunted down by Frank Miller, a man who Kane sent up for murder, and Miller's posse. Although the setting in High Noon and "The Most Dangerous Game" are similar, the main charters and conflict are different.…
The theme is the moral or life-lesson we learn from a short story. Rudyard Kipling, the author of “Rikki-Tikki-Tavi,” made it obvious that the theme of this story is “greed can lead to negative consequences.” I can support this with loads of evidence. For example, the cobras were greedy, evil, and cruel, and they were punished. On the other hand, Rikki was selfless, content, and courageous, and he was rewarded. Notably, some people think “knowledge can help us prepare for the future” is the theme, but this is not true. I know I have hit the nail on the head with this story’s theme.…
The difference between life and death can be listening to the opinions of friends and family. This is portrayed in Into the Wild, written by Jon Krakauer and Grizzly Man, directed by Werner Herzog. In Walden, written by Henry David Thoreau, he did not die but his time spent at Walden was time wasted. Depending on the situation, it can be vital to take others’ opinions of our actions into consideration when making our own decisions. However, in other situations, the opposite can occur where it is vital to make your own decisions for yourself.…
Likewise, to survive in any environment or society, you must adapt to the rules and regulations, whether they are written or unwritten. In the aforementioned book, Call of the Wild, there was a certain situation that Buck was put in. He and some other dogs…
Since creation, all creatures have had to use their survival intuition to adapt to their surroundings in order to survive. "The Call of the Wild" shows the conflict of nature versus nurture. In order to endure the harsh conditions in "The Call of the Wild", Buck must use his natural instinct to with stand the tasks set before him.…
In the novel, The Call of the Wild, the author, Jack London, uses power in order to convey his theme of ancestral memory and primitive instinct to the reader. Throughout the novel, the protagonist, a large Saint Bernard named Buck, tries to find his place at the top of his community. London uses The Call of the Wild to display how people, or animals, want to dominate. From the beginning of the story when Buck is put into a group of mail running dogs, he is trying to come out on top. Buck was born into a wealthy family, and instead of being of use to his family, he was just a pet who controlled all of the other dogs on the settlement. Once Buck is brought into the wild, he is not taught how to be fierce, instead it is suggested that Buck recovers his primitive instincts from his ancestors. London manipulates Buck, and his setting in the cold north to show how we all have primitive instinct, and sometimes it needs to be used. This book also presents that sometimes when ties to humanity are cut, so is your humanity, and it causes you to lose control.…
In the novella Call of the Wild, by Jack London the theme of the story is the power of instinct. In the text it states, “ The blood-longing became stronger than ever before he was a killer, a thing that preyed, living on the things that lived, unaided, alone, by virtue of his own strength.” (London, page 48). This shows that Buck is Starting to use his domesticity and wild instinct while in the forest. Buck is starting to hunt his own food and only eat the food he has hunted. Additionally, Buck kills a moose and a black bear, which shows how brave and strong he is. Buck has grown strong from all of his cruel masters that have beaten him and hurt him. Furthermore, in the story it states”... suddenly his head would lift up and his ears cock…