Although both versions of Edgar Allen Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart" were equally entertaining, the cartoon version of the story is more effective in conveying the narrators insanity than the performance. There are multiple reasons why the cartoon was much more successful in expressing the narrators madness. Some of these reasons include the distinct sound effects, prominent facial expressions, outstanding computer effects and even the hinting at another hidden message in the story.
A key component of why the cartoon was more effective in conveying the narrators psychosis was that although the basic message of the story is that when you lie, something bad is most likely going to occur in your life or happen in return. In other words "What goes around comes around" meaning that if you lie or do a bad deed, then it will come right back to you and affect you in the future, just like it did to the narrator. After watching the cartoon multiple times at home, I realized that there was not only one message in the story. If you were to analyze the video, there were many significant details that could change your outlook on the story. Towards the beginning of the tale, while the old man was eating his soup, the narrator was looking away in disgust, slightly glancing up above the mantel. After observing that scene, it came to my attention that right there above the mantle was a picture of the narrator, the old man, and a extremely tall woman when they were a lot younger. Subsequent to the end of the cartoon, the audience never found out who the woman is but this picture made it look like the old man and the narrator were related. This seems almost unreal to me because the story is describing how much the narrator desired to get rid of the old man, just because of a physical flaw. This helps convey the narrators sheer madness because although this poor old man did have a scary eye, he is family, and the narrator stated himself at the beginning of