In the teleplay The Monsters Are Due On Maple Street by Rod Serling In the beginning Steve says “What was that? A meteor?” because it says on line 38 “What was that a meteor” just because the meteor pasted over even though it wasn’t a meteor it was the aliens from lines about from 65 to 80 it describes how nothing is working not even the portable. The story describes how when Les Goodman try to start his car he says “No dice” Les Goodman is explaining that his car won’t start and the Mob turns of him even when his car starts even though he is not in his car. At toward the end of the story Charlie Shoots Pete Van Horn and when that happened at that time the “Mob” turned agents Les, Steve, Charlie, and Tommy all because…
In writing his novel “Monster”, Walter Dean Myers used his experience to keep the judicial system relevant to his points while still realistic. Steve’s attorney, O’Brien, is honest about her role in the system to Steve, telling him, “My job is to make sure the law works for you as well as against you.” Instead of pretending to be crusading for a not guilty verdict, O’Brien tells the truth that she intends to help hunt down the truth both for and against Steve as an unbiased tool of the court. This means that she will insure that the jury’s predispositions do not change their verdicts, that the prejudice of the court doesn’t change the evidence given in court, and that the evidence against Steve is legitimate and/or nonexistent.…
In the “Monster Are Due on Maple Street” by Rod Serling the character actions affect the plot because the power goes off Les Goodman’s car starts on it’s own after he had attempted to do it with no luck, the text states “He walks toward the group…the car engine starts up all by itself.” After that happens they all think it is a meteor. Then Tommy tells them about the aliens and says “Whoever was in that thing that came by overhead.” “Whoever was in the thing that came over. I don't think they want us to leave here.”…
Monster is the story about a 16 year old black boy named Steve Harmon from Harlem. Steve is on trial for a being a possible accomplice to a murder. The book begins with him in jail waiting for his trial to start. The story is written in screenplay format, due to Steve’s passion for filmmaking, along with Steve's journal writing which he does even in the courtroom. Steve writes this way to keep his sanity while being in prison during the trial. The majority of the story takes place in the courtroom. Steve is there with another defendant, James King, who has his own attorney. The events of the robbery unfold through the accounts of witnesses, attorneys and the participants. The book is about Steve's trial and whether he will be found guilty of felony murder…
In his novel Monster, Walter Dean Myers demonstrates the complexity of the justice system, and how people can be tried unethically. The characters, Bobo Evans, Steve Harmon, James King, and Osvaldo Cruz all differ in magnitude of guilt and involvement, but were tried either too harsh, or let off too easily. What differs in each person’s case is attributed to biases including age, race, and cooperations with the police. The first poorly tried suspect in this felony-murder case was Osvaldo Cruz. Osvaldo is a fourteen year old boy who helped out in the robbery, but claimed it was in fear of the suspects that drove him to do this. Osvaldo gave tips to the police, helping them out with the crime. Due to this fact and his young age, he was not tried…
In the story “The Monsters are Due on Maple Street'' the characters all act the same. By being scared and worried being around the other people because they will start to accuse them about something. Like in the text when “He stops suddenly as behind him, the car engine starts up all by itself. Les whirls around to stare at the car.” Then Charlie says”He always was an oddball”.…
In this attention grabbing, brillaintly plotted, and elegantly written book, D. T. Max shows us what happens when the insomnia doesn’t end, no matter how aggressive the medical intervention or sedative prescription is. He tells the story of an Italian family that for at least 200 years has been plagued by an extremely rare hereditary disorder that destroys the brain’s capacity to fall asleep. Ultimately, if you stop sleeping altogether, you will probably end up suffering; effects include losing all bodily control and finally a horrible death. Although science may not yet understand the purpose of slumber, fatal familial insomnia, the author suggests, it could be “the worst disease in the world.”…
Immediately everyone starts to accuse each other of being monsters. This shows that when Tommy said there were monsters in their group everyone started to accuse each other without any evidence or reliable information. Later in the story, Pete Van Horn had…
Rod Serling’s message to the readers of “The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street,” is prejudice, to not be too quick to judge people. The theme begins to appear in the story when Les Goodman’s car starts up by itself and everybody is in shock. Then everybody kind of starts blaming Les Goodman for the car starting up by itself after Tommy tells his crazy story about how aliens went to earth ahead of time to freak these people out then the aliens could land on earth. That’s when people start being prejudice and start falsely accusing Les Goodman of doing these acts without any actual proof. As Les Goodman says in the movie after the car randomly started up,” I just don't understand it.…
Insomnia began by first being referenced in the world’s oldest literary book, the Gilgamesh epic. In the book, the character, Gilgamesh, became mortal by making a transition from being constantly awake, to sleeplessness, and then to familiarity. In other ancient tales, sleeplessness and sleep played the difference in being immortal or mortal. In one ancient tale, the story of Chinese king Wu, the reason of his sleeping problems were because he never secured the heaven’s support. People back in the medieval time period in Europe, were not too worried about waking up in the middle of their sleep. During this period of time, having your sleep interrupted at night was a regular occurrence. The wrongdoers that were the reasoning of insomnia consisted of bedbugs, along with the fear of incendiarism, burglary, and political conspiracy.…
To say that the Stephen King novel “IT” is simply a horror novel about a monster is to say that Alan Paton’s “Cry, The Beloved Country” is just a novel about a man losing his son. There is much more to it than that. Published by American writer Stephen King in September of 1986, “IT” is a known suspenseful, horror story that not only pulls back the vivid memories of your childhood fears, but makes you relive them as well. Taking place in Derry, Maine between the years of 1957 through 1985, “IT” is an outstanding novel with so much to offer to any reader willing to embark on a chilling adventure this novel offers.…
In the “Monsters Are Due on Maple Street” by Rod Serling, the story helps advance the plot because it really talks about how humans panic and what they do when nothing is going their way because they wanted to figure out which character was helping the aliens. As quoted in the story Tommy says it was “...a ship landing from outer space”. Tommy knew what it was but the adults thought he was reading too many comic books, but as he got to telling them more about it, they began to get suspicious and question each other but they mostly panicked. Another reason why they were accusing each other is because in the story, it says “...can you get it started, Les?” “No dice”. “He walks toward the group…… the car engine starts up all by itself.” The…
Wilcox, Ph.D., W. B. (2005, October 24). Seeking a Soulmate: A Social Scientific View of the…
The lens through which readers encounter monsters is often a skewed one. This lens could be that of the author, who seeks to embody a monster as a horrific, non-human entity that will cause havoc in an area. Similarly, this lens could be that of a character in a piece, one who witnesses the monster’s wrath and destruction firsthand and hopes to avoid the cruel savage being. Monster narratives rarely unfold from the perceptive of the monster, and, as such, audiences must rely on other sources as to the monster’s course of action. Such voices can carry a bias with them. As in the case of the author, the omniscient perspective provides descriptions of the monster without directly interacting the monster. This perspective could easily fail to report…
In our minds, we think that we would never get so fearful and paranoid that we would turn on each other and start to attack each other, all due to the paranoia. Well, we don’t know ourselves to well, then. In the teleplays [Rod Serling’s “Monsters are due on Maple Street” and its 2003 remake “The Monsters on Maple Street”] it tells that we would turn on each other and attack, just out of fear. The claim both stories try to get across is fear of the unknown can cause people to turn on each other. Sadly, under circumstances that are abnormal, we people may get suspicious of each other, which leads to our downfall.…