It is a mixed blessing to be able to see the movie version of a popular book. In most cases, Hollywood veers from the text and the viewer is left with a watered down version of the original. In the case of the Princess Bride, the cinema version is very close to the book. One such scene is Inigo and Fezzik’s visit to Miracle Max in search of a miracle. Setting, conflict, and dialogue are three points of high congruency.…
AAAAAAhhhhhh Oooo my gosh, these are words that we hear all the time bye crazy fans when the see popular actors, singers and all famous celebrity’s with the fancy cars and loads of money that mean something to all of these crazy fans. In the film Edward Scissorhands, Ed is very much treated like a celebrity he was discovered, he hit his peak of popularity, then as he made one little mistake the world turned against him and he crashed. This 1960’s suburbia movie demonstrates how the life of a normal family living the American dream changes when there is a “celebrity “around. Ed is a creation bye a man who died and never finished him. He gets discovered by and Avon sales lady trying to sell him facial goods. She decides to bring him home. At first the community does not know what to think of Ed. They discover that he can do some pretty amazing things and hits the peak of his popularity. As soon as he does one thing wrong they look at him as the guy with the scissorhands that is a threat to kill everybody. In the movie Ed is treated like a celebrity as he like the attention at first and then realizes what it has done to him. This movie is based on the American dream and how in the 1960 suburbia was extremely popular and the setting for this movie.…
Fiona Hall (b.1953) is an Australian photographer and sculptor renowned for her post modern techniques involving histories of language, gender politics, the body the domestic and the everyday, colonisation and the current state of the environment. Hall creates art works that are metaphors for the messages she explores. She began her art practice in the 1970s when the conventions of modern art were being radically challenged. Hall’s art practice deals with society and culture and increasingly how we as humans are impacting upon the natural world. Her work is often extremely detailed and her ideas and thinking multi-faceted and complex. Hall’s passion towards the environment is clearly displayed through each of her works which confront an array of issues concerning the environment. Leaf litter (2000) clearly represents how plants may be seen as something disposable but are actually valuable and have contributed to the growth of many economies. Cell culture (2002) questions the role of natural science and the way societies have viewed the natural world. Medicine Bundles for the unborn child (1994) is different from Hall’s other works as it represents how western civilisation (including children) now depend on these types of products to function…
To begin with, in the novel Of Mice and Men, Curley’s wife is a disadvantaged character who relates to the themes dreams and loneliness. She is important in the novel because she portrays the stereotypical 1930’s women in America and she is the only women in the novel. Steinbeck presents her negatively but by the end of the novel the reader feels sympathetic towards her.…
In his book, The Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne tells of a story where a young woman has had an adulterous relationship with a respected priest in a Puritan community. Typical of Hawthorne's writings is the use of imagery and symbolism. In Chapter 12, The Minister's Vigil, there are several uses of imagery when Dimmesdale, the priest, is battling with confessing his sin, which has plagued him for seven years. Three evident techniques used to personify symbolism in this chapter are the use of darkness versus light, the use of inner guilt versus confession, and lastly the use of colors (black versus white).…
What is the importance of the role of Curley’s wife in the novel? You should refer closely to her words, to events, and to the actions and opinions of other characters in your answer.…
the novel Little Scarlet by Walter Mosley, the protagonist faces inner-conflict when he is chosen to lead an investigation for the LAPD. The author makes the conflict real for the reader through imagery and allusion. The racial tensions between the people in L.A. throughout the book are truly real and able to be experienced. Walter Mosley uses these tangible literary devices to show the reader the heartfelt pain that the main character, Easy Rawlins, feels, and in the same way smoothly resolves Easy's inner conflict. He feels that by proving the innocence of a white man, and taking time away from his family he is doing a wrong thing, but when he comes to think about it he feels that by helping the police he is working for a just cause.…
Set in 1930s America Of Mice and Men shows the apparent hardships of an America gripped in a great depression. The Wall Street crash of 1929 was making the American dream become more of a nightmare and over farming had devastated the American countryside leaving workers to migrate across the American mid west to find work. Steinbeck also worked on a ranch as a young man so the story has a personal touch from his own experiences.…
4. What do you think is the most severe pain the community members could experience?…
In the novel, "In the Skin of a Lion," by Michael Ondaatje, the main character, Patrick Lewis, searches for identity and light. Without these elements, he lacks love and cannot survive the world. A passage in chapter three describes him as a lonely man that is isolated from the world around him. "Clara and Ambrose and Alice and Temelcoff and Cato- this cluster made up a drama without him. And he himself was noting but a prism that refracted their lives. He searched out things, he collected things. He was an abashed man, an inheritance from his father. Born in Abashed, Ontario. What did the word mean? Something that suggested there was a terrible horizon in him beyond which he couldn't leap. Something hollow, so when alone, when not aligned with another- whether it was Ambrose or Clara or Alice- he could hear the rattle within that suggested a space between him and community. A gap of love," (Ondaatje, pg.157) suggests his feelings of separation from his close companions. It also reveals Patrick's thoughts and characteristic qualities.…
In this passage from the epigraph of the play, we see direct parallels between the poem (Hart Crane's “The Broken Tower”) and A Streetcar Named Desire. It could be interpreted from Blanche's perspective; where the “broken world” is her world of illusion in which she has become Allan. Allan is then the “visionary company of love” that she traces, which causes her to make “desperate choices.” These desperate choices shape the play—the lying, the young boys she pursues, and finally, when she makes her most important choice in Scene IX: will she ultimately tell the truth. Because the following dramatic action of the play rests on what Blanche decides, when she decides to alternatively lie or tell the truth, the consequences of her decisions drive the action of the play forward.…
The Giver is told from the perspective of a eleven year old boy named Jonas. Jonas lives in a “flawless” futuristic society. The society is free of conflicts, pain, fear, hunger, and hatred. Jonas ultimately uncovers the secretes about the community, making him question his and his communities ignorance. Throughout the book the main character Jonas dramatically changes as do the settings of the book.…
Anne of green gables is a children’s book about a young girl who was adopted by a brother and a sister who both were not married with intentions of this child to work on the farm for them. Anne of Green Gables promotes the importance of a relationship between mother and daughter and its ability to affect the growth of the child and the guardian. This can be seen due to the historical context, through Marilla’s attempt to teach her social norms and finally the importance of education.…
In plays, dialogue is often relied upon in order to reveal the morals, and values of its characters. Dialogue also plays a very important role in establishing the nature of the society the place takes place in. In Oscar Wilde’s satire Lady Windermere’s Fan, the dialogue is effective in doing just this, giving the reader the opportunity to make great incites regarding the inner workings of the three characters who speakOne of the characters with dialogue in Lady Windermere’s Fan is Lord Darlington. Based on what he says, as well as what others say about him, Darlington is a rather laid back, carefree individual. This is backed up with his statement to Lady Windermere “I think that life is far too important a thing ever to talk seriously about.” This quote can lead to the assumption that Darlington is a man who lives for pleasure. Darlington is also obviously very playful. This is seen in his reaction to when the Duchess of Berwick jokingly calls him wicked, where he quips “Don’t say that Duchess. As a wicked man I am a complete failure.” Throughout the course of the excerpt, he makes known the fact that he is a rogue.…
Ms. J K Rowling was born in Chippling Sodury on July 31st 1965. Her childhood was generally happy, although she does remember getting teased because of her name, “Rowling”. She recalls often getting called Rowling Pin by her friends.…