Víctor Hernández 11th Grade English November 25th‚ 2013 There’s no flesh or blood within this cloak to kill. There’s only an idea. Ideas are bulletproof. An idea is a thought or suggestion as to a possible course of action. It is an aim or a purpose. And as the notorious anarchist‚ “humble vaudevillian veteran” and “vestige of the vox populi” says‚ they are bulletproof. The concept of an idea is an impalpable matter that lies on the thoughts of the encephalon of the human being. An idea arises
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the strong themes and warning signs that these two powerful works of art‚ 1984 and V for Vendetta‚ attempt to delineate. 1984 and V for Vendetta have their similarities and differences yet their worlds are built around these basic tenets. Yet varying with their degree of control‚ both the novel and the film depict despotic leaders and repressive governments. Both of these leaders use intricate methods to keep control. Even being in the same genre and heavily borrowing‚ they still have their wild
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Imagine living in a world where freedom of expression‚ thought‚ belief‚ and happiness was not allowed. In George Orwell’s 1984 and James McTeigue’s movie V for Vendetta that would be completely normal. The citizens do not have these freedoms‚ in fact they do not have freedom at all. Both 1984 and V for Vendetta are being ruled by a totalitarian government and have similar views on how society should be run. For example they both use the media and slogans to manipulate the citizens into believing
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1984 and V for Vendetta The novel 1984 and the graphic novel V for Vendetta have similar views on how society is being run. However V for Vendetta was based on 1984 since 1984 was written before V for Vendetta. Both of these novels are similar in a way like the themes and how the male protagonists are the one in charge of overturning the government. The first similarity between 1984 and V for Vendetta is that the society is being run by totalitarian rule. It is the government that controls the lives
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large contributors to the instigation‚ magnitude and normalization of violence in a society. The movie V for Vendetta gives the audience a lens through which they can look at the role and impact these three actors play in the perpetuation and normalization of violence. The state; as a system of surveillance‚ coercing individual’s conformity‚ and soliciting submission uses its role to project power in the name of national security and maintaining peace. The fascist police state in the movie takes civil
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behavior in correspondence with socially accepted standards‚ conventions‚ rules‚ or laws. What this means to me is when someone of higher ranking tells you to do something that has an effect on a whole. Conformity can either be good or bad. In V for Vendetta and "Repent‚ Harlequin" there was a character who thought that conformity was bad for society‚ and a person should be able to decided for themselves. Conformity is everywhere‚ even in the United States. We have to obey traffic laws‚ pay taxes
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Several students have told me that the film V for Vendetta is “just like” 1984. Since I’m always interested in resources that might make Orwell’s important warning clear to younger people‚ growing up as they are in a world that is so shaped by Newspeak and Doublethink–now referred to as “political correctness”–that his message is hard for them to hear‚ I watched the film. It was similar‚ in the sense that in both stories humanity is being oppressed by a totalitarian regime. Still‚ it was the differences
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McTeigue’s movie “V for Vendetta” both show dystopian cultures. In “1984” no one realized how much they were being mistreated by the party except for Winston. On the other hand‚ in “V for Vendetta” V makes the people of Britain aware of how the government is negatively impacting their everyday lives. Both the novel and the movie demonstrates how leaders use fear to control societies‚ various types of revolution‚ and how hatred is directed. The leaders of the world use fear to gain control over society
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Politics in Film “V for Vendetta” The film I focused on for this essay‚ V for Vendetta‚ was filmed and produced in 2006 by Warner Brothers. The plot of the film circulates around a mysterious and charismatic masked freedom fighter being hunted down by the totalitarian British government in the near future. Although his full identity is kept a mystery throughout the film‚ audiences learn he was a victim of a cruel scientific experiment involving “unwanted” British citizens and hormonal drugs
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Illuminating Aspects of Totalitarian Dystopias Through Character Lines Winston Smith from 1984 and Evey Hammond from V for Vendetta are used by their authors to showcase different aspects of dystopian worlds and totalitarian governments. Both characters face similar losses early in life‚ which play a role in their distaste of control. Evey faces the loss of her parents to an oppressive and dictatorial government. Winston similarly loses his mother‚ as described by Orwell in “[t]ragedy‚ he perceived
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