¶ … orchestrate the plot such that the characters are forced to make crucial decisions regarding their most centrally held values and beliefs; whichever action a specific character chooses serves to inform the audience as to what type of individual he or she is. It should not be surprising, therefore, that the motif of abuse, in particular, occurs in tales throughout history; but also, considering each story's social context allows for insight into these singular characterizations, as well as, a better grasp of the underlying values permeating their settings. Through the characters in The Bluest Eye and Bastard out of Carolina their particular moral settings become clear, and the similarities seem to span many of the divides of race. Centrally, the key issues in both novels seem to be poverty, oppression, and their emotional consequences; in other words, the themes within The Bluest Eye and Bastard out of Carolina are similar mostly because the characters within the two tales are under the same sort of pressures, and they handle them in the same ways.
Obviously, the two characters that draw the most parallels are Pecola and Bone -- the protagonists of both stories. Both are very young girls when the novels begin, and both initially find some level of comfort in the female characters that surround them. However, as young and impressionable girls, their lives are forever altered by those around them; they believe, from the very beginning, that they have been forever attached to a social stigma. Bone declares, "There I was -- certified a bastard of South Carolina." (Allison, 3). She is certified in that her birth certificate clearly states that she is an illegitimate child of her mother, Anney Boatwright. Not only does this have the practical consequence of Bone never knowing who her father is, but it carries the emotional consequence that she must also feel like a second rate individual as a result of her parent's actions.
Similarly, one of the first features of Pecola's personality that Morrison reveals to the reader is that she loves Shirley Temple; this is mainly for the fact that she thinks she is beautiful, and she believes Temple is beautiful because she is white. This generates an immediate contrast between what Pecola perceives beauty to be, and what she is herself. Pecola Breedlove is a black girl in a society that values whiteness; additionally, the fact that she has a relatively dark complexion, even among other blacks, fills her with even more personal shame since occasionally makes her the object of ridicule from lighter-skinned children. So, out of this personal context, Pecola's objective within the first portion of the novel is to somehow make people love her despite what she believes to be her innate ugliness.
Morrison writes, "It had occurred to Pecola some time ago that if her eyes, those eyes that held the pictures, and knew the sights -- if those eyes of hers were different, that is to say, beautiful, she herself would be different." (Morrison, 45). This is the idea behind the title of the story; but Pecola's desire for her eyes to be beautiful or, more specifically, blue extends beyond merely the notion that blue is good and brown is somehow bad. Pecola's belief that her life would somehow be better if her eyes were blue is somewhat more philosophical: she thinks that if her eyes were beautiful, then the things she could see through them would be more beautiful as well. In this way, her dream is to somehow transform the world around her and the people that occupy her life into something more attractive or easily...
The moral background in Life's a Dream is vastly different than that in Iphigeneia at Aulis, but the human elements of the story remain quite analogous. From Vasily's position as king, he acts to rob his son of his right to the throne, from his position as a father, he treats him is a way that Sigismund believes "denied me my humanity." (Calderon de la Barca, 118). In this way,
James Bond: A transmedia character "This was going to be bad news, dirty news, and he didn't want to hear it from one of the Section officers, or even from the Chief of Staff. This was to be murder. All right. Let M. bloody well say so." For viewers accustomed to the James Bond of cinema, reading The Living Daylights by Ian Fleming may come as something of a surprise. In contrast
The couple that hopes to adopt Juno's baby is well cast (especially Jennifer Garner, the wife) too. Juno, above all, takes center stage with her pretty face, her ponytail and hoodie, and her wise cracks, which is quite typical of an intelligent, perceptive high school girl. Paulie too is an ideal actor for that role as he and Juno go from just having some teenage affection for each other into
West Side Story Like all musical films, the West Side Story relates to a production where the characters sing songs and sometimes dance too, all with the view of developing the characters and advancing the plot of the film However, the movie brings to the fore various special features, which notably set it out as a historical document. The era in which the film was produced is also of massive importance considering
crime dramas of cinematic history, Arthur Penn's 1967 Bonnie and Clyde exhibits many hallmarks of accomplished filmmaking. Mainstay elements like character development, pacing, and screenwriting combine with the subtler aspects of moviemaking like mis-en-scene, cinematography, and sound editing. Faye Dunaway as Bonnie Parker and Warren Beatty as Clyde Barrow fulfill their most iconic roles. The film is based on the outlandish but true story of a heterosexual bank robber
Candidate is an American film produced in 1972, starring Robert Redford and directed by Michael Ritchie. Peter Boyle plays Marvin Lucas, a political strategist. The protagonist and the political candidate the film's title refers to is Bill McCay, played by Redford. McCay's father John McCay is played by Melvyn Douglas. Other characters include Senator Crocker Jarmon, who is the incumbent Republican candidate that opposes Bill McCay in the election. Marvin
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