¶ … Music in Forrest Gump
Forrest Gump is a true epic of a film in that it spans several decades and numerous different stages in the life of its protagonist, Tom Hanks. Essentially, Hanks is in the process of recounting his life story to different people as he waits at a bus stop. He is both candid and surprisingly reflective -- the latter fact stems from the reality that he is mildly mentally retarded and has an IQ below that of most people. Ultimately, it is this facet of Gump's character that proves the most prominent in this movie, for the simple fact that Forrest is able to achieve myriad remarkable things: certainly more than most people with 'average' intelligences are able to do. Gump grows up in Alabama with his single mother, and has to walk with metal braces to correct some sort of debilitating condition. He is constantly bullied and teased because of his braces and his limited intellect, a fact which one day spurs him to take off running despite his braces. To his surprise he succeeds, and he becomes an extremely fast and longwinded runner for most of his life. This fact enables him to get on the football team at a collegiate university and to become very successful in college.
However, another important focal point of this tale is Gump's relationship with a young girl by the name of Jenny (who is his age), and who he first meets as he in grade school because she is one the few people who does not tease him (due to her own problems at home. Gump eventually comes to desire Jenny during college, yet is not able to pursue this endeavor fully as he is drafted to Vietnam. There he makes a lifelong friend in his lieutenant, Dan, whose life Forrest saves in Vietnam (although Dan would have preferred to die in battle because both of his legs were amputated due to his injuries).
Gump eventually makes his fortune in the shrimping business, an endeavor which he begat with the interests of some of his friends in the army. He is able to see Jenny and even has a sexual encounter with her, before she refuses to marry him and abandons him. Gump responds by running...
There is a direct correlation with, say, Henry Hill's cocaine abuse and the increasingly rapid cuts between shots. Faster-paced narrative parallels quicker-moving shots. When viewers finally see the film in the theater, the finished product reads like a cohesive narrative when in fact the filmmakers strung together disparate shots and cuts and combined them later after thousands of hours of painstaking labor. Analyzing a movie must therefore include respect
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