The play Macbeth is a story in which many different themes are represented. A man named Macbeth becomes king of Scotland by murdering the former king, which leads to further violence, deceit, and corruption. It’s a story with different characters who personify power, deception, manipulation, and loyalty. Although it is certainly a very unique story, it also shares some similarities with the movie Mean Girls. Despite the different time periods, the plot and characters in Mean Girls truly reflect that of Macbeth. Between these two stories, there are several themes including deception, appearance vs. reality, and manipulation.
Many know and it is obvious to realize that there is a dominant theme in the movie Mean Girls: manipulation. The theme
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The theme of deception in Mean Girls is most strongly represented by the relationship between Cady and Regina. Early in the movie, Regina causes Cady to hate her by ruining her chances with Aaron Samuels and then taking him for herself. With further convincing from her friend Janis, Cady becomes a part of Regina’s clique known as “The Plastics” in an effort tear Regina down through lies and deception. Similar to how Macbeth maintains a good relationship with Duncan, Cady slowly gets close to Regina appearing to be her best friend. Taking advantage of the trust she earns, Cady attempts to sabotage Regina by giving her foot creme disguised as facial lotion and cutting holes in her clothes. She successfully deceives her by supplying her with “nutrition bars” to help her lose weight that actually cause her to gain a substantial amount of weight. Eventually this leads to Regina being kicked out of their lunch table and group when she wears sweatpants lunch, which is breaking their rules. As a result, Cady becomes the leader of “The Plastics” due to this effective act of deception just like Macbeth becomes king after deceiving
The movie “Mean Girls” is all about conflict whether it was with the outside groups or each other. Conflict management is the way we engage in conflict and address disagreements. The movie “mean girls”, every character showed many conflict management styles. Two character who used many conflict management styles in the movie were Cady and Regina. Cady used the Avoidance style. The avoidance is deliberate decision to take no action when dealing with conflict. Avoidance conflict style is Basically being avoiding the conflict all together. Examples of when Cady used the avoidance style is when she eats her lunch in the bathroom because she could not find people to sit with. Another time she shows the avoidance style is when she did not tell her parents how the school was really going. She just ran to her room. She ignored the conflict all together. The opposite of Cady is Regina, the “queen bee” of the school. The conflict style Regina used was competition. Competition is someone thinking that the conflict has to go their way or the highway, is a win-lose situation. She showed this conflict style is when she told Aaron the rumors that Cady was stalking him and then got back with him. Even though she did
The movie Mean Girls is filled with characters that are easy to relate with, quotable lines, and a hilarious but realistic plot line. One other major thing that the movie has is concepts of the development that occurs during late adolescences including social, emotional, and cognitive development. Mean Girls is about a girl named Cady that is attending a public high school for the first time after being home schooled in Africa for all of her life. She knows nothing of the American teenage culture or customs or about the public school system. During her first week of school Cady becomes friends with two people in one of her classes named Janis and Damien, who unbeknownst to her are a part of the
"Mean Girls", based on the book "Queen Bees and Wannabes" written by Rosalind Wiseman, was produced by Paramount Pictures in 2004. (Walters 2004, Wiseman 2002) The leading star, 15 year-old Cady Heron (Lindsey Lohan), recently moved to the suburbs of Illinois after being home schooled in Africa by her zoologist parents. During her first day of public high school, Cady befriends two teenager outcasts, Janice Ian (Lizzy Caplan) and Damian (Daniel Franzese). They supply Cady with a map of North Shore High School in order to educate her to the 21 different cliques within the school. Even more, warning Cady to stay away from the "worst people you will ever meet", The Plastics. Which was comprised of three girls: Gretchen Wieners, a girl who's rich because her father invented toaster strudel; Karen Smith, the "dumbest girl you will ever meet"; and Regina George, "queen bee" the unofficial leader and the meanest one. The Plastics take an interest in Cady and invite her to join them, Cady is very unsure of this. She discusses this with Janice and Damian and they convince
Mean Girls is about a girl named Cady who joins an elite social group at her new school known as the Plastics. While socializing with the Plastics, Cady develops a new, mean girl, personality and ends up sabotaging the group’s leader, Regina, and becomes the new leader of the Plastics. Regina retaliates by spreading the burn book, a book the Plastics filled with insults and gossip about other students, around the school leading to a riot and Cady takes the blame. Cady realizes that her new personality is wrong and apologizes to the school, makes amends with her old friends, and forms a truce with Plastics who disband and become regular students (Mean Girls, 2004).
Regina George’s friend group is comprised of Karen and Gretchen. Their friendship is difficult at times. They share secrets among each other, for example the burn book is a secret between the girls. When Cady is included into the friend group she is then entrusted with the group’s secrets. This group of “Plastics” are friends by choice and always ask for each other’s
Macbeth is a play about a Scottish general (Macbeth) who receives a prophacy from three witches that states that one day, he wil become the king of Scotland. This makes Macbeth power hungry so he decides to murder the current king of Scotland, Duncan. As people grow more and more suspicious of who killed Duncan, Macbeth is forced to commit more murders in order to protect himself from being exposed. This leads to him becoming filled with paranoia and guilt, which ultimately is his major downfall. Shakespeare wrote this play in 1606 to make people realize that excessive ambition can have terrible consequences. Both the play and the movie incorporate murders into telling the story of Macbeth, but they do so in different ways.
As Janis is telling Cady about the different cliques at their school, she ponders "How do I begin to explain Regina George?" This is followed by comments and opinions by different students ': "Regina George is flawless" "She has two Fendi purses and a silver Lexus". The fact that the second comment made about her describes the products that she owns says a lot about our consumer culture and recognition of brands, and the way we look up to people. Mean Girls emphasises that Regina is "fabulous, but she 's evil" - despite her attractiveness and the respect she is given, her behaviour and personality leave much to be desired. Even though she is downright nasty and universally hated, people still want to be like
The movie Mean Girls follows Cady Heron as she experiences high school for the first time in her life. As she is thrown into a new society, this film provides the opportunity to socially analyze high school. From figuring out her new culture and society that she is engrossed in to realizing how social status can both negatively and positively affect her values and beliefs, there are many concepts that Cady learns and is taught as she makes her way through her first year of public school.
Stereotypically, men and women have very different roles in the eyes of society. Gender roles and stereotypes have a history in religious, political, legal and economic systems. In reality, men and women are more alike than most people assume. Throughout the world there are struggles with identity, power, and violence occurring everyday between both men and women. The film Mean Girls, directed by Mark Walters, follows a young girl, Cady’s, transition from being home schooled to public high school. Cady enters the school’s group of mean girls, otherwise known as “the plastics”, which consists of Regina George, Gretchen Wieners, and Karen Smith. Throughout the film each character struggles with their true identity.
About four hundred years have passed since William Shakespeare composed his last play. However his writing, plots and characters are as alive today as they were when the plays were initially produced throughout the late sixteenth and mid seventeenth centuries. Despite the fact that Shakespearian plays are over centuries old, the themes and morals portrayed are still relevant in our society, as they are used in media today, betrayal being the main focus of this essay. In life all relationships are formed on the basis of trust, making it the foundation for all friendships and partnerships. Although it may be one of the most basic instincts we may possess as human beings, we still manage to trust the wrong people, or get taken advantage of by others, which usually results in physical or emotional pain, sadness, anger, and ultimately betrayal. Many similarities can be drawn between Macbeth, a play written by Shakespeare in 1606, and The Social Network (2003), directed by David Fincher. Macbeth is a tragedy about a loyal and once trusted noble of Scotland who, after some influence, becomes ambitious and plans the murder of the king, which involves gaining trust in some, and deceiving others. After doing so and claiming the throne, he faces the wrath of external forces, along with his internal struggles that lead him to his ultimate fate. The Social Network gives an insight on the formation and revolution of communication, Facebook
Examining the film Mean Girls, the use of tragedy in the film reflects on how the tragic hero goes through a rollercoaster of ups and downs throughout their high school experience. Johnson and Arp explain that the tragic hero has different parts of their character which contributes to what experience they are living through whether it may be good or bad experiences. Cady Heron, homeschooled at first for most of her life, is the new girl in school with little experience of what the outside world or society is really like but has a kind heart nonetheless. “He is great not primarily by virtue of his kingship but by his possession of extraordinary powers, by qualities of passion or aspiration or nobility of mind” (1294). Substantially, this is when the character starts the entirety of becoming a tragic hero. They begin by finding their good fortune or acceptance into society amongst them just like in Mean Girls Cady gets accepted into the “Plastics”, the classic queen bees who rule high school, as part of her acceptance into the highschool life and not knowing the problems yet to come as being a Plastic. The Plastics containing Regina, Gretchen, and Karen are known for being the most popular, having a lavish lifestyle, with snarky attitudes and creating drama around them. Furthermore, the next portion of a tragic hero is “middling” where the
There are more than enough examples from Macbeth and Great Expectations to prove that “subversion of gender roles,” a term that describes someone acting in a way that is not expected from those of their said gender, is evident in both writing pieces. There are a number of connections between the women of the play and novel; this can be seen in their stern, powerful and leader-like and always changing personalities that a number of female characters share. For instance, Miss Havisham’s burning hatred for men that she implemented into Estella 's mind, to Lady Macbeth’s level of ambition to have her husband become king. Others include similarities in levels of knowledge, even though they were considered “commoners” on a part of the social ladder where a lack of knowledge is expected, and examples of how they use their high levels of knowledge to their advantage. This can also be considered evidence of subversion of gender roles; women at the time were not expected to be knowledgeable by society as they are now. Other connections would be based on the topic of visual appearance overall, with connections to how they portray themselves to other characters and the reader throughout. The women of these two works show an exceptionable amount of power, control and capability of holding a family together a number of times throughout the novel and the play. A leading factor in this is their personalities- they spoke their mind, and were not afraid of the consequences. which happen to be
Mean Girls is about a young teen girl Cady Heron who just moved from Africa to attend a public high school in America for the first time. This is very different for Cady because the high school setting in America will be extremely different from how it was when she was living in Africa. It’s not easy for her because she is not used to the American customs or “norms”. Within the first couple of days of school she becomes really good friends with two people named Janis and Damien. In the school there are many many cliques, and Janis
The last psychological perspective of psychology to compare “Mean Girls” to is the behaviorist approach. This approach emphasizes the importance of environmental and situational determinants of behavior. Simply because of the new environment that Cady is thrust into her entire behavior is changed. She acts completely unlike her normal self, adapting and becoming an expert at backstabbing and manipulating. Through her manipulation she learns to control everyone around her, because according to this theory people and situations influence each other
The message of a film is what it revolves around, and what the filmmaker is trying to portray; a strong message makes for a successful film. Mean Girls and Bully have that in common. They correlate the message of not fitting in with a crowd, therefore the characters modify themselves in an attempt to please others. The Plastics initiate a conversation with Cady, where first they offer her an invite, followed by listing all the rules she needs to follow to be allowed to join the group. She goes along because it is for the purpose of the hoax that Janis plots (Waters 13:40). Cady is confined with how she dresses, who she is seen with and how she interacts, otherwise she is seen less as. It is unlike her personality to act so feminine and mean because she has a different taste. Even Gretchen is unhappy in the group, “She knew that it was better to be in The