Analysis of Following vs Followers Bianca was not totally soft and was not always following what people did. She learned off of Katherine and, Bianca just wanted have fun and Katherine secretly wanted to keep her safe. So was she not really the “perfect girl’’ that follows other people a does not have of mind of their own. Katherine soon realized that she was ready to tell Bianca why she would want her not to go out. She did not want her to make the same mistakes that she did. The only thing that Katherine wanted to do was to keep her sister safe from guys and other people that picked on her or used her.
In the movie there was a lot of peer pressure. Katherine knew that anything could happen in high school. In the movie Katherine said “I was just trying to keep you safe. I did not want you to make the same mistakes”.She learned the hard way and she fixed that by trying to not let the same thing happen to her sister. In the book people were following other people. They would follow the crowd and do whatever other people would do. That’s basically what Biannca was doing throughout the movie. She was worried about staying popular only
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In the movie it was mentioned because Bianca was getting ready to leave to go out somewhere and Katherine said something to her about her wearing them. In the movie Katherine asked Bianca why she had on her necklace. Katherine told her “ You can't just take Mom’s necklace like that and go wearing it whenever you want, Bianca said “yes I can, she’s not coming back”. I assume that something happened to their mom because their dad was the only one taking care of them in the movie. In the movie I think that some of their actions kinda went with the mom thing. Whatever happened to their mom maybe influenced how they were acting in the movie. They are not very close sisters at the beginning. They grow more closer as the movies goes through. They both realized they were trying to help each
However, there are just as many differences between the novel and the film. For example, at the end of the novel, Melinda tells Mr. Freeman about what happened to her. In the movie, she tells her mother about the incident. This affected the relationship between Melinda and her mother as portrayed in the novel. Their relationship in the novel was not very close at all. It would’ve been very shocking if at the end of the novel, Melinda told her mother about how she was raped.
The author chose to alternate between the two girls’ perspectives because she wanted the reader to see how both these characters changed when forced to be around
A difference in the movie and the book is when Cassie was beating up Lillian Jean. This took place in the middle of “Roll of Thunder, Hear my cry” book. In the movie they did not show it as being an important event. At the end they showed a little flashback of Cassie beating up Lillian Jean. At the beginning
Next, the differences in the book from the movie is that the book has LJ, Cody, and Rufus, while the movie doesn’t. Also, Mama talks more southern in the movie, while she doesn’t as much in the book. Then, in the movie, they introduce people that are not in
If she had not have eaten the instructions then I think it would have left out a lot of information and it would have made the movie not as fun to watch. Another thing they put into the movie that was in the book was that in the book it said that there was a blackout for about seven minutes. I am glad they added this to the movie because if they didn't add that to the movie there would be no detail and much information about the city. One last similarity that we found in the movie and book was that when they found the room with the mayor hoarding the food and supplies. If they had not added that then Lina and Doon could have thought he was actually a good
People often scoff at movies based on books, according to the article “Why ‘Wonder’ the Movie, Can’t Best the Book It’s Based On”, by Maria Russo. I strongly agree with that because the books will always be more detailed than the films. This story shows how four siblings must learn to take care of themselves and their struggle in poverty. The book and film are similar in some ways, but they are also extremely different. Movies often have to exaggerate to
I am going to tell you 3 differences between the book and the movie In the book they all went to the spring and mae, jesse and miles told winnie there story about the spring. That
There are many similarities and differences throughout the book and movie. One similarity was Mae hit the Man in the Yellow Suit in the back of the head with a gun. This was the part in the book where the Man in the Yellow
At the age of thirteen she started attending high school on the Campus of West Virginia State College, five years later she enrolled into college with the mentor W. W. Schieffelin Claytor. Katherine graduated with the highest honors in 1937 later having a job at a black public school. In 1939 the graduate school, West Virginia University, presented Katherine one of three spots at the school. She enrolled into the graduate math program. One thing Katherine had to realize is that she wanted to have a family and had to stop going to school.
When watching the film, the first difference the viewer can see between the book and the movie is how the characters are portrayed. A notable example would be Carlson. In the film,
Her mother had always pushed her to do what Taylor wanted to be and do in her life and not what other people wanted her to be. The reader is shown both from Lou Ann’s and Taylor’s points of view during the novel and is shown how each character views their beliefs and wants. When Lou Ann and Taylor are introduced together, finally, they butt heads but also work together very well. While their friendship isn’t seamless at first, it is flexible and caring. Both Lou Ann and Taylor end up working together to form their own family.
It is an unimaginable thought that something so similar can be missing so much. They can be both so unique and incomparable. In the book To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee the main character, Scout and her brother Jem fight prejudice through a young person perspective. The main characters go on a journey against Bob Ewell throughout the sleepy town of Maycomb, at the 1930’s. Bob Ewell has falsely accused Tom Robinson of a crime. On the process the characters grow a lot and find things that spark their curiosity. This makes an interesting plot with many turns. The movie, To Kill a Mockingbird, has many differences from its book, many plots and characters are missing which greatly impacts the movie directed by Robert Mulligan.
In the movie is clear that she likes to be the center of the attention she likes the fact that people admire her and are afraid of her.
Katherine on the other hand presents herself in a very different way. She is moody, sullen, angry, rude and outspoken all the time. These are not characteristics that are desired in a wife. Katherine doesn't care though, she goes to above everyone's criticism, which comes from her father along with other random suitors to Bianca and she chooses to be her own person. She refuses to be polite simply because that is what is expected of her. The consequences of acting in this such a manner are that the men in the society refuse to marry her, they jest at her expense, and she is at risk to have to become an old maid and live with her father for the rest of her life. Her father can't wait
I think that her conformity had to do a lot with Wes and affected him