In the movie and the book my favorite was the movie. Some of the reasons why i liked the movie more because it was more understanding for me. Its easier to understand things when you see it for yourself and not see it in black and white. My favorite part in the movie is when hannah is so kind and takes her life to save man many others it was emotional part in the movie. There was a big difference between the movie and the book here are some examples… In the book she had a little brother his name was Aaron. Aaron was a big part of the story if you ask me. In the beginning the story he was always there. When they were going into aunt Eva's houses they were fighting on who would press the elevator buttons. But in the movie they just walked up the steps and knocked on the door and Hannah was an only child. In the book it really took off when they were playing a game of hide and seek and hannah said ready or not here I come. …show more content…
In the movie fayge and his friends or family attempted to escape but when they were running they were caught when they got caught they were beaten with billy sticks then the next day they were all hung in front of everyone in the camp. In the book when the boys ran away instead of them being beaten and hung they were just shot dead so they did not have to do extra work for themselves. In the movie hannah was roughly 18 because she was thinking about getting a tattoo and she was old enough to drive by herself without her parents or someone over the age of
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
I think the movie is better than the book because it’s more visual, has more action, and has props.
I prefer some aspects of the movie to the book. First, I liked the visual representation of the novel that we had read as a class. I enjoyed being able to physically see Mitch Albom change and take Morrie’s words to heart, rather than just trying to interpret it in my own way. The movie did a better job of demonstrating Mitch’s original state of mind, where he didn’t seem to change too much. I also enjoyed being able to see the added character, “Shawn Daley,” change his ways throughout the movie just as
Despite the differences of the book and movie there is also some similarities. The allision demonstrated between the two was one of the similarities. They both show Hannah traveling in time and waking up back into her original time just like the main character in the Wizard of Oz. The characters Hannah and Schmuel both stay the same. Hannah is the main character in both the movie and the book and Schmuel get married in both. Another thing that they have in common is the conflicts. Hannah goes through man verses society when she is fighting against the Nazis. She has to fight them for food, fight them for survival, and fight them for the safety of her friends. The Nazis are slowly taking away those things from her. She is also goes through man versus self. She knows all of the bad things that are going to happen and no one will believe that she is right, so she starts to second guess herself. She also thinks that they are the monsters so
One difference between the book and the movies is the characterization. Some of the characters have age differences in the book and the movie. For example, Jonas, Fiona, Asher, and the other kids in their grade level are all twelve years old. However, In the movie, the characters are aged up to sixteen years old. Because the characters are older in the movie, the screenwriter added romance between Fiona
The 3 major differences that were seen are the shattering of the conch, the pilot’s presence, and Ralph’s attitude towards Piggy. Due to these major differences the novel left a greater impact on its readers than the movie on its viewers. Seeing the movie and as well reading the book, personally the book was a better. The book has a very different approach of that showed these 3 major differences to their full extent. Out of the two though, I would choose the book as more pleasant and
Hannah has experiences in the story that change her. In chapter three, Hannah drank watered down wine for the first time. Hannah also got drunk. “ Uncle Sam poured another quarter glass of wine into her glass, then filled it the way with water for the next blessing.” this was on page 16. This experience is a huge role in the story because it causes her to fall asleep and have to crazy dream. Another quote is when Hannah says “I'm not Chaya.” On page 34, “I'm from New Rochelle. And I'm not Chaya, I'm Hannah’ When Shmuel’s eyebrows rose up and lines furrowed his brow, he looked so fierce Hannah moved back a step” Rivka explains to Hannah that she was sick and probably forgot. Hannah has many experiences in the story that change her.
Hannah’s background as a Holocaust survivor is important for understanding the experience of the Holocaust. Her story provides unique insight on the Holocaust outside of concentration camps, dispels myths, and captivates the emotional aura of living during the Holocaust. Hannah’s story is one of resistance, danger, and the importance of family.
One difference was that Gitl and Rivka were two different characters in the book, but in the movie, they were just one character. In the book, Gitl was Hannah’s aunt who took care of her after Hannah’s parents died. Another difference was that in the movie, Shmuel and Fayge actually get married, since the rabbi was telling them to rush, but in the book, the two never actually have time to get married before the Nazis take them away in their cars. A third difference was that in the movie, Ariel is the son of the rabbi, the love interest with Hannah, but in the book, Fayge is the daughter of the rabbi, the love interest of Shmuel. A fourth difference was that in the movie, Hannah was an older teen, and more rebellious.
In the movie the differences are very noticeable first off Hannah is just referred to as Hannah not Chaya also in the movie there is a woman who gives birth in the camp and the baby is not allowed to live. In the movie Hannah tries to get the townsfolk to have Seder in the camp which is a success in bringing the town people together ,but it doesn’t happen in the book. In the movie Hannah has a love interest but not in the book it doesn’t matter anyways because he just dies after he pronounces his love.
The book is better because it gives more excitement and emotion. The book just explains each of the events in great detail. I don’t know about other people, but for me the more information there is, the more I understand it. And in the movie of “The Outsiders”, it does not really say much about what’s going on. For instance, when Johnny dies, in the movie, Ponyboy goes home but it does not tell how long he had been out. In the book, Pony is walking home from the hospital and a man asked him if he wanted a ride (Hinton 151). Though others might think that the movie is better because it visualizes the events that are happening. But, even though it envisions what the book tells about does not mean that it is one hundred percent better.
Chapter 37- Hannah asks Will resides to ask him to ride to Salem to warn the Patriots of a British attack. Hannah decides to make the ride herself. Will and Mr. Hubbard helped her along the route and directions.
The first difference is the age differences of Hanna. In the movie, Hanna is a immature, seventeen-year-old girl that likes the wine. In the book, Hanna is a thirteen-year-old girl that despises the wine. Another difference is that the wedding was actually finished in the movie, so Fayge and Shmule were married before they were taken to the concentration camps. In the book, they could not finish the wedding, so they were only engaged when they died. A final difference is that Rivka was actually Hanna’s cousin in the movie so they met right away, rather than in the camp like they did in the book. It is a change because the characters care for each other more because they are
In the book Hannah didn’t get a tattoo with her friends at the tattoo shop. She also wasn’t able to drive in the book because she was 13 not 16. The last difference is the execution of Hannah. In the movie she is killed because she pretends to be Rivka, because Rivka is too weak to work so the Nazi’s were gonna kill her. However, she is killed in the book by being shot trying to escape the concentration
Hannah informed me that she is 100% Korean and was born in Mokpo, South Korea. She moved to America when she was only six months old. I asked her if she misses living in South Korea, and she said that she sometimes wished she could move back there to feel more like a “standard” citizen. Hannah then began to explain the cultural differences between America and South Korea. The first is that cultural beauty is drastically different. Secondly, Koreans are extremely traditional and their history speaks for its culture. They value their identity as Koreans, even though they are now somewhat Americanized. Most Koreans keep to themselves in terms of traditional values. Lastly, cultural beauty in South Korea consists of having pale skin, heavy sunscreen and umbrellas on sunny days, and wide, double lidded eyes. It is common for some Koreans to get surgery to widen their eyes. I asked Hannah for her input on changing a person’s physical appearance, and she concluded that it would be a dream to have the perfect figure; however, she would never make any major adjustments on her body. If she could change anything about herself, she would change her hair color to blonde, and have perfect