The Giver started off as a book. Then it was transformed into a movie. These are some differences between the two. First off, in the book Jonas is 12 years old and in the movie he is 18. Which brings me to my next reason. They added a special ❤ between Jonas and Fiona that was not in the book. In the movie there was a lot of things left out. Like in the movie they skipped a year. When you look In the book it showed when he was a 11 and then his sister was waiting for a bike. Also when Jonas left in the movie the giver gave him the memory of strength and courage. In the book he does not receive the memories of strength and courage. In the movie when Jonas was escaping from the community he rode off in a motorcycle from one of the leaders. In the book he rode a bike. In the book when Jonas is riding away with Gabe he has to hide behind trees and duck behind bushes so he would not be seen by the drones. He also runs out of water so he has to drink from a pond he passes. In the movie there …show more content…
Here they are. The movie and the book have all of the same characters. The movie didn’t add anything or leave out any characters. The book and the movie have the same concept. Like Jonas has been chosen to be the new receiver of memory. He gets the memories and figures something bad out. So then he wants to leave because his “brother” is going to be killed. He has to go to “elsewhere” to give the community all of the memories. The book says that there is no color. In the movie it is all in black and white until the very end where he gives everyone the memories. In the book they all have the same jobs as the movie they did not add any or take any away. The movie had the same type of community as the book. They have the same rules and the same objects. Finally they have the same memories. Except in the movie they have like a montage of him getting the memories. In the book they have them all
After reading The Giver I had high expectations for the movie to be just like the book. I was hoping that the ending would be better explained. . Don't get me wrong, Lois Lowry did an amazing job, I just feel that the ending happened too quickly and it was not detailed enough. Concerned with the ending of her book I thought that watching Phillip Noyce movie The Giver would clearly thing up. I was obviously wrong, it was too serious, I mean for the most parts it was OK, but the book was a little more chill. Another thing that bothered me was the chief elder, she only appeared in the book like twice, but in the movie she was like in every other scene. Really it was like they were trying to put her everywhere and make her like one of the main
Normally, when a movie is made about a story in a book the two stories are not exactly the same. The movie is adjusted by adding small details or leaving out some parts in order to make the story more
The third main difference between The Giver book and the movie was the Chief Elder's role. In the Giver book, the Chief Elder was not much of an important character, "The initial speech at the Ceremony of Twelve was made by the Chief Elder, the leader of the community who was elected every ten years," (pg. 51 - Lois Lowry). However, the Chief Elder played an important role in the Giver movie. In the book, the Chief spoke in a few chapters during Ceremonies and that was all. The Giver movie's Chief Elder always watched Jonas closely. She started becoming suspicious of Jonas, and so she would warn Jonas' mother and The Giver. She then found out about Jonas' plan to escape. When she did, she ordered Asher to "lose him" (The Giver movie). That meant she wanted Asher to kill Jonas.
This book is about a boy names Jonas. Jonas lives in a futuristic society where there is no pain, fear, war, and hatred. There is also no prejudice, since everyone looks and acts basically the same, there is very little competition. They have also eliminated choice.
The Giver is both best-selling book by Lois Lowery and a major motion picture. They are both centered on the same storyline and character but also have some major differences. “The movie (and the book) takes place in the confines of “the community,” something that started after “the ruin,” when all memories were erased and everyone became equal.” (Krule, 2014). The book and the movie and the book are very different in many ways such as the plot, characters and concepts. The book and movie are more different than they are similar, although there are a few similarities.
The Giver is an amazing novel and so is the movie. There are some differences between the book and the movie such as a border around the community, Asher and Fiona got different jobs, and The Giver passed memories to Jonas in a different way. There are more differences, but these three are the main differences between the book and the movie.
One big difference was when Jonas went to the Givers home in the book he was let in by a woman maybe his secretary but in the movie there was a facial recognition procedure that allow him in. The movie is basically an advanced place filled with drones, 3D transmissions and impressive looking devices of all sorts. In the book it's not as advanced as the movie but it's still pretty impressive. The book The Giver has books in in it and the movie jonas has never saw a book in his life.
The Community is a horrible place compared to our country. Read more to find out why. A utopia is a world or place that is perfect in every way, and a dystopia is a world or place that has major flaws and is horrible. (The Giver) is a dystopian society and that is because they kill the smallest of any one twin, also they have drugs that keep them from hitting puberty. The Community in (the Giver) and our society are similar and different because parts of the world and the Community have people that make decisions in society, and MOST of the nations do not kill twins like the Community does.
The Giver is a dystopian book written by Lois Lowry, that has recently been adapted into a film. If you have read the book, and are a fan of it, like me, then you should definitely spend the money to go and watch the film.
Many differences exist when you compare our world to the world of The Giver. In the book age is celebrated up until the Ceremony of Twelve. In our world there are many milestones throughout our lifetime. We celebrate with presents and parties. Nobody in The Giver has a birthday party for just themselves. Instead they all share a yearly celebration together.
To begin, the movie and the book are alike in some ways but also extremely different. The movie and the book had the same aspects but were played out differently. For example, the book states that Sam, Bill, and Johnny are staying in a cave but in the movie they seem to have just taken camp on the side of a mountain road. The movie and book also were at crossroads when neither Sam nor Bill fit the description given in the book. The book and movie were alike in the way red chief scalped Bill and even how Bill sent Red Chief home. All in all, the book and movie had their similarities but also their differences.
These two characters have two different lives. For example, Billie Jo is a red headed girl that lives on a farm in Joyce, Oklahoma during the Dust Bowl 1920s. It’s a small town in the panhandle of Oklahoma. In the book Out of the Dust, things got really difficult for Billie Jo. Otherwise, Jonas is a boy that lives a secure community. In the book The Giver, His story is filled with lots of emotions. Both of their lives are different, while there thoughts and personality are pretty
The Giver, a book by Lois Lowry, and The Giver, the movie version, have more differences than similarities. The movie changes some details to fit into the new themes and expectations of the film. There are some similarities between the two, such as the general idea of a community based off of Sameness and order. However, there are many differences in things like the themes, the plot, the symbols, and the characters that just cannot be neglected. The movie is more different to the book than similar because it removes important details, such as Jonas’ pale eyes, limiting exposure to themes like government surveillance, and changing the ending of the movie to being more literal.
What one may think of as being a Utopia could be a dystopia to another. Lowis Lowry’s 1993 novel “The Giver” may seem like a remake of the 1932 “Brave New World” by Aldous Huxley given their similar plot lines, but these two novels also have their differences. Jonas and Bernard, the protagonists of the novels, both have an intelligence that wants to know more, that wants to know what is outside of this Utopian place they live in. Both Lowry and Huxley have very different family situations. Lastly, both these societies live in their own definitions of Utopia, but the roots of their government have a resemblance to Plato’s Republic.
The Giver is in many ways Jonas’s coming-of-age story. Jonas reaches maturity only when he is given memory, and through memory, experience. In this way, Jonas becomes more mature at twelve than the "adults" of his community. But The Giver also teaches Jonas the wisdom to recognize his own shortcomings. Jonas truly becomes an adult at the