The Phantom was a first class creep and murderer. However, that may have been different if society didn’t judge a book by it’s cover. All throughout his life, The Phantom was scared of being judged due to his face. His deformity lead to his mom giving him a mask to hide his face. He was in a freak show where they called him the “Devil’s Child” and tortured him. All of this lead to the murdering of innocent lives and an obsession of a 16 year old girl named Christine. One main reason I think the Phantom would’ve been different is if, the mother cared about him. The Phantom’s mom clearly couldn’t even love her own child. Nothing says I love you more than giving your child a mask to hide their face. A child’s early stages in life is where they are being shaped to be who they are. If you shun them and hide their imperfections, they will never learn to truly accept themselves. The Phantom didn’t know any better, he was young. Shunning someone for their looks is one thing, but torturing and abuse is totally different. When Erik , the Phantom, was younger he was in a “Freak Show”. He was tortured and called “The …show more content…
Before he died he told her he would send her an angel of music who would sing. When she goes to the Opera she hears the Phantom singing her and believes the Phantom is the angel. She loved him so much, and it lasted for a while, until one night. In this part of the movie, he takes Christine underneath the Opera to his house. Here the Phantom sings to her, after this she takes off his mask, and is horrified. She flees to another guy, Raoul, whom she’ll marry later on. This makes him very angry and flips on his switch, which made him hurt many people. After all of this, at the end of the film, she realizes it’s on the inside that counts not the outside. She barely realized it, and still goes for the guy with the better looks. She never truly accepted him for who he is, she only cared about
Comparing Aung San Suu Kyi’s excerpt from “In Quest with Democracy” and Martin Luther King’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail”
Just as Edward is seen as the typical gothic horror “monster”, so can the “normal” suburban community. As has been discussed, the appearance of Edward can be considered monster-like, but what truly makes a monster, is its personality and what it
The children's version, meant for 8 to 12 year-olds, is the most like the original 1920s Gaston Leroux version. One of the few things that is changed, other than the overall abbreviation of the novel, is simplification of the language. For example, Erik begins describing himself by saying, "I was ugly. Worse than ugly"3. This straightforward, childlike language puts the novel at the preteen reading level while preserving Erik's crucial description. The Phantom of the Opera is the most popular book in Random House Publishing's youth "Bullseye Chiller" series, above other tales of vampires, werewolves, mummies, and witches4. Even children can identify with the love triangle among the three main characters - Erik, Christine and Raoul. They probably still pity his unrequited love for Christine, and the way in which he was mistreated. Night Magic, another adaptation, is much lighter reading and aimed at a different audience than the more literary variations. Night Magic is the modern-day romance version of Phantom, spanning two decades. Erik becomes a reclusive scarred contractor, and Christine is now Marisa, a spoiled and orphaned teenager with a beautiful voice. The traditional Erik kills without a thought when he feels threatened, while Erik's most raging moment in Night Magic consists of him throwing a stool across the room when a client has been flirtatious with Marisa5. This adaptation is lacking the "dangerous" side of Erik, so as not to scare
begins this writing from when she was eleven years old. Her mom and Granny were very
Richard Rodriguez and Amy Tan are two bilingual writers. Rodriguez comes from a Latin background where both his parents speak Spanish. Tan is a child of Chinese parents. Though they share some of the same situations; each has a different way of portraying it. This gives the readers two different aspects of being bilingual. Rodriguez told his story in Aria: a Memoir of a Bilingual Childhood. Tan told hers in Mother Tongue. In spite of the fact that they both wrote about their experiences of being bilingual, they told their stories were for very different reasons.
He hurts people, and does not want Christine to marry Raoul. The relationship between the Phantom and Christine is a conflict that affects how she acts towards Raoul. The phantom has instilled fear in her, for example, after the fight at the graveyard, the Phantom declared “Now let it be war upon you both!” The Phantom also had killed other people up into this point, during the production of Don Juan, the Phantom crashed the chandelier upon the audience, and then set fire to the theatre. Also, due to fear, Christine keeps their engagement secret from the world, and then upon the Phantom finding out, he reacts in a rage of fear and hatred, If she chooses Raoul, she has reasonable evidence to believe that they both should die. If the Phantom had not instilled this fear in her before, and they had not formed a rather (mean, abusive, dating) relationship, they could have reasonably worked this out between the three of them. Christine also has a relationship with Raoul, and then proceeds to become engaged to him. Their engagement becomes a source of fury to the Phantom that caused him to go into solitude and set fire to the theatre. The Phantom made her choose, to prove that she still “belonged” to the Phantom, even after her engagement to
Brent Staples of “Just Walk On By”, Judith Ortiz Cofer of “The Myth of the Latin Woman”, and Alice Walker of “Beauty: When the Other Dancer is the Self” had discovered their personal/cultural knowledge and identity through their experiences. They might have different experiences in different situation or incident it has the same concept. Brent Staples and Judith Cofer had similarly uncovered how they are being alienated especially in their foreign place. They both had experienced to be mistaken as somebody else. Brent Staples was once mistaken for a burglar in a magazine company and a mugger in a jewelry store. Cofer was also mistaken as a waitress by an old woman while she was holding her notebook which an old woman thought a menu
Young men who are sent to a war learn the reality in a very harsh and brutal way. Both the stories, ‘The Red Convertible’ and ‘The Things They Carried’ portray the life of a young soldier and how he psychologically gets affected from all the things he had seen in the war. Tim O’Brien’s ‘The Things They Carried,’ is more specific on the experiences of a soldier during a war where as Karen Louise Erdrich focuses more on describing the post war traumatic stress in her short story ‘The Red Convertible’. One thing similar in both the narrations is the Vietnam War and its consequences on the soldiers. From the background of both the authors it’s easy to conclude that Tim O’Brien being a war veteran emphasizes more on the
“The Outsiders” is by far one of my favorite books of all time. I think it’s a great story that tells about how a fourteen-year-old boy overcomes many challenges and learns how to get through each of them individually. “The Outsiders” is a story about a boy named Ponyboy that lives with his two older brothers, and they have a group of friends, called the Greasers. One day Pony gets upset with his older brother, Darry, and goes to a park with his friend Johnny to calm down. At the park, a group of kids, called Socs, come and start drowning Pony. Johnny gets scared and doesn’t know what to do so he kills one of the Socs. Soon after, Pony and Johnny decide to run away so they wouldn’t have to deal with
As I struggled to grab on to a thesis for this essay, it finally occurred to me that my empathy for the monster really was fundamental in my reading of this text. In further examining why I would feel this way, and by comments made in class on this subject, I soon realized that I had a parallel to the monster’s experience right in front of me – literally. My brother, borne with a severe cleft pallet and lip he has endured twenty-three years of surgeries and therapies to repair the structure of his face. The first surgeries focused primarily on function of his basic needs: eating, breathing, speaking etc. without emphasis on how he looked. However, these past few years, as he approached his early twenties, the surgeries have focused primarily on his appearance. Like the monster, he experiences many prejudices based on his appearance. He is frequently looked upon suspiciously in stores while shopping and has been approached by security on occasion. Strangers tend to shy away from him and often look away and do not respond if he directly address’ them. He
The act of being habitually and carefully neat and clean can make for an interesting topic in a comparison and contrast essay. Dave Barry compares the differences of how women and men clean in his compare and contrast essay, Batting Clean- Up and Striking out. In Suzanne Britt's compare and contrast essay, Neat People vs. Sloppy People she compares the differences of personalities between Sloppy people and neat people. Both essays compare cleanliness in one way or another however they both have differences regarding their use of humor, examples, and points made in their thesis.
(Shelley). The fact that Frankenstein fled from his creation very shortly after it came to life, proves how he refused to accept his obligations and responsibilities after his creature was created. ?The [creature] is Frankenstein?s abandoned child? (Mellor Abandonment 357). It is unfair to bring something into the world, and then not teach it how to survive. Victor was intimidated by his hideous characteristics and felt threatened by the creature. He did not know his creation at all, so he had no right to judge him. This is an example of how various people and society place too much judgment on physical appearance. The creature had just come into the world for the first time, and the first thing he saw was his creator screaming for his life as a result of his appearance. This traumatized the creation, and caused him to seek revenge on Frankenstein. This novel shows how when people are prejudice against physical deformity or ugliness, it automatically characterizes that person as bad or monstrous (Halberstam 59). Victor was the one who gave him these characteristics; so in fact, he is to blame for the creature?s appearance being so monstrous.
The Phantom of the Opera started out as a book written by Gaston Leroux, published January 8th in 1910 (Haining, 1). There have been several adaptations since then, including Andrew Lloyd Webber’s musical. The other adaptations were Das Phantom der Opera, which is also known as Das Gespent im Opernhaus produced during 1916 in Germany as a silent drama film, this is known as a lost film due to no known copies existing at this time. A silent drama horror was produced on November 15th, 1925, a drama thriller was produced during August 27th in 1943, a horror film was produced June 25th during 1962, and an indie thriller, called Phantom of the Paradise was adapted from Phantom of the Opera and then produced in October 31st of 1974.
First of all, the villain in the story, Erik, is the Opera Ghost who mysteriously murdered Joseph Buquet, who manipulated and kidnapped Christine Daae into his house
The Phantom of the Opera centers on the Paris Opera House which has over time become the Phantom’s domain. Upon the news that the opera house has been bought and is under new ownership, the Phantom demands that the new owners