The strengths of the movie was showing events happening at Tom Robinson's house and the weaknesses were taking out when the house caught on fire and when Mr.Finch unbuttoned his clothes . In the beginning parts of the movie it shows Bob Ewell harassing Jem and Scout while they waited in the car for Atticus to finish talking to Toms wife. The filmmakers did this to show how evil Bob Ewell is,how much he hates colored people, and it showed how people in the “deep south” would act towards colored people. This was a strength of the movie because it got the idea across of how it was back then in the “deep south” and how unfair life was for colored people. However, a weakness of the film was not showing Jem, Scout, and Calpurnia going to church.
Strength doesn’t come from what you can do. It comes from overcoming the things you once thought you couldn’t.”
Imagine you are a lawyer tasked with an impossible case, and everybody in your community is against you, but still there is a shred of hope you cling to. What might that be you ask? That to which you cling are your morals. In To Kill a Mockingbird Atticus Finch had been given the Tom Robinson case, where a black man was convicted of raping a white woman. As a single father of two children, he continues to reinforce his values throughout the trial and during his daunting task of raising his children. In To Kill A Mockingbird what Harper Lee suggests about the nature of morals is that you should try to stand up for what you believe in even if people oppose or reject your ideals. Even when faced with an insurmountable opposition you should stand up for your morals because in the end if your don't follow your beliefs you are just contributing to the problem. We should try to create a voice for what we believe in and impress that upon the next generation so they can continue to exercise their beliefs to make the world a better place.
“To Kill a Mockingbird” by Harper Lee is an exceedingly powerful novel. It includes many significant minor themes such as racism and hatred which leave the reader to have grown more attentive to the past once they complete the book. The book takes place in Maycomb County Alabama during the great depression. During this period there was a great deal of hate and prejudice towards people of color, in addition to a great regard to social class. The novels protagonists, Atticus Finch a well-respected lawyer and his children Jeremy “Jem” Finch and Jean Louise “Scout” Finch are a few of the towns occupants who respect others regardless of social class or race. For this reason, Atticus has no objections
To kill a mockingbird book is a story you should never read. It takes a long time to get to the middle, the climax of the story. It also has unnecessary characters that should have been in the story only at the beginning or not in the book at all. Lastly, it tells the unnecessary characters story than telling us more about what happened to Tom Robinson, Atticus Finch, Jem, and Scout relationship and also about how blacks and whites are not treated equally.
To Kill a Mockingbird, author Harper Lee uses unhypocritical, more experienced characters like Atticus to expose Jem and Scout to adult knowledge. Their adult influence is what brings about the empathetic growth and maturity of Jem and Scout.
In chapters nine and ten, Scout is teased by the kids in school because her dad is defending a black man. Preventing her from fighting, Atticus tells her to keep her head up high. When Christmas comes along, all the Finches gather at aunt Alexandra's. During the visit, Scout is stuck playing with her boring cousin Francis. Francis eventually rattles her by calling her daddy a "nigger-lover." This caused Scout to punch Francis' teeth. Unfortunatley, Scout got in trouble and went home with Atticus and Jem. Later that night, Scout told her side of the story to Uncle Jack and resolved everything. The next day, Jem and Scout fuss about how their dad isn't as fascinating as the other dads in town, but when Atticus saves the neighborhhood from the "mad dog", they change their perspective.
To Kill a Mockingbird has been documented as one of the greatest novels of all time. This novel was then turned into a movie; the director had all the challenges of making a movie out of this loved novel. It is very difficult to make a film be so similar to a novel. I believe Robert Mulligan did a good job keeping the film as close as possible to the novel. While there were many differences and similarities from the film and novel Robert Mulligan was able to keep the reality of racism many people went thru in the 1930’s.
The visit to Calpurnia’s church is included in the novel to visually demonstrate the black community and to display Lee’s ideas about the racial discrimination of African Americans and whites in the 1930’s. In the novel, Scout and Jem’s journey to the First Purchase M.E. Church is the first glimpse of the black community in Maycomb,
It further develops the plot by showing evidence of the segregation that was built up over the generation of the Finch family. Specifically, we begin to see the injustice and the problems Scout and Jem encounter because of Atticus’ passion. It develops the conflict because the real problem of the story and in the opinions of all of Maycomb think what Atticus is doing is going to ruin the respect and dignity built over the decades. The literary device, characterization, is used to label Atticus and Scout based on their actions and their credence, “he turned out to be a nigger-lover...” The reader begins to see the different diverse characters and the racial comments made, mostly the grandmother ruthlessly making Atticus seem like a horrible person in the minds of the young children. Atticus Finch becomes a victim of the ongoing prejudice due to his dreams to help an innocent black man. Harper Lee uses indirect characterization to further develop the theme, prejudice and the inequalities, through the characters for better understanding the unjust. When the trial is discussed in the novel, the town folks make racist comments or ideas in an attempt to persuade those who believe that Tom Robinson is innocent. In this quote, the theme discussed is the fear of prejudicial injustice. The author, Harper Lee, explains the fear and the restrictions a skin color could
Can you recollect a person that you hate all the time? Is this person rude, not sociable, emotionally abusive, or just plain racist? In To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee, the novel digs deep into the roots of Social Classes. One of these classes, in particular, is “White Trash.” “White Trash” is a class that has the poor white people that don’t contribute much to society and sometimes even make the society worse. There is one character that everyone loathes in Maycomb, and he is Mr. Ewell. Harper Lee portrays Mr. Ewell and his kids as uneducated, racist, murderous pigs because of three reasons. This family disrespects other members of the community in cruel ways, abuses their power by accusing a black man of rape, and tries to kill two
What the movie is really about is that sometimes the nothing can be fair and the racism is even worse.Finch deciede to defend the black man that supposedly that has raped a white woman which he never did.Also realizing that people are very ignorant toward the different races and just accusing just somebody of the different race of somebody.The films shows when the kids saw thier father take the hickory nuts because the client had no money.Then Scout and Jem began to learn what the racsim came to into thier town and made everything so bad and being in poverty sense it was close to the depression era.When going into the court room of the ending of saying thier last words in the jury the black man says that he felt sorry for the white woman
“But do you think I could face my children otherwise?” Atticus says while talking to his brother. “You know what’s going to happen as well as I do, Jack, and I hope and pray I can get Jem and Scout through it without bitterness, and most of all, without Maycomb’s usual disease.” Atticus uses his words and symbolism extraordinarily in the To Kill a Mockingbird novel but this along with a myriad of other quotes were left out of the movie adaptation leaving much of Atticus’ wisdom out. The movie adaptation of To Kill a Mockingbird is considered a masterpiece by thousands despite its faults although its flaws cannot be ignored. The movie abandoned the true evilness of Bob Ewell, the importance of the black
In her coming-of-age novel To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee, portrays the main character Jean Louise “Scout” Finch to reveal to the causes and effects of lies in the small southern town, Maycomb County. In Maycomb County, Alabama, the civilians of the town make “telling lies” a helpful thing to do. Most of the people who live in the town come up with lies to protect themselves and other, affecting the lives of innocents. This harmful and selfish act harms the town and its citizens in many ways. Through the use of characterization, rising actions, and falling actions, Lee portrays gossip spreading and telling lies have a big impact on the town, Maycomb.
The moment where Tom Robinson is found guilty, is not only heartbreaking for Scout and Atticus who believed in his innocence, but it is also heartbreaking for the audience who wants the best for our protagonist. The filmmakers beautifully manipulate the audience’s emotions, we feel anger at the white jury who cannot see pass their prejudices and Bob Ewell the one who should be convicted, but we also feel sympathy and pity for Tom Robinson and for Scout who experiences the real world for what it was at the time. These emotions are crucial to the representation of the theme of racism. Due to the historical feelings of America in the 1960s, the film needed to show the cruelty and use strong emotions, but also logic in order to reach the hearts of those who encouraged segregation.
In Harper Lee’s “To Kill A Mockingbird,” Mayella Ewell, a young woman as well as the daughter of Bob Ewell, lives a life of insolence and isolation in the town of Maycomb. As a Ewell, which they are familiarized as being vulgar, uneducated, and indigent, Mayella is disrespected by the people of Maycomb as well as by her father. During the court case, Atticus shows courtesy towards Mayella by addressing her as a miss and a ma’am, which is not surprising for his values of equality. Mistaking his manners with sarcasm, she replies with, “Won’t answer a word you say as long as you keep mockin’ me” (pg.181). Harper Lee is demonstrating the amount of disregard Mayella faces in her life, so much that courtesy can’t be identified as just that. Mayella finds that Atticus is ridiculing her for what she doesn’t have, respect from others. With a reputation such as Mayella’s, people treat her like an outcast. Her lonely life can be a reason to explain why she always asked for Tom Robinson’s company, she wanted to experience friendship and perhaps love for the first time. Her loneliness was so clear to see, even Scout, who still has their childhood-innocent mind, can see through it. Scout compares Mr.Dolphus Raymond’s “mixed children” to Mayella because they both don’t know where to stand in their social class, “white people wouldn’t have anything to do with her because she lived among pigs; Negroes wouldn’t have anything to do with her