I’m writing a compare and contrast essay about “The Monsters Are Due on Maple St.” and “The Andy Griffith Show.” Both are a Tv show, but “The Monsters” is a book too. Suspicious and scary things start to happen to both towns. Only one town has a happy ending. Also they both take place in the afternoon. There were many similarities to “The Monsters” and “The Andy Griffith show.” Both towns started off peaceful and happy. Then, suspicious things started happening to both towns. Each town tried to solve the mystery. Each Tv show was filmed in black and white. Another similarity is the town’s people started making accusations before they solved the mystery. In addition, both towns started fighting each other. Then, strange people started showing up to both …show more content…
Also in “The Monsters” everything happened on one street, but in “The Andy Griffith show” everything happened throughout the whole town. The problem in “The Monsters” was that the aliens kept shutting their power off and on and the problem in “The Andy Griffith Show” was that a strange man kept lurking around town. “The Andy Griffith Show’s” suspect was a human, but in “The Monsters” the suspects were aliens. In “The Andy Griffith Show,” the film had a comical effect on the town, but in “The Monsters” the film had a scary effect on the town. “The Andy Griffith Show” was the only show that had a happy ending. Somebody got shot in “The Monsters,” but not in “The Andy Griffith Show.” The people in “The Monsters” threw rocks at each others houses when they got mad, but in “The Andy Griffith Show” they just wanted to fight. The power went out in “The Monsters,” but not in “The Andy Griffith Show.” The sheriff was one of the main characters in “The Andy Griffith Show,” but the police didn’t have a main role in “The Monsters.” The suspect in “The Andy Griffith Show” came off a bus, but in “The Monsters they came in a
Although the stories’ main components mirror each other, they still differentiate. For example, in “The Devil and Tom Walker,” everyone believes Tom has made a deal with the devil, whereas in “Young Goodman Brown,” the author questions the actuality
How do two text compare to each other with their differences and similarities? Each text can be unique in their way and can be similar in other. They can be compared based on themes, setting, and style of writing. Each text is similar and unique in their own way.
As for differences, I came upon many that I think show how the authors might’ve felt about star crossed love, young love, or just love in general. The little details I picked at really do draw lines between the two stories and give them both different meaning.
The protagonists in both stories made each story interesting and entertaining. Even though they are
Frankenstein and Psycho both have similar settings that identify with the horror genre because they are set in creepy places. For example, Frankenstein is set in an old terrifying castle and Psycho is set in a vacant eerie motel. The characters in the films also identify with the horror genre because they each have a menacing antagonist. However, the evil entities differ in how they were presented in each film. Although they are both equally evil antagonists in Psycho the antagonist is a realistic human murder who is a psychopath unlike, in Frankenstein which has a fantasy, zombie monster as an antagonist.
Differences (stick with at least four)- Ponyboy has a good relationship with sodapop and gets along better with darry but still has a very good relationship with his brother. In the beginning of the book, Pony gets jumped by some Socs, but he doesn’t get cut with a knife. In the movie, they cut him. In the movie when ponyboy is talking to cherry he says how the sun on the south side and she says”good how bout the north.” In the book it's written west and east. Also in the movie johnny never got his first beating from the soc in the book he does. In the book it gave more detail and information in the movie it starts like in mid way of the book.
They both are products of their environment because they both show how the town you live in the people you chose to hang with can all change you as an individual. The author Wes Moore was influenced by the people around him and the community which made him into a dealer and user of drugs because his friends were into drugs and getting in trouble the author Wes also saw the money that could be made selling drugs. The other Wes Moore moved a lot and everywhere he went the drug game was big and he could make a living. The other Wes also had a brother that was heavily into the drug game and keep
For example setting, in The Red Umbrella by Christina Diaz Gonzalez the cuba during the cuban revolution and the children have to immigrate to america in order to live a better life. Which in "A 'Band-Aid' for 800 Children" by Eli Sastow the setting is Which is the same situation found in San Diego. Another major difference is Dialogue in "A 'Band-Aid' for 800 Children" the story is based off dialogue and it shapes the story, however in "A 'Band-Aid' for 800 Children" by Eli Sastow there is no dialogue and they have to use different techniques. This helps reveal the subject because shapes the story and add the
They both have somebody dying in them.They die in the same area as each other.They both bleed out when they are dying.
A. In what ways are the two shorts stories by Shirley Jackson and D.H. Lawrence similar and different.
The film was nominated for a number of awards, including a GLAAD Media Award for Best Picture Musical/Comedy. They may seem quite different on the surface; however, the similarities they do have in common are mainly due to the genre they share. This is shown by the use of music, production design, and film techniques.
My two books for this comparison essay are “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson, and The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins. “The Lottery” is about the towns people drawing out slips of paper and seeing who gets the slip of paper with the black pencil dot; whereas The Hunger Games is about Katniss taking her sister's place when she she's called into the Hunger Games and trying to survive in the arena with Peeta in the Hunger Games. This book ends with Katniss and Peeta winning the Hunger Games and the two of them returning to District 12 with mixed feelings for each other, and an unforgettable experience. There are many similarities between these two books.
Where the two authors are utilizing the same literary element, the presentation is remarkably different and produces a different feel in each story.
Even with the similarities of theme, both movies have a parallel between how it portrays itself, and it further widens the gap due to its difference of timelines.
The book The Odyssey by Homer and the 1997 movie The Odyssey portrayed many real world learning aspects into each take of the story. The book and the movie both had many big ideas that were expressed as the same but had many detailed and specific ideas that were different.