A Kiss In Time We all know the story of Sleeping Beauty right? About how she pricked her finger on a spinning wheel only to fall asleep and be woken up 100 years later by true love's kiss. Well, what if I were to tell you that instead of waking up 100 years later, she woke up 316 years later and was forced to live in modern times? That’s what happened to Princess Talia of Euphrasia in Alex Flinn’s, A Kiss In Time. Both the original Sleeping Beauty, by the Brothers Grimm, and A Kiss In Time have several similarities, but they also have many differences. Some of those differences are that Talia was woken up several hundred years later by a modern boy, she ended up getting kidnapped by the witch, and in the end her kingdom was turned into something …show more content…
Like in the original story, when Talia, who was Sleeping Beauty and the princess of the land, was first born, her parents had a party to celebrate her birth, but they didn’t invite one of the fairies, Malvolia, to the celebration; that fairy ended up showing up angry and cursed the child that, “Before her sixteenth birthday, the princess shall prick her finger on a spindle and die!” the curse was then altered by the last fairy, who hadn’t given the child a gift yet, to say that Talia wouldn’t die when she pricked her finger; instead, she would fall into a deep sleep, along with the rest of the kingdom, until one day she will be awakened by true love’s first kiss. Another similarity was that, the night before her sixteenth birthday, Talia, was lured to an old tower in the castle where a woman, the evil witch Malvolia, was spinning thread for dresses. She tricked Talia into touching the spindle and Talia and the rest of her kingdom fell into a deep sleep. The last major similarity in these two books is, that Talia was awoken by true love’s kiss, like Sleeping beauty was, and Talia and Jack, the boy that found her a saved her from her curse, got to live happy lives …show more content…
One of the main differences was that, instead of being woken up 100 years later by a prince, like Sleeping Beauty was, Talia was woken up 316 years later by a common boy and had to live in modern times. In “Little Briar-Rose she pricked her finger, fell asleep, was awoken by true love’s kiss, married the prince and lived happily ever after. While on the other hand, Talia did prick her finger and was awoken by a kiss, but Malvolia didn’t believe it was true love’s kiss. So, in order to prove that Jack was Talia’s true love, Malvolia kidnapped Talia and forced her to prick her finger on a spindle for the second time. Jack saved Talia for the second time and proved that he was, in fact, Talia’s true love. Another major difference in the two books was how they ended. Sleeping Beauty, in “Little Briar-Rose,” got to marry her true love and they lived happy lives together. In A Kiss In Time they decided to make Talia’s kingdom a tourist attraction, since it was present day and we don’t have castle’s like that anymore. Jack and Talia stayed together to see where the future would take
...d coloring of certain images. The novel, however, puts much greater emphasis on the imagination and creativity, and on the main character Tita. The novel really makes the reader feel Titas pain and grow with her as she discovers her freedom, whereas the movie failed to achieve this. Moreover, the movie tends to ignore the significant of 3 integral motifs, cooking, tears and sensuality.
Presently, many books and fairytales are converted movies and often, producers alters the original tales to grasp the attention of a large audience. However, some of these interpretations hide the primary interpretation. The original interpretations of the Disney classics Snow White and Sleeping Beauty are greatly reinvented from the original fairytales Sun, Moon, and Talia and Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs because of the brutal nature of the treatment women in these original forms. Although there are differences in certain aspects from the original tales to the movies, there are many issues that are influential to the young girls who are still watching the Disney version. I realize this when my youngest niece, Anella asks me, “Why can’t I be beautiful and fall asleep and suddenly wake up to finally find my prince?” This is true in all cases of the four different translations of the fairytales. Every single girl in these stories are in a “beautiful” state of half-death who wake to find a prince who if eager to carry them off. This can lead to negative psychological effects on young girls as they are growing up, creating a large amount of pressure and low self-esteem due to the beauty that these stories portray and maintaining restrictions that these women experience in the stories. While it is true that Sleeping Beauty and Snow White and the Seven Dwarves are considered Disney classics that entertain children and provide meaningful role models, it is evident that the true, vulgar nature of these tales are hidden; these stories are about women who are thrown away.
Things that are similar about the two novels and how both of their dreams were crushed are both are groups of people who have these dreams and each finds or meets something that can help their dreams come true, the pearl and Candy. Furthermore, the realization of their dreams coming to an end is, in both books, caused by the death of someone who is a part of the dream, Coyotito and Lennie.
Both stories deal with a young girl who, with the help of a little magic, is able to find her prince and live happily ever after. Needless to say on of these versions is much darker than the other, but the story sends an overall good message.
There were many differences among the two stories, among these differences were setting, weapons, the classic “Balcony Scene,” other new adoptions to the film, the concentration on the main characters of Romeo and Juliet, and the implementation of imagery to the storyline. First, the setting of the story is probably one of the biggest differences between the two stories. The original version of the tale is set in Verona, Italy. The newer version is set in a fictitious Verona Beach, California, a city with the appearance of modern day Los Angeles after a riot. The new environment gives familiarity to the viewer, allowing them to relate to the situation at hand, bringing it to a modern time. Another change to the story was the weapons used within the story. The original story used daggers as weapons whereas the newer version uses guns (appropriately titled sword, dagger, etc.). The famed “Balcony Scene,” where Romeo and Juliet avow their love to each other was dramatically changed in many aspects. In the original version, Juliet appears on the balcony and utters the famous words “O Romeo, Romeo! Wherefore art thou Romeo?” (Shakespeare 45) Juliet then goes into the speech about names, asking Romeo to deny his fathers name. Romeo is hiding in the shadows below and hears the words of Juliet. After hearing Juliet’s speech Romeo steps into the light. Romeo and Juliet profess their love for each other and they plan to get married in secrecy.
Although sex is not a central theme in Slaughter House Five, Kurt Vonnegut does not hesitate to integrate sexual content into his story. He is able to demonstrate his belief of how sex is perceived before and after the World Wars, showing how much the destruction of war has changed the modern world.
In 1959, two young African American boys, James Hanover (9) and David “Fuzzy” Simpson (7) were charged with molestation of a young white girl. The case is known as “The Kissing Case”, a case that has been much forgotten and to some even unheard. While there were many issues within the case, the main factor that changed the young boys’ lives forever was the simple fact that they were innocent. Some of the problems in this case are issues that are judicial system still seem unfit to get right in many cases.
While Catherine Breillat’s “Sleeping Beauty” does stay true to the original Brother’s Grimm tale in its archetype, she does stray from the original version in many ways in order to convey a message. In comparison to her film “Bluebeard”, “Sleeping Beauty” was much more explicit, with graphic sexual scenes. Additionally, this tale is different in that the main character is not the dainty frail princess we usually see in classic fairytales, but a tomboy who wants to referred to as “Vladmir” and has sexual encounters with another woman. Breillat contrasts the lesbian sex scene where Anastasia is laughing and enjoying herself with her having sex with Peter where she cries throughout it and puts her face down in a pillow after it is done.
Once upon a time, there was a beautiful young maiden with long, golden hair who was locked up in a tower. One day a handsome prince found her, and he fell in love with her and carried her away to his castle where they lived happily ever after. Or did they? The fairytale you’ve heard isn’t the one I’m telling. No, I’m afraid that the trials of our dear little Rapunzel (whose name wasn't actually Rapunzel) didn’t end there. But in order to get there, we should really start from the beginning, because that’s where the storytellers all went wrong, long ago and far away...
Even though the time periods are very different (by 200 years) the formulas for their fairy tales seems to remain constant. Character development, which is very important in fairy tales is both well done and accurately portrays the living situation for a character in the time period of when it was written. Perrault's version seems to put Cinderella's family in a higher, well-off situation of the Grimm's because she is still abided to obey the rules that her dying mother had set for her. Something that you would see a women do in the late 1600's. Her higher class and the rules of her generation has set her to not have revenge on her step-sisters and helps them marry in the end, making a happy ending to the story for everyone. This also gives off the rules of the time to the young girls who would be listening or reading this story back then. They knew their place in society and tales like Perrault's reinforced it. The Grimm's version, titled Ashenputtle, has key elements in the story line that make it very different from Perrault's Cinderella. The theme becomes very different as the end of the tale results in revenge on the step-sisters from Ashenputtle. This variation in the story line represents the setting in which the Grimm's either lived in themselves, or the living situation of the people who related this tale to the Grimm's.
Ninety percent of Americans marry by the time that they are fifty; however, forty to fifty percent of marriages end in divorce ("Marriage and Divorce"). Love and marriage are said to go hand in hand, so why does true love not persist? True, whole-hearted, and long-lasting love is as difficult to find as a black cat in a coal cellar. Loveless marriages are more common than ever, and the divorce rate reflects this. The forms of love seen between these many marriages is often fleeting. Raymond Carver explores these many forms of love, how they create happiness, sadness, and anything in between, and how they contrast from true love, through his characters in "What We Talk About When We Talk About Love". Four couples are presented: Mel and Terri, Nick and Laura, Ed and Terri, and, most importantly, an unnamed elderly couple; each couple exhibits a variation on the word love.
Oates’ novella is a love story between Officer Dromoor and the Maguire women, both Teena and Bethel. It is a tale that morphs a love for justice into one that represents a love for feeling supported. The Maguires are scorned by the people of Niagara Falls. Teena, even more so after the gang rape, is perceived as the town ‘whore,’ drug addict, and a bad parent. John Dromoor’s mere presence on the family creates a mutual respect, or love, amidst such difficult circumstances. Years after the events at the Rocky Point Park occurred and Dromoor is no longer in the Maguires’ lives, the story ends with Bethel’s husband telling her that she “looked so lonely, suddenly” (Oates 154) after
In many fairy tales, there is always a damsel in distress that is beautiful and the male character always falls in love with her. In Rapunzel the short story, Rapunzel is put into a tower and lives there most of her young life by her ‘mother’ before her prince comes to recuse her. The difference between Tangled and Rapunzel the short story is that, Rapunzel is the princess and her prince is actually a thief, which ends up falling in love with her. Tangled illustrates how a naïve and beautiful heroine, evil mother figure, and a shallow egotistical hero can make a fairy tale story end with love and marriage.
As the world has transformed and progressed throughout history, so have its stories and legends, namely the infamous tale of Cinderella. With countless versions and adaptations, numerous authors from around the world have written this beauty’s tale with their own twists and additions to it. And while many may have a unique or interesting way of telling her story, Anne Sexton and The Brother’s Grimm’s Cinderellas show the effects cultures from different time periods can have on a timeless tale, effects such as changing the story’s moral. While Sexton chooses to keep some elements of her version, such as the story, the same as the Brothers Grimm version, she changes the format and context, and adds her own commentary to transform the story’s
Overall, I didn’t enjoy this story, even though I tend to like modern adaptations. For one thing, I liked the adaptation in Folk & Fairy Tales called Sleeping Beauty and the Airplane, it had a cute vibe to it. Anyway, there are a few reasons why I didn’t care for A Kiss to Wake the Sleeper. In short, the story was strange especially towards the end. In the beginning, I didn’t have any problems except for the fact I didn’t realize it was an adaptation until I saw ‘sleeper’ on page 413. To be honest, I didn’t see the title that would have clued me in that this was a Sleeping Beauty adaptation, but that’s not the point. However, one of my points is that the transition between talking about SCID to nuns and castles felt strange - it caught me off guard.