Character Analysis Of Dora In The Movie Central Station

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In the movie, Central Station, the protagonist, Dora, has a dynamic character change. Dora is a thin, simple, and harsh woman. She lives alone in her apartment with no children or husband. She works out in the street writing letters for people that are not able to because they are illiterate. Before this “job,” Dora used to be a teacher in a school. Although Dora seems like a person that will not change her ego, she has deep thoughts that makes her turn into a more considerate person because her friend, Irene, brought it up.
Before the turning the point of Dora’s character, she was a woman that was greedy and did not care for others. As seen in the movie, Dora did not do her job thoroughly. She would charge a dollar or two for her to write and “send” letters through the mail. No one wondered whether she would actually send the letters or not. They would trust her to do it. When she would get home, she called her friend, Irene, to come over to her house. They would look through the letters, judge them, and debate whether or not Dora should send the letters. When a boy’s mother went to Dora so she could write a letter to her husband saying that her child, Josue, wanted to meet him, Dora did not look too pleased because she knew Josue’s father was a drunkard. After that event occurred, a bus hit and killed …show more content…

Afterwards, she got tickets for a bus so that Josue could be able to meet his father. She also got a ticket for herself so he would not go alone. She would look after him more than she did before but not to the point where she considered herself a mother. She had not fully changed though. Dora got off the bus, left the boy some money, and told the bus driver to take the boy to his final destination, which was his father’s house. Dora did not realize Josue got off the bus. They struggled to get to their destination, but once they did, Dora was by Josue’s side through it

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