Film Analysis Of The Movie 'Tuesday's With Morrie'

1308 Words3 Pages

Christina Bates
Film Analysis Paper
SOWK 692
Mrs. Michelle Gentle
University of Southern California
February 01, 2018

Introduction
Life is a developmental process that evolves over time beginning as an infant, growing into a child, and maturing into an adult all of which is a part of evolving. Many people take life for granted as people have a tendency of thinking that the next minute, the next hour, and their tomorrow will be there. People often do not realize they have taken a person or life for granted until a diagnosis or event takes place that is marked as fatal such as death. There continues to be an enormous amount of controversy surrounding what is the definition of death? As a result, in America in 1981, a federal law …show more content…

The movie Tuesday’s with Morrie by Mick Jackson (1999) focuses on a true story. Jackson (1999) introduces the character Morrie, a college …show more content…

The theoretical framework provides five stages coined by Kubler Ross as: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance (Corr,2015). The stages may interrelate with each other at the same time and there is not a certain order for the dying or bereaving person to go through the stages. Denial is conveyed by Mowry when he mentions to Mitch that he often asks “why me? What did I do to deserve this?” which created a depression for Mowry. Mowry battles with the anger stage. Mowry verbally expresses to Mitch that it angers him that he is dying as Mowry becomes very upset in the mornings when he awakes and in the evenings. Clearly, the denial and anger stages interrelate here. The bargaining stage was subtly conveyed when Mitch mentioned that he has been given more time to spend with his family and friends. The acceptance stage was portrayed in the film when Mowry mentioned that after he has his moments of anger, sadness, and frustrations in the mornings he makes a choice to look forward to the day. Mowry then chooses to begin his day positively after processing his emotions behind the scenes in the mornings when he awakes. Relative to the five stages of grief Corr (2015) notates that “individuals manifest various symptoms during the entire process of grief, and they are not experienced in a sequential order” (p.59). In the film, Mowry displays

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