Movie Analysis: Bus Stop

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Bus Stop Analysis Bus Stop, starring Marilyn Monroe, is a 1956 film about a young rodeo star, Bo Deker, (Don Murray) who travels to Los Angeles for a rodeo. On his trip, his friend, Virgil (Arthur O'Connell), tells him that it is about time for him to start looking for a young woman to marry. Bo decides that he is going to find an angel for himself. Upon arriving in Los Angeles, Bo and Virgil decide they would go to a local saloon and relax a little before the rodeo. At the saloon, the Blue Dragon, the boys meet the saloon’s showgirl, Cherie (Marilyn Monroe). Bo thinks that Cherie is his angel and that they should be married the next afternoon. As much as Cherie refuses, Bo and other men do not listen to her cries for help. Bo does not treat Cherie with respect, instead he treats her like the cattle he ropes in his rodeos. Virgil tries to tell Bo that she is not the girl for him, but Bo insists that he will marry her. Bo abducts Cherie and puts her on a bus to Montana with him. Towards the end of the film, Bo changes and begins to respect Cherie. Cherie sees …show more content…

The film’s major focal point is on the life of women. Women in the 50s were seen as objects and not for who they really were. Women were disrespected by men instead of being treated like the queens they were born to become. Men would violate the women with his eyes instead of being a kind gentleman towards them. Women were expected to stay at the house and care for the household duties instead of becoming the independent person that a woman is. The modern society still believes some of the themes of the 50s. Many men still tell a woman that she is to stay in the kitchen, but many women stand up and fight back for their individual rights. The women in the 50s had little to no individual rights. As society changes throughout the years, women have slowly claimed their place in the world and have demanded the respect of many

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