There are many movies that people could label as their “favorite” although, “The Notebook” happens to be an all-time classic for people of all ages. The movie reflects back on a young couple, Allie and Noah’s love story. The movie is told by the older Noah, which he tells of how their love began and how it has changed over time. The movie is split up into times that have passed, when the couple was young, during the 1940’s, during the years when they had grown up and grown apart and during the present times while the couple has aged. The movie shows young love, or what many people call “puppy love” which eventually gets altered by the families’ decision for Allie to leave the young Noah, and Allie moving away for a higher education; college. …show more content…
Allie’s parents do not see her relationship with Noah as “serious” because of her age and her “inability to love.” As time goes on their love for each other grows more serious. Their love for each other is seen as more legitimate because they have aged a few years and they are now “experienced” with love. This movie portrays aging at its best and its’ worst. It shows Allie and her slowly deteriorating mind, along with Noah’s sharp mind and his ability to make Allie remember him and their love story. The movie portrays the aged versions of the characters as struggling, yet still happy and content with each other even though Allie has a heartbreaking illness. Although there are not many stereotypes about this movie, there are a few.
Allie has a controlling and rather bitter mother. Because Allie’s mother acquires these traits, it begins to make the younger Allie a rebel. Allie drops out of college to be with Noah, who happens to be the love of her life. Her mother does not approve of Noah because his family is not as wealthy as her family. Noah’s inability to provide fancy clothing, an extravagant home and the “proper” love for Allie makes Allie’s mother overbearing for the two. With the pressure from Allie’s mother, Allie decides to leave the town she is in to become more educated, in New York. New York is hundreds of miles away from her love, Noah, in Seabrook, South Carolina, a fictional place. This is a big move for Allie because she is forced to leave Noah and attend a college miles away from him because of her over bearing …show more content…
parents. With South Carolina being an “old-fashioned” and very conservative state, it is somewhat clear as to why Allie’s parents wanted her to find a “fit” gentleman to provide for her and her future needs. This may be why she was sent up north to New York to get an education and hopefully find a “fit” gentleman that was up to their standards. With the movie being filmed during World War II it also adds stress to Allie finding a “fit” gentleman to provide for her and give her a secure life. As time fades away from the young, rejuvenated couple, age hits them.
Allie’s cognitive decline goes for the worst. Just because someone’s age declines does not mean that there health will. Noah’s aging did not hit him as hard as Allie’s aging. Noah’s cognitive assurance was fine. His mind was swift, unlike the forgetful Allie. Society expects for older people to be cranky or hostile and that was not the case for the couple. Neither Allie nor Noah were cranky or hostile throughout the movie. In the movie, Allie’s family wanted Noah to give up on trying to recover Allie’s memory. Although they loved Allie they believed that her memory was gone forever and nothing Noah could do would fix
it. Allie and Noah were faced with many difficult decisions. They both constructed their own lives with their choices and actions that were based on the opportunities and restraints that they were given. Allie was able to get the best education she could with her parents’ wealth, although she is restricted on her personal decisions because of this. With Noah it was the complete opposite. Noah’s family was not wealthy so he was not able to go away from home and receive the best education possible. Instead of going away from home, he stayed and worked as a laborer, and soon went into the military. Love came through in the end for Noah and Allie. Noah found his way back to Allie. He waited for her and was very patient. He did not force his love on her and neither did she. When they fell in love, it just happened. It was not with a prearranged marriage from her wealthy parents and it surely was not to whom her parents wanted her to marry. Noah just so happened to be the opposite. Although Noah did not have wealth, he had a caring heart and a contrite spirit that connected perfectly for the two. In the end, love pushed through for the two.
The climax of this story is when Grace and her friends discover that there is not just one scarred man. There are several of them who are all accused of killing Caroline, Grace’s mother. Noah is kind of confused and mad and he feels as if they were lying to him and they made this all
isolation which is a stage during early adulthood was present throughout the entire movie. In this stage people are looking for someone to share their lives with. I think that this stage happened a lot sooner in Noah and Allie lives because they were not looking for each other but rather they ended up finded that they did love each other and that they both already knew that they were the only people that they wanted to be with. During the movie Allie leaves Noah to go to school, Noah wrote a letter to her every day for a year, but he never heard back from Allie since her mother was hidding the letters. Noah’s father soon died of old age and he was left alone, Noah soon fell into a depression and he isolated himself from everyone because he lost everything he ever wanted. Allie on the other hand found someone else who she felt made her feel like the person her mother wanted her to be. Allie soon found out that Noah was alive and he had finished their dream home and that’s when Allie discovered that she was always meant to be with Noah and no one
After Allies father catches her and Noah making out in the truck, he tells Allie that he wants to have the chance to meet her friend, so he politely asked Allie to invite Noah over Sunday for dinner. While seating at the dinner table, Noah was asked what job he does for a living. After Noah stated that he was a laborer it was pretty clear by their facial expressions (especially her mother’s) that they did not approve of their relationship. Later, Anne makes the statement that “summers almost over” giving her daughter the idea that her and Noah probably will not be seeing each other anymore. Moreover, Anne decided to tell Noah about Allie’s school plans, and how he was not in the plan. Anne believes that their relationship is just a summer fling, or a short-term initial attraction. This scene most certainly relates to chapter nine. Allie was unable to develop her Relationship of Choice simply because they did not find Noah suitable for her, mainly because he was not wealthy. Al...
Stereotypes are used everyday, by every human, no matter how much effort we put into speaking objectively. Throughout the centuries, stereotypes have been made for every race, gender, or group of individuals. Examples of such include all blonds are unintelligent, all men are meatheads, women are not strong, and so on. These comments are often used to hurt this group in order to make their own flaws less visible. In the book my RC class read, The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton, many stereotypes were made about greasers that the narrator, Ponyboy, completely went against. Most believed greasers were uneducated, violent, and emotionless, but this protagonist completely shattered this imposed mold that society has crafted for anyone who is part of a
The movie Crash was directed by Paul Haggis is a powerful film that displays how race is still a sociological problem that affects one 's life. It also focuses on how we should not stereotype people based on their color because one may come out wrong in the end. Stereotyping is a major issue that is still happening in today 's society and seems to only be getting worse. This movie is a great way to see the daily life and struggle of other races and see how racism can happen to anyone, not just African Americans which seems to only be seen in the news and such.
“I 've pretty much learned I can let that [being black] hinder me if I want to ... or I can fight for different kinds of roles.” This is a quote from one of the most well-known African American actresses in the film industry, Halle Berry (Halle Berry Quotes, Sucessstories.com). Most people aren’t aware of the rut African-Americans in the film and television are in when it comes to the roles they play. Have you noticed that most are placed as comedic or oppressed characters? There should be more diverse acting parts for African-American characters.
Noah reads their love story to Allie everyday in hopes that she will remember him and everything they have experienced together. Throughout most of the day as he reads to her, she does not recall that the story is about herself and Noah. She also does not remember who her children and grandchildren are when they come to visit. At the end of the film Allie becomes lucid for a few moments and realizes that the story Noah is reading is their own and they begin to dance together. After a few short moments Allie relapses into Alzheimer’s and has no idea who Noah is and why he is there with
Noah wrote Allie for a year in hopes to hear from Allie, but her mother intervened the letters, so Allie never received them and the two never knew the love for one another and had no choice but to move on with their lives. Allie became engaged to a businessman named Lon, Noah bought the farmhouse and restored it
The reason why Allie had to leave Noah 6 years ago was because the mother did not want them to see each other. Allie visited Noah and the house that he had built while her engagement was still on. Noah and Allie’s undying love for each other again brought Allie to tell her fiance that their relationship is over. Allie’s mother shows up at the door and takes her to her lost love. Her mother told her that her life could have been very different with this other man. After them being rebonded, her mother pulls out 365 letters from Noah after their first year of not being
In the movie crash which takes place in the diverse Metropolis of Los Angeles and challenges audience to confront their prejudice. The movie is centered around a Brentwood house wife and her district attorney husband to cops and Persia shopkeeper and a pair of carjackers and Korean couple. Stereotyping is defined as a simplified and standard does concept or image infested with special meaning and held in common by members of a group. I believe that stereotyping happens due to socialization and the way we’ve been conditioned throughout our lives and raised. The movie even starts out with stereotyping and prejudice. In the very first scene there is a car accident between two different ethnicities. The Asian woman claims that it was the Mexicans women fall for breaking too early saying that Mexicans
While watching movies, have you ever noticed that the villains in almost every single Hollywood film are of Middle Eastern or European descent? In a reoccurring theme of Hollywood, the villains in these films are almost always foreigners or people of color. This is a stereotype. On the other side of the spectrum, we often see that the heroes of these films are most often than not white males. This is another stereotype. Within the last few years, we’ve seen actors such as Will Smith, Morgan Freeman, and Zoe Saldana take the lead roles, so it can’t be said that there are no non-white heroes, but there certainly isn’t many. Hollywood action movies, moreover than other genres, are typically loaded with an abundance of stereotypes. The way these movies are composed and structured can tell us a great deal about the views held within the American psyche and who holds the social power. The harsh reality is that the media ultimately sets the tone for societal standards, moralities, and images of our culture. Many consumers of media have never encountered some of the minorities or people of color shown on screen, so they subsequently depend on the media and wholeheartedly believe that the degrading stereotypes represented on the big screen are based on fact and not fiction. Mary Beltran said it best when she stated in her “Fast and Bilingual: Fast & Furious and the Latinization of Racelessness” article, “ultimately, Fast & Furious mobilizes notions of race in contradictory ways. It reinforces Hollywood traditions of white centrism, reinforcing notions of white male master while also dramatizing the figurative borders crossed daily by culturally competent global youth – both Latino and non-Latino” (77). This paper will specifically look...
The man, Noah, is a poet in Allie's eyes and he expresses love as, "Our souls were one, if you must know and never shall they be apart; With splendid dawn, your face aglow I reach for you and find my heart" (183). As teenagers, the two of these "love birds" had one summer of intense passion that was ended abruptly by Allie's parents disapproval. When Allie left New Bern the couple planned to keep in touch by writing letters, but because Allie's moms did not approve of Noah, she hid all his letters from her without Allie knowing. Noah continued to write but without a reply, his hopes dissolved. While Noah sat on his porch playing his guitar with his three-legged dog Clem, he reminisced about the adventures they had, foreshadowing the events that followed. "And if, in some distant place in the future, we see each other in our new lives, I will smile at you with joy, and remember how we spent a summer beneath the trees, learning from each other and growing in love. And maybe, for a brief moment, you'll feel it too, and you'll smile back, and savor the memories we will always share together" (151). There are surprises one would never expect and descriptions that one can't even imagine; they pull the reader in and paint a picture in the mind. This novel will make the reader cry, gasp, sigh, and cry once more.
The romantic drama, directed by Nick Cassavetes from a screenplay by Jeremy Leven and adapted by Jan Sardi from the novel, is a rollercoaster definition of true love. It is told in recollection of memories as Duke (James Garner) reads excerpts audibly from a love story to Allie Calhoun (Gena Rowlands) a patient suffering from Alzheimer 's.The theme is going above and beyond for someone who you genuinely love, and how sometimes you will never stop loving someone no matter what happens between you and them or the struggles and hardships that may get in between. Allie’s heart is so troubled by this love story about Noah, a poor Southern boy who works in a lumberyard, and his wealthy girlfriend, who is also coincidently named Allie, that for terse moments his readings re-generate her cloudy memory into focus. “The Notebook” shows how miracles can happen by having Allie remember memories from many years ago despite her
The Notebook is about an elderly man who tells the story of his life with the one he loves the most, his wife. He tells the story to his wife, who has Alzheimer’s Disease, which is a degenerative disease that affects a person’s memory. She has no recollection of him or their life together, or even her own children. She wrote the story of their love herself, so that when he read the story to her, she would come back to him. There are three things that I would like to discuss about this movie.
This theme is a big lesson learned throughout the whole story of Allie and Noah. She loves Noah with all of her heart when she is a young woman, and yet when they were separated for a period of time she finds her way back to him. When Allie sees Noah again for the first time in years, she realizes she never stopped loving him and her heart belongs to him. When she has to choose between Noah and Lon, she follows her heart and chooses the man to whom she loves most.