Connection: Desperation makes people do bad things Texts: V for Vendetta (V kills people he doesn’t need to (BTN) and tortures his only friend (Evey) My Sisters Keeper(The mother tries to save Kate, completely ignores other children and sacrifices anna) Maze Runner (WICKED releases flare and kills everyon eso the world doesn’t starve.) Minority Report (Lamar kills Agatha’s mother so she can keep predicting crimes and stop more deaths from happening) “The Road to Hell is paved with good intentions.” What this famous proverb means is that sometimes when people are in desperate situations, they will make choices that end badly or have a horrible impact on others, in order to achieve their goal. In the Texts V for Vendetta, Daredevil, My Sister’s …show more content…
Keeper, Maze Runner and Minority Report, A main character is so focused on doing the right thing, that along the way they do terrible things. In the movie “V for Vendetta” James McTeigue shows the audience a character so desperate for vengeance that he will do anything to achieve it.
V is trying to make his world a better place by freeing dystopian Britain from the rule of the fascist Norsefire party, who have ruined his life. However his methods for doing this include torturing Evey, the young woman who trusted him, and killing anyone who was involved with Larkhill, even if they have changed their ways. McTeigue shows the audience that V is doing this because his mind is set on the goal of destroying anyone who was responsible for his past when he kills the workers at the BTN building just to send a message to Chancellor Sutler. At this point, V has gone beyond seeing the workers at BTN as humans, and has started seeing them as pawns in his game of revenge. This shows that when people are desperate to achieve something, they will stop thinking of the consequences of their …show more content…
actions. In The Book, “My Sister’s Keeper”, by Jodie Picoult, A mother ruins her youngest child life while desperately trying to save her eldest child.
When Sara’s eldest daughter Kate gets leukaemia, she chooses to have another child, a genetically engineered baby designed to be a perfect donor match for Kate. What begins as a one off to save Kate’s life snowballs as Sara forces Anna to give her sister, blood and body parts, but when Mrs Fitzgerald attempts to coerce Anna into giving up a kidney, she files for medical emancipation. The Author shows how Sara has become blinded by her desperation to save Kate during the corse of the court case, specifically with dialogue such as “I think that this family, when they conceived Anna, had the best of intentions.” and Sara replying with “You don't know what it's like, until your child is dying. You find yourself saying things and doing things you don't want to do or say”. Jodie Picoult shows us that if forced people will make terrible choices if it means they can save someone they love, as Sara does by hospitalising Anna and taking parts of her body to save Kate. Sara is trying to do the best she can to save her daughter, in the time before she dies of
lukemia. In the Series “The Maze Runner” By James Dashner, The reader is shown a world in which a government trying to save civilisation, destroys it out of desperation. Much like in “My sister’s Keeper”, people of Authority are making bad choices for the people they are responsible for, because of a forced time limit. In this dystopian future, the world is running out of resources and a desperate coalition of governments around the world knows that if something isn’t done quickly, the world will die of starvation. Because of the desperation of this situation, the coalition approves the first solution they come across, releasing a disease that mutates and causes billions of lives to suffer. They do this so that the world’s population will fall and the people who survive the flare will enjoy a better life with more food. James Dashner shows how government’s making rash decisions out of desperation, can have a massive impact on their citizens when Thomas leaves the maze to see how society has deteriorated from when he was last a part of it. In the final text, “Minority Report” By Steven Spielberg, Spielberg shows us that if someone feels threatened, they will react out of desperation. When his crime prevention unit is threatened with closure, Director Lamar decides that the only way to save his department is to kill Anne Lively. By killing this woman, Director Lamar ensure the future of his crime prediction department, as she was planning to take away his means of predicting crime, Anne’s daughter. Much like V, Lamar see’s anyone who gets in his way as a threat to his department and kills them, as he does with Anne and attempts to do with John Anderton, who figures out Lamar’s secret and threatens to expose him, which would end the prevention of crime department. What Speilberg is teaching us is that once one bad choice has been made, one ofter finds themselves making more bad choices out of desperation, as Lamar does when he tries to
Imagine a world where civil liberties have been stripped away, a bare façade of civilization left behind. This is a world that is inhabited by people who were once free-willed and strong-minded. These people have become weak and obedient, easily bent to the will of their oppressive government. The world that these words have conjured up in your mind is the same existence that the characters occupy in Edwidge Danticat’s “A Wall of Fire Rising” and Alan Moore’s “V” for Vendetta. Danticat’s story is about a small family living in present-day Haiti with their small, ambitious son. The country is a mish-mash of people amassing obscene fortune while the rest scrape at the bottom of the proverbial barrel just to make ends meet; the class gap is seemingly far apart. In Danticat’s story, the husband spends his days either working at the sugarcane mill or searching for work elsewhere. Each day the husband watches the mill owner’s son take a hot air balloon up into the sky, and each day becomes more envious of the freedom attached to that action. After complaining to his wife about his exhaustion with their current situation he claims that he wants to take the hot air balloon for himself and leave Haiti for a far-away and better place. The following day, the husband makes good on his word, abandons his family, and takes the hot air balloon up into the sky. In James McTeigue’s version of “’V’ for Vendetta”, the country is a futuristic and dystopian London. Corrupt politicians control every aspect of the country and the citizens within. The main character, a masked vigilante by the name of V, grows tired of his country’s lack of freedom and decides to destroy an historic courthouse at midnight on the morning of November the 5th. The building i...
While she might think that her plans are working, they only lead her down a path of destruction. She lands in a boarding house, when child services find her, she goes to jail, becomes pregnant by a man who she believed was rich. Also she becomes sentenced to 15 years in prison, over a street fight with a former friend she double crossed. In the end, she is still serving time and was freed by the warden to go to her mother’s funeral. To only discover that her two sisters were adopted by the man she once loved, her sister is with the man who impregnated her, and the younger sister has become just like her. She wants to warn her sister, but she realizes if she is just like her there is no use in giving her advice. She just decides that her sister must figure it out by
Susanna recalls her suicide attempt: “I wanted to get rid of a certain aspect of my character. I was performing a kind of self-abortion of my character… but i had no heart to try it again” (Kaysen 39). Although Susanna’s action is viewed by some critics as alarming, it was a learning experience for her, and she moved on. Furthermore, Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs emphasizes the idea of undergoing drastic measures in order for results to be evident. Also, self-actualization stresses the need for personal growth that spans a person’s lifetime (McLeod). Susanna’s drastic actions allow her to realize her need for self-evaluation and understanding her actions. Susanna explains that “scar tissue has no character... It doesn’t show age or illness... It shields and disguises what’s beneath. That’s why we grow it, we have something to hide” (Kaysen 16). Seeing Polly’s scar tissue, Susanna acknowledges the motives behind the creation of the form of skin, and thus, her understanding brings her closer to identifying her motives and what she seeks to gain from her actions. Susanna explains what goes into one’s detachment from life: “... practice imagining yourself dead, or in the process of dying” (Kaysen 36). Susanna acknowledges preparing for suicide, however, she realizes after
The approach towards freedom is hard to achieve against a totalitarian government, but possible to win with the people’s belief. 1984 by George Orwell and James McTeigue’s V for Vendetta portrays the same idealism of the anti-heroes, Winston and V. An anti-hero is “a protagonist who lacks the attributes that make a heroic figure, as nobility of mind and spirit, a life or attitude marked by action or purpose” (“Antihero”). Winston is not courageous, peaceful, and self-centered along the path of freedom for Oceania, whereas the anti-hero, V, is violent in his actions, impatient and careless in his pursuit to free London from the totalitarian government. As a matter of fact, V and Winston have the opposite behaviours; this is significant because it helps to compare the approach of the anti-heroes toward freedom. At the end of 1984 and V for Vendetta, the result of their approach is different from each other; Winston gives up on the liberation of Oceania, while V dies knowing that London is freed from Norsefire Party.
Through this dramatic irony Orwell is trying to picture to the audience the selfishness of the pigs, and so criticizing the selfishness of Stalin and the leaders of the Russian Revolution. The selfishness of totalitaristic leaders is also depicted in V for Vendetta. James McTeigue draws this idea into V for Vendetta through allusions to the Nazi Party and Hitler. This allusion is established throughout the film, with direct representations, such as the close up of the Nazi flag in Gordons house and through the symbolism of the finger men logo which vaguely resembles the swastika. Allusions to Hitler are also drawn straight from Sutler himself. The rhyming of Hitler and Sutler as well as during flashbacks of
Thomson’s main idea is to show why Pro-Life Activists are wrong in their beliefs. She also wants to show that even if the fetus inside a women’s body had the right to life (as argued by Pro – Lifers), this right does not entail the fetus to have whatever it needs to survive – including usage of the woman’s body to stay alive.
V for Vendetta is a graphic novel written by Allan Moore. It is a story full of comedy with V as the protagonist who is out to fight and destroy the government and affects innocent people. The novel was later adapted into a film and directed by James McTeigue and written by Wachowski Brothers.
T.C. Boyle tells a story again about how people intend good and cause damage. For example, they pack mor...
A dystopian government is “futuristic, imagined universe in which oppressive societal control and an illusion of a perfect society are mainstreamed through corporate, bureaucratic, technological, moral, or totalitarian control (1984 Unit Essay Prompt). The book 1984 is a dystopian novel written by George Orwell that was published in 1949. V for Vendetta is a 2006 American-German political thriller film directed by James McTeigue. This paper will be comparing these two fictional dystopian governments to the United States on how they are similar and different. Even though these are fictional novels they are very similar to how the United States of America function today. The US is similar to a dystopian government because the citizens think
Death is inevitable to all forms of life. In giving birth to a typical family, Flannery O’Connor immediately sets the tone for their deaths, in the story, A Good Man is Hard To Find. O'Connor’s play on words, symbolism and foreshadowing slowly paves the way for the family’s death.
Henry V, like most characters created by Shakespeare, is very complex, and cannot by defined in black and white or as good or bad. However, he is the sum of his actions, and his actions and decisions during the campaign during the campaign in France lead him to be classified as a war criminal. A politician who works for his own good and through that, the good of his country, Henry’s decisions are often cold and calculated, designed to manipulate those around him.
The setting of the film, as a whole, displays Marxist ideas of capitalism. One of the foundational themes of Marxist thought is that, within a capitalist society, there will be a distinct polarization between two classes: The ruling class (bourgeoisie), and those whom they rule over (proletariats) (Korczynski, Hodson, & Edwards, 2006, p. 33). V for Vendetta takes place in a not-so-distant future version of a dystopian England.
‘“I ain’t got no friends take a handsaw to their own children’” (Morrison 221). Sethe is not the first or last mother to murder her own child. Famously, a woman named Andrea Yates was also found guilty of a horrific spree of infanticide against her five children. Killing them in the family bathtub, Yates proceeded to drown her son two-year-old son Luke, three-year-old son Paul, and five-year-old son John, her six month old daughter Mary, and seven-year-old son Noah (Picard). Although the outcome was the same, compared to Yates, Sethe’s dealings were not nearly as torturous and disturbed. The motives of both women were completely different. Yates’s actions were psychologically based and derived from depression and insanity while love and fear drove Sethe’s actions. It is hard to explain what went on in the mind of Yates, but it can easily be deduced that mercy underlined Seth’s unorthodox act of love. Both women went to jail and had to live with their regrettable ...
The debate has caused many to argue either in support of or against abortion. In the article “A Defense of Abortion,” Judith Jarvis Thomson uses analogical reasoning (such as the case of the sick violinist) to support and convince a right to abortion. Thomson presents the argument that all people are entitled a right to life and that a person’s right to life outweighs any person’s right to decide what happens to their body (1, Thomson, CC p.188).Thomson proposes a hypothetical situation in which the reader is kidnapped and their circulatory system is linked with that of a sick violinist in order to prevent his kidneys from failing. If the person agrees to offer his or her kidneys, they would have to remain plugged for nine months or even more. However if the person refuses, the violinist would die. By using the sick violinist example, Thomson seeks to undermine the argument that an abortion cannot be performed because ...
Diane was a patient of Dr. Timothy Quill, who was diagnosed with acute myelomonocytic leukemia. Diane overcame alcoholism and had vaginal cancer in her youth. She had been under his care for a period of 8 years, during which an intimate doctor-patient bond had been established. It was Dr. Quill’s observation that “she was an incredibly clear, at times brutally honest, thinker and communicator.” This observation became especially cogent after Diane heard of her diagnosis. Dr. Quill informed her of the diagnosis, and of the possible treatments. This series of treatments entailed multiple chemotherapy sessions, followed by a bone marrow transplant, accompanied by an array of ancillary treatments. At the end of this series of treatments, the survival rate was 25%, and it was further complicated in Diane’s case by the absence of a closely matched bone-marrow donor. Diane chose not to receive treatment, desiring to spend whatever time she had left outside of the hospital. Dr. Quill met with her several times to ensure that she didn’t change her mind, and he had Diane meet with a psychologist with whom she had met before. Then Diane complicated the case by informing Dr. Quill that she be able to control the time of her death, avoiding the loss of dignity and discomfort which would precede her death. Dr. Quinn informed her of the Hemlock Society, and shortly afterwards, Diane called Dr. Quinn with a request for barbiturates, complaining of insomnia. Dr. Quinn gave her the prescription and informed her how to use them to sleep, and the amount necessary to commit suicide. Diane called all of her friends to say goodbye, including Dr. Quinn, and took her life two days after they met.