Monday, January 13, 2014
Eternal sunshine of the spotless mind
I remember watching eternal sunshine of the spotless mind my freshman year the morning after homecoming but I don't remember making the connections that I did when we watched this movie in class. I absolutely adore this movie, the acting was fantastic, but I think the thing that I liked most was the story line. The plot of Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind was basically that Joel is a normal guy who is living a boring life but then he meets clementine. Clementine is different, she has weird hair does strange things and wears weird clothes, she works at a book store and tries to live her life as extravagant as possible. Well clementine and Joel have a falling out, they love each other but Clementine comes home late one night drunk and Joel had been waiting for her for hours, he tells her that the only way she makes friends is by sleeping with them, Clementine leaves and ends up getting Joel erased from her memory without telling him. So, on Valentines Day Joel goes to Barnes and Nobel to give Clementine a Valentines Day gift, but she doesn't remember him. He gets so confused and his friends end up telling him how they received a letter from the memory eraser company letting them know what was going on; Clementine got her memory erased and Joel can't find out. Joel ends up finding out and wants to remove all of that hurt that Clementine had put on him, so he decides to get his memory erased by the same company. In the morning Joel wakes up and meets Clementine...again. The scene replays of the day they first met, and at the end Clementine reads her mails and it says that they she had her memory erased, she freaks out to Joel and Joel goes home to his apartment where the same letter is waiting...
Animal Farm
Animal Farm by George Orwell was incredibly boring. However, at the end of the book I was rewarded by making so many connections to today's political problems even though it was a book set in 1940. Being someone who is interested in dictatorship and I found it interesting that George Orwell portrayed a government with farm animals as the main citizens. The parts that I didn't understand a whole lot was why he included the part about Molly and her bows, and why the windmill was important. Although, I thought it was really cool how at the end of the book the pigs morphed into humans. The way I pictured it was that the pigs were still legitimate animals but in all of the other farm animals' eyes, they saw humans because that's how Jones treated them. The allusion of animal farm portrayed to Nazi Germany, or Russia, however, turning the citizens into animals made it very hard to picture the same things happening to people which made the books plot line seem more fiction than it actually was. I think that the part where I actually realized that the animals
Animal Farm by George Orwell was incredibly boring. However, at the end of the book I was rewarded by making so many connections to today's political problems even though it was a book set in 1940. Being someone who is interested in dictatorship and I found it interesting that George Orwell portrayed a government with farm animals as the main citizens. The parts that I didn't understand a whole lot was why he included the part about Molly and her bows, and why the windmill was important. Although, I thought it was really cool how at the end of the book the pigs morphed into humans. The way I pictured it was that the pigs were still legitimate animals but in all of the other farm animals' eyes, they saw humans because that's how Jones treated them. The allusion of animal farm portrayed to Nazi Germany, or Russia, however, turning the citizens into animals made it very hard to picture the same things happening to people which made the books plot line seem more fiction than it actually was. I think that the part where I actually realized that the animals were starting to act like humans is when the pigs got drunk and Napoleon ran out wearing one of Jones' hats. The only part that I could really connect to a government issue is when Napoleon had the chickens killed on the spot by the dogs. I can on next that to Nazi Germany because hitter used to have Jews killed on the spot by his army members. In this case, Napolean's army members are his dogs. I would say that most students are incredibly bored and annoyed that it is a requirement to read Animal Farm in English class, however, if we were to read it in a history class, it will still be as boring as it would be I English, but the students would be able to connect more to the book after learning about nazi Germany than they would be able yo connect with of just a reading assignment in English class.
In all, Animal farm is a really boring book about animals as dictators, but it portrays the pasts governments well, and is an example of what an allusion is for students, because it connects to hints we learned in history class.
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