A complicated relationship between a father and son can be very frustrating for both people. The complications, however, generally dissolve or resolve themselves over time. In the novel Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury, the main character, Will Halloway, and his father, Charles Halloway, share a troublesome relationship. The complications come from when Will tries to protect Charles from dangers and when Charles doesn’t believe he is a good father to Will. As the story progresses, the relationship changes from where it was at the beginning to the middle, from the middle to the end.
In Norman MacLean’s “A River Runs though It”, Norman and Paul share a passion for fly fishing. In their childhood and sometimes in adulthood when time permitted, they would meet at Big Blackfoot River to fish together. With Paul’s many difficult situations, Norman attempts to help him through. The river brings a place where they can bond and shows the love that Norman has for his younger brother. While Paul struggled with his drinking and many run ins with the law, Norman was always willing to help his brother out.
Firstly, as I relate to fatherlessness the movie contains several examples. At the beginning of the movie a scene is played out in a classroom where Tre Styles gets into a fight with one of his classmates.
When Bloom was a small child, he never talked back to his parents or any of his elders. Once his parents told him to do something, he did it without hesitation. For example, his mother said, “‘about time you go off to school, isn’t it Edward?’ He then replied with ‘I guess it is,’” (11). Which shows how obedient he is towards his mother.
His son Will is angry, with the fact that his dad is always telling these stories. Unlike the nurse the wants to the truth in the stories his dad tells. By telling these stories, it makes him happy and forgets about his worries just like Colonel Freeleigh, when Jorge opens the window. Edward takes his life experiences and the people that the met, and turned them into something extraordinary. Edward’s stories make him feel accomplished and not boring or terrifying as they could have been.
The 1989 movie “Dad” follows the emotional rollator coaster of the Tremont family. The story is centered on, Jake Tremont, an older man whose caretaker wife falls ill and is hospitalized for a while. Jake’s son, John, steps in to help take care of his cognitively declining father. It is through his emotional journey, filled with pain, growth, and love- that we witness the get a glimpse into the world of older adults and the many struggles they go through.
Tim Burton is a famous director who puts a lot of originality into his work. Burton uses editing techniques, music and sound, as well as shots and framing and camera movements to determine the mood of the scene. Editing is one of the techniques Burton uses to create emotion and suspense in the audience. One way Burton does this is by using fade in Big Fish, Edward crosses paths with Karl who was waiting for him on the longer road.
Throughout human life, people experience many events which lead them to mature and come in contact with the grim realities of growing up. In the film Big Fish by Tim Burton, the characters recognize that the end of childhood comes with many responsibilities and the tragedy of this reality is unavoidable. The film guides us through the loss of innocence within the characters lives through the new experiences encounter, the movement from rosey to a greyer outlook on life and by the realization of an unconceived truth. Throughout the film, the audience is lead through the loss of innocence by many new experiences the characters face.
Each parent’s shortcomings then gets projected and magnified through the sons. The movie is about conflicts; between the couple, the child and the parent, the intellectual and philistine, identity one manufactures and one’s true self. The parents are so preoccupied with their problems that the children are left lost. It is interesting how they take their children and pit them against one another many times without realization. Bernard Berkman is a novelist whose career has gone into a slow decline and is now reduced to teaching.
Similar to the father, he tries to pass on the culture hoping it could survive within the family. Sadly, the culture “[was] slowly dying” (341) in the sink. When the fish was being cooked in the wok, it is described as “tires on gravel, a sound so loud it drowns all other noises” (342). The noise level hints a tense argument that has been built up within the family for years. As such, when the fish is served, the tension and dissatisfaction between the son and father imploded; hence, the father acted violently towards his son for being “ungrateful” (344).
During this time, Edward just speaks in his head. He wonders why this was happening to him. Tim Burton leaks his personal thoughts and opinions on puberty into this section of big fish. It could be believed that Tim thinks it is a troublesome part of life and it seems to happen so quickly. On the other hand, we can also see that the process, that was so painful, stopped right when Edward realized something about himself.
The father drags his son to a mass grave, filled with bodies. The boy says, “There’s babies in there.” The father hits him “They’re all the same” The boy realizes that his father is weak, demented and full of inhumanity. In the final scene with the father and son, the boy runs away, yelling at his dad, “I hate you!” Mr. Wright ends up being a hero, finding his conscience in the heat of the massacre, fueled by his wife!
Outlaws of the west created the spirit of the wild west and made America what it is today. Outlaws in the wild west were beneficial to the development of the American west because they made security more important, they gave people more jobs, and they helped create more structured laws. Outlaws in the west helped make security more important. Outlaws robbed many spots including trains, banks, salons, and stores.
Tim Burton uses camera movements, camera angles, and sound in Big Fish, Edward Scissorhands, and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory to create the right mood for the audience to feel. Creating the right mood allows the audience to connect to the movie and to be intrigued by the movie. In Edward Scissorhands, Burton uses camera movements to create a sad mood. In a flashback, the camera moves with the inventor, who made Edward, as he takes Edward's hands out of a box and walks over to Edward before he dies, without getting to put Edward's real hands on.
I believe this is a very common occurrence for parents and the way he portrays his emotion towards it is very intriguing to me. He finds him and his son so similar to the point that he sees himself fishing while they're in the boat together and the fact that he is able to share this place with his son and watch him create the same memories that he did is very heartwarming, and also gives a feel of longing for that childhood