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Big Fish By Tim Burton

749 Words3 Pages

The overcomplication of goals are common in trying to develop oneself further. I personally felt this attack when trying to plan activities with friends. I attempted to gather everyone with precision, and tried to time everyone's schedules with mine. Once I took a step back and gained a new perspective I realized there was no point, we would go another time, or with selected friends. In Big Fish, directed by Tim Burton, William Bloom struggles to create a genuine, trusting relationship with his father. This relationship deteriorates over time from repeated neglect and misunderstandings. Will finds the need to know the truth about his father, and cannot live with his fathers tall tales. In Big Fish, Tim Burton explores William Bloom’s circular …show more content…

He believes them and loves hearing them over and over again. Will, at a young age loves to hear of his father’s tales. Will loved learning about his father’s life in a way that sparked creativity. Will “listens wide-eyed” (1) at his father's stories as a young boy, enforcing the love that is shown towards his father and his storytelling. He used his father’s “bigger than life” (2) attitude to grow attached to these stories throughout his childhood. Will is able to hear these stories throughout his adolescent years and appreciates them. He hears constant reminders of his fathers life, and adventures that he may or may not have had. Will gets to know his father through these creative and inspiring tales, and is able to emotionally connect to them as a …show more content…

William asks for a genuine answer to his questions about his fathers life, but receives countless stories. Will realizes that his father told his stories as a way to really get to know him, and show him as a true person. These stories were meant to show his true self, and not to set barriers between them. They showed who Edward Bloom really was, and who he was as a person. These effects however were lost on William until the very last moments. Will manages to feel alone while in a loving family, being the only one trying to change his father’s means of communication. He tries to make sense of an insensible situation, he must come to terms with no definite

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