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Compare And Contrast Of Mice And Men

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In the book and movie version of John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men, characters, their problems, and their relationships illustrate what keeps people apart and ways people can help each other. The characters have connections with each other, in turn making it easier to help one another or hurt one another.
The book version of Of Mice and Men and the movie version display a rather large amount of differences, but both these pieces have many more similarities. Every character described in the book is portrayed the same way they were described in the movie. George and Lennie were originally described as two men who move around constantly, don’t have much money, and are polar opposites. In the movie, this is exactly how they are played. Lennie has …show more content…

A second similarity from the book to the movie is the goal George, Lennie, and Candy have about living in a nice house, “How long’s it gonna be till we get the little place an’ live off the fatta the lan’ –an tend the rabbits?” (56). In the book, Lennie constantly states that when they acquire said house, he will live of the fat of the land and tend to the rabbits they will get. This exact same phrase is stated many times in the movie version. The final similarity is the name of the ranch George and Lennie work on after fleeing Weed and arriving at Soledad. The book puts it as Tyler Ranch, and so does the movie. The ranch is owned by Curly’s father in both the book and the movie. …show more content…

One of the most noticeable changes in the movie was when Lennie was by the pond. In the book, he has an illusion of his Aunt Clara and some rabbits. In the movie, this scene was removed, leaving a fairly large gap in the viewer's mind. The second, and another prominent difference, is when Lennie is in the barn with the dead puppy and Mrs. Curly. In the book, after everything happens, it cuts to another scene. In the movie, after everything happens, it cuts to an aerial picture of the interior of the barn and a pigeon flutters away, indicating something bad has happened. Lastly, in the book, when Lennie and Curley fight, Slim tries to stop the fight by saying he would fight Curley instead. On the other hand, when these two fight, Slim never jumps in to stop the fight. Even though there are a few more differences from book to movie, the most prominent ones are Lennie’s illusion of Aunt Clara and the bunnies, the pigeon in the barn, and Slim trying to stop Curley and Lennie from

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