Courage, True Love In Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds

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“Love is that condition in the human spirit so profound that it empowers us to develop courage; to trust courage and build bridges with it; to trust those bridges and cross over them so we can attempt to reach each other.”-Maya Angelou. Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Birds” emphasizes on courage, true love and support. In this film, a wealthy San Francisco socialite Melanie pursues a potential boyfriend Mitch to a small Northern California town that slowly takes a turn for the bizarre when a series of unanticipated and exotic savage bird pounces on the people of Bodega Bay, California over the course of a few days. The story revolves around the friendship between Melanie and a local school teacher Annie Hayworth, the blackbirds and crows and their hate for the fur coat, and the lovebirds. Melanie is a wealthy socialite who came all over from San Francisco with the aviary containing lovebirds for Mitch. Melanie seems to be in love with Mitch. She was wearing a fur coat all the time when she is in Bodega Bay, and this might be the reason of conflict between the nature and the people, specially Melanie. And this is why the birds attacked …show more content…

The moment where the young mother becomes hysterical and accuses Melanie of causing the attacks, as the birds did not start their vicious behavior until she arrived. The mother is somehow faultless. It is because when Melanie first enters the town, she brings with her the lovebirds for Mitch, in a small cage, and it might be the reason why the birds are attacking her or the place with her presence. Bring lovebirds in an aviary might be the reason why the seagull attacks her on her first arrival in a small boat because the birds can’t see the other birds like that. This might be the reason of conflict between the birds and the people. This gives us an idea that whatever one will do, will get in return