Essay On The Giver Movie

484 Words2 Pages

Here are two societies. One is the society in The Giver movie; there is no war, crime, and hunger. Every person has a job although the job is assigned by the government. Another society is the one in “Fahrenheit 451”. Firemen are people whose job is to hunt down and burn books in the society. Both of the two societies are not normal. When comparing The Giver movie to “Fahrenheit 451”, it becomes clear that there are some similarities and differences. Three topics similarities or differences are the climax, resolution, and the characters. To begin with, the climax of “Fahrenheit 451” and The Giver movie are very different, but they do have a small similarity. In The Giver movie, the climax is Jonas realizing that everything they are doing …show more content…

In the resolution of “Fahrenheit 451”, Montag and a large group of the book people have a process of conserving books forever by word of mouth; which leaves hope for the demolished city to be reborn with the use of books, but there is no definitive resolution to The Giver movie. In the end, Jonas and Gabe experience starvation, cold, and fear. However, they have each other, and a bond of love. The story concludes with the two sledding down the hill that Jonas was given a memory of with Jonas crossing the boundary of memories and giving everyone in the community back the memories before the government started to control everything. The similarity between the book and the movie is that the protagonist had to leave their city or community in order to help change society. Lastly, the characters in “Fahrenheit 451” and The Giver movie are notably similar, yet with a difference. Montag and Jonas, want to change society back to the way it was before the government started to change how everything runs. Fiona, the Giver, and Faber are the characters that help the protagonist. All of the other characters follow government rules. A difference between characters is that the protagonist from The Giver movie ends up falling in love while the protagonist from “Fahrenheit 451” ends up losing his