How Is Atticus Finch Landing Used In To Kill A Mockingbird

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In the town of Maycomb, growing up means witnessing challenging situations and the characters’ innocence may be threatened. To Kill a Mockingbird is about brother and sister Jem and Scout who live in a very prejudiced town. Their father, Atticus Finch, is a lawyer defending a black man and the town shows Jem and Scout just how narrow-minded people can be. In Robert Mulligan’s movie To Kill a Mockingbird, there are various deviations from the book that have a great significance.
Finch Landing was a key part of the novel. The Landing was Atticus’ family’s land where Aunt Alexandra lives. Atticus’s brother Jack, visits Finch Landing as do Scout, Jem, and Atticus for the holidays. “You're real nice Uncle Jack, an’ reckon I love you even after …show more content…

This shows the readers how grateful the friends and acquaintances of Tom Robinson are for Atticus defending him in court. The black people of Maycomb are tired of the racial discrimination and segregation in and are ecstatic to see progress being made. At the end of the service when we were all leaving, Reverend Sykes said to us, “We were ‘specially glad to have you all here,” said Reverend Sykes, “The Church has no better friend than your daddy” (Lee 163). To add to the this point, even though Atticus and Tom Robinson did not win the trial, the black citizens of Maycomb stood up out of respect to Atticus as he walked out of the courtroom. In the movie To Kill a Mockingbird, the kids never go to church with Calpurnia even though this plays a key role in the book. In the movie they skip the event of Calpurnia taking the kids to a service at her church. Since the church scene never occurred, Scout and Jem never got to see how unjust the prejudiced town of Maycomb is to people who have a different skin tone than themselves. Scout and Jem also do not get the chance to learn more about the way Calpurnia grew up and her current life at the moment. This important scene never occuring in the movie takes away from the plot and theme of To Kill a