Saturday, November 12, 2016

Film and Text - V for Vendetta

1. The characters Evey and Winston Smith bring in many similarities and differences. Evey alerts a biography of relative freedom compared to ill Winston Smith. Winston is in the outer party, only surviving a determined routine that is being watched by the police. Evey has a life extraneous the government and works at a TV station. The similarities that Evey and Winston restrain are that they twain detest the governments rules, twain were party members, they both worked for the party. Evey and Winston were both disobedient. If Winston and Evey were not disobedient than they would assume the rules and do things that they should not be doing, for example Winston keeping a diary and Evey not red ink out after curfew. The differences betwixt Evey and Winston are that they both live in a dystopian universe. Evey lived in a world where there was civil fight and utter chaos. Winston lived in a world where there was struggle going on that was unendingly happening and the li ving conditions were terrible. The irregular difference was that Evey was a gun for hire because she fought against the government and won the battle. Winston is not a hero because horizontal though he was against the government, at the end he in the end loved everything about the government. The prevail difference between the two characters is that Evey is being tortured by the government into tramping V. Although we see that V was the one who was behind the bawl out of Evey, she does not give in and betray him. On the new(prenominal) hand, in 1984, both Winston and Julia betray each other during their custody. This salmagundi in storyline take to Evey becoming apart of the cause, in terms of overthrowing the government. Winston and Julias actions in 1984 guide to their mutual downfall, and the end of their plans for deposing freehand Brother and the government.\n\n2. Realistically, London, England is a sightly city. In 1984 and in V for Vendetta, London is described a s a dark, frightening and lamentable place. In the novel 1984, Lon...

No comments:

Post a Comment