I have found the 2007 movie Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street by Tim Burton to be interesting. It is a musical based off a Broadway hit. Sweeney Todd is a fictional character that has been around in various plays since 1846 and made into a movie in 1936.
The movie begins with the character Benjamin Barker on a journey to London. Through a series of songs and flashbacks, it reveals that Sweeney Todd is an alias name of Benjamin Barker. Barker had escaped from Australia after serving 15 years for a wrongful sentence in prison. Rescued at sea by a sailor called Anthony Hope, he makes his way on to London. Barker tells him how he was the best barber in all Victorian London. He tells Hope of his loving, beautiful wife Lucy and his daughter Johanna and that Judge Turpin desired his wife. He states that Judge Turpin falsely accused him of a crime and exiled him in an effort to get to her.
…show more content…
Lovett’s pie shop. He learns from her that Lucy had poisoned herself after the Judge had lured her to a masked ball and raped her. The Judge then took the daughter in as his ward and he keeps her there at his house. Mrs. Lovett recognizes him as the barber Benjamin Barker and reunites him with his razors from long ago, to which he refers to as “my old friends”. Mrs. Lovett tells Todd that business is poor at the shop and soon afterward, Todd begins killing people by slashing their throats. Now driven by rage and revenge, he plots the murder of the Judge in his every thought. Mrs. Lovett loves him and does whatever she can to protect him. Business picks up after she begins using the human flesh as an ingredient in her meat
The novel The Catcher In The Rye, by J.D. Salinger, contains many complex symbols, many of the symbols in the book are interconnected. A symbol is an object represents an idea that is important to the novel. I believe the most important symbol in this novel is Holden 's idea of being the "catcher in the rye".
In the book The Wealthy Barber it begins by talking about the thing that he likes to do in his spare time. David then begins to introduce his wife and talks about how they have a baby on the way but he is completely clueless when it comes to managing/saving money. He needs to make himself a smart financial quickly with having a wife and now a baby on the way. David talks continues to talking about how his father was very smart with financial means. His father has never bought anything without saving for it first. The only thing David’s father borrowed money for was to buy a house and he had a 30 year mortgage. He learned to become financially smart from a local barber named Roy. David, his sister Cathy, and his best friend Tom together go visit Roy who promises by the end of seven months all of them will be on the road to success.
The following poster was designed by Noah Van Belle to explore the deeper meaning, found in the film The Shawshank Redemption, in just a single and simplistic image. The primary image, which is a rock hammer, represents the motifs of friendship and hope that is displayed throughout the film. The rock hammer is the first item that Andy, the protagonist, obtains from Red, who is also an inmate. This exchange between Red and Andy is the spark of their strong friendship. This friendship proved to be beneficial to Andy not only because he was able to obtain the resources, that he needed for his escape, from Red but he also had a partner to keep him from going insane, in a brutal place such as Shawshank. Red also benefited tremendously from his friendship
William Butler Yeats a writer and irish poet once said, “The innocent and the beautiful have no enemy but time.” In the book, “The Catcher in the Rye,” by J. D. Salinger, a boy named “Holden” is dealing with the consequences of growing up and losing innocence. The story details the importance of being a kid and going through maturity. It also shares the knowledge of learning from mistakes and growing up. Holden experiences all of these elements through loneliness and innocence throughout the book.
1- The movie revolves around an individual character named Benjamin Braddock, who is 21-year-old, and he recently graduated from college. Ben is at a continuous anxiety and is very confused because everybody has different expectations of him. He becomes a prey of the wife of his father’s business partner named Mrs. Robinson. She dose not have feelings to Ben, and she uses him for the sexual purposes. Ben is not happy with his relationship because he needs more than sex in his relationships.
Set in Victorian England, Hugh Wheeler’s, Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, explores the vicious cycle of poverty through characters who are forced into economic submission by the upper class. A prime example of the perpetuation of this cycle is through the character of Tobias Raggs, a young child labourer. Examined through the lens of the Marxist supersystem, Tobias Raggs is the desperate image of poverty, born into a set class and robbed of a childhood as well as any opportunity for him to advance in society, ultimately forcing him to continue the cycle of capitalism. The Marxist theory of a supersystem suggests that a system of regulations and authority forces is instilled and enforced by the upper class in order to ensure that the lower class remains immobile and inferior socially, economically, and politically.
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, was an excellent choice for this assignment, as many key, prominent psychological signs and symptoms are prevalent in the majority of characters. Though excellent cases of psychological abnormalities can be found throughout the film, unfortunately, we could only choose one. As a result, we believe the most interesting character to diagnose would be the main character Benjamin Barker: also known as Sweeney Todd.
The human condition refers to the inescapable features of being a human being. It is related to those human feelings that search for the meaning of life. It is the saga of events in life that changes people’s perception. In the big picture, the human condition is also the reasons which causes a child to grow and mature into a man. J.D. Salinger explores this condition through his character Holden in his book The Catcher in the Rye and director Fred Schepisi in his film Six Degrees of Separation, through his main character, Paul.
Sweeney Todd and Into the Woods are musicals with lyrics and scores written by Stephen Sondheim. In Sweeney Todd, a barber is sent to Australia for trumped up charges while the Judge steals his wife and daughter. Barker comes back with a vengeance, renames himself Sweeney Todd and vows to make the Judge pay for what he has done. In Into the Woods, a witch has put a curse on a family for generations because the patriarch stole some vegetables from her garden. Springing from this robbery, she set a curse disallowing the family to ever bear children again. The Baker, the son of the thief, now begs the Witch to remove the curse, she sends him on a scavenger hunt and thus creates turmoil and distress for many other people. In both cases, revenge is used as a driving force for the plot. Sondheim represents the theme of revenge in both musicals as detrimental to those you love as well as a trap that can lead you into dark places.
Everyone has fantasies but most know that is not the true reality. Defining dreams and reality are two different things. Some want to escape the real world and make their own dreams become true, due to seeking happiness. The author portrays Blanche, Stella, and Stanley as characters that are fixated on what they want to believe is the truth; however, the reason being is because they do not want face their fears. Stella and Blanche both desire to make their past non-existent and live in a perfect world, rather than accept the truth and move forward. Stanley does not let his fantasies take over his life as much as the two women. In Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar name Desire the three protagonists Blanche, Stella, and Stanley exist in a fool’s paradise by using denial and fantasy to display a public facade in desire to obscure the truth; however, the characters want to escape their undesirable reality through their more desirable fantasy.
J.D. Salinger’s novel The Catcher in the Rye is widely recognized as one of the most self-destructive novels ever written. The novel’s protagonist Holden Caulfield is known for his anti-social behavior and his self-loathing, self-isolating character in the book. Holden’s traits could widely be compared to Napoleon Dynamite the protagonist of the 2004 film Napoleon Dynamite directed by Jared Hess. Napoleon is characterized by his clichéd “school nerd” behavior and of course his own self-isolating habit just like Holden. Like Holden, Napoleon tries to put down people to isolate him from others. But even though Holden and Napoleon are alike on how they assume the traits of the people they meet,
The role of woman in the society has always been really controversial, whether it was 400 years ago or now. Shakespeare's two very famous comedy plays, The Taming of the Shrew and The Merchant of Venice challenge a very serious social issue, the role and importance of woman in society. We all know the stereotypical image of woman in the society but Shakespeare questions the society on these thoughts through his plays. While Shakespeare expresses his ideas in a very unique way in each of his plays, this issue is common in both plays and is portrayed very similarly. Whether it is the way woman are treated, portrayed or judged, Shakespeare repeats the same idea through difference acts and events between the two comedies. There are some
“Is The Catcher in the Rye, as a work of literature still relevant for today’s youth?”
William Shakespeare is perhaps one of the most famous writers of English literature. His writings and plays have touched the lives of many people. At some point in our lives, whether we are aware of it or not, we have all come across a poem, play or perhaps even an old adage that was written by William Shakespeare that has captured our attention. I still remember the very first time I read Romeo and Juliet in high school. The story was one of the most memorable pieces of literature that I recall reading in school. Shakespeare’s unique style of writing has had a great influence on our society. One of his famous plays, Twelfth Night, was modernized by director Andy Fickman and made into a movie called, She 's the Man in 2002. Although
Can time and historical events affect the categorization of a literary piece? William Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice is a play that is difficult to classify in a specific genre. It is often referred to as one of his problem plays. This means that it does not easily fall into a single category. Most literary sources categorize The Merchant of Venice as a comedy because it fits the description by having a happy ending. There are those, however, that discuss the dark side of the play and insist that the play could also be classified as a tragedy. Due to the plays’ complexity and the events of history, it can be argued that