Hunted Heroes: A Comparative Analysis of High Noon and The Most Dangerous Game

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High Noon is a well made film, following to story of the lead protagonist Will Kane, through one and a half hours of his life. The Most Dangerous Game is a short story following the story of the main character, Rainsford, though four days or so of his life. Both are very prestigious and well known pieces of literature, with their own touches of magic in the wording and dialogue of it all, leaving no doubt that the two stories are both very deserving of what praise it receives. Both Kane and Rainsford are being hunted, both them fighting alone with nowhere to run. Their predators have two different reasons for hunting them, but the two prey have similar feelings of helplessness, hopelessness, and loneliness. Will Kane is a man who likes to put up a strong front. Despite his best efforts to be a fearless hero, his struggle to swallow his fear is in vain, and he shows no hesitation to be transparent about it. "'You …show more content…

It wasn't that they wouldn't run, it was that they both recognized that they quite literally had nowhere to run, and both Kand and Rainsford were forced to face their enemies head on. "'Off there to the right — somewhere — is a large island,' said Whitney. 'It's rather a mystery.'...'The old charts call it "Ship-Trap Island"'" (Connell 1). Sanger Rainsford ended up being stranded on that island, with no way off but General Zaroff's boats. "This is just a dirty little village in the middle of nowhere" (Foreman 299). The only thing connecting the 'dirty little village' to the outside world was a single train track, and that was no longer an option for escape as Frank Miller, the person who wants Will Kane dead, is on that incoming train. Although the two mentioned settings seem to be completely differing at first, they do serve the same purpose of keeping the protagonists from escaping the antagonists, creating a suffocating

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