The Lottery Book Vs Movie Essay

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In the movie version of “The Lottery,” the director chose not to emphasize the beauty of the day the lottery was held with his set or the comfortable nature of the people attending it. This dulled the effect of the ending, but it made the viewer more suspicious and uncomfortable through the movie. The director’s choice to make Mr. Summers a serious character instead of the “round faced, jovial man” in the text served to cause suspense to creep into the story but sacrificing the atmosphere created by his overly happy attitude. In the movie, the costumes of the characters were familiar and normal, which made their behavior more disconcerting. More changes from the short story occurred as the children were repeatedly shown gathering rocks. The movie adaptation turned it into a more significant event than Jackson, causing an ominous feeling in the viewer. On the other hand, Jackson had decided to …show more content…

This was shown in the film as the children happily gathered rocks, making them seem normal. It was again shown through the costumes of the actors, just typical, everyday clothes. Much of what the director did helped to nail home the theme, such as his choice to choose a “normal” person to play Mr. Summers. His choice to adapt some of the small talk from the text, such as the talking between the men about taxes and Mrs. Delacroix and Mrs. Hutchinson about the latter’s being late, made the characters more normal and set up the end to the movie. All of this was to prepare for the stoning. During the stoning, the dying, brown grass and Tessie’s screams created an ugly, atrocious scene. The calmness with which the villagers proceeded added to the theme as well, demonstrating how they would not just murder, but they would do it with no qualms. All of the alterations to the original text were used to underline the

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