The Lottery Movie Analysis

489 Words1 Page

The Lottery is a surprise story with a huge plot twist at the end. It seems like a normal everyday life was portrayed with just normal conversations like nothing dark was happening. It's almost as if they were so used to dark concept of the lottery that saw it as a necessary way of survival. It kinda shows how people can be stuck in how the ways have always been and do not adapt to change.

The main reason it's a surprise story is the ending and how the story is all put together all at once. The kids collecting rocks might of been over the line to infer what was going to happen. The darkness is mostly in the fact they have been doing this seventy seven years and no one has said anything about how idiotic the idea is. The lottery is usually something people want to win a vast amount of money, in this case the reward is a death of a close family member. Usually death of a close family member is wanted to be avoided at all costs. It was one of those neighborhoods where everybody knows everybody, almost at a stuck up rich setting. They …show more content…

You can’t get much more surprise than a stoning of a teenage boy because a piece of paper says so. I could only imagine the emotions going through the his mind while the entire village is slinging rocks at his face. Especially all the small children witnessing a death at such a young age, I don't know how their minds aren't warped witnessing such a horrific event every year. I know if I witnessed that every year for seventy seven, i’d be one demented kid. Unless its secretly a cult that uses human sacrifices to keep their crops growing in an isolated location where no one can bother their sacred traditions. It's kinda scary situation because a long time ago the Mayans, and the Aztecs though this actually worked sacrificing human life just to please the

Open Document