To Kill A Mocking Bird Movie And Book Comparison

1793 Words4 Pages

In To Kill A Mocking Bird, a novel written by Harper Lee is a story based upon an old town of Maycomb, Alabama. The story is about a black guy, Tom Robinson who is charged on an account of rape of a 19 year old girl named MayElla Ewell. The story by Harper Lee is followed up by a movie which follows the same storyline of the book. These two, were both award winners for the work they put into both of these. The novel and movie, can be compared and contrasted in different ways such as, how the charters may act, the setting of the story, etc. The characterization between the the novel and movie were alike; yet very different. In the novel, I imagined the characters wearing different clothes, I imaged them wearing dirtier, more raggedy clothing, because it was a old and worn down town. Also, being able to see the characters in the movie, provides a different perspective the reader doesn't get from the novel. I feel that Scout is a more developed character in the novel. She is used as the narrator, thus the stories in the novel are all based …show more content…

This is the major theme throughout the novel and movie. It's the good versus evil struggle. The town takes on human characteristics, with the people and its values ultimately hurting Boo and killing Tom. They are simply innocent people wanting to bring joy to those around them. At the end of the novel, even though the world has been more than unfair to Boo, he still helps Jem and Scout by defending them from Bob Ewell. Boo is still like the "mockingbird." He's trying to be the good, in a world of evil. The novel and movie both depict the town and its people as the evil. It's shown through ignorance and injustice. The way Boo and Tom are treated shows bias and social inequality. Tom must be guilty because he's black, and Boo must be mean because he is quiet, reserved, and slow. Boo, Atticus, Scout, and Jem represent the good forces acting against the evil of Maycomb

Open Document