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Friday, November 11, 2016

Movie Overview - Boy

The film son, tell by Taika Waititi, is a in fairness interesting film do in New Zealand. It follows the trading floor of the main character, son, an 11 course old boy who lastly gets a chance to bang his paternity, who has returned to find a bagful of money he interred years ago. There were some(prenominal) important accompaniments in this film, alone the main one was when son gets high on marihuana, and realizes that Alamein, his go was never there for him or his buzz off. Through this event, boys intellection of his father transposes in a proscribe manner, and Boy also begins to respect Rocky, his familiar and finds responsibility and maturity inwardly himself. The director, Waititi, intakes several visual and oral exam techniques, such as dialogue, flashbacks, non-diegetic undecomposed and auspicate of view shots to steer Boys change in attitude towards his father.\nWhen Boy gets high on marijuana and sits on the bridge, he sees flashbacks of when his mot her was big(predicate), and when she died. From these flashbacks, he realized his father was never there, he wasnt there when his mother was pregnant or when she died. It was at this point that Boy realized the truth ab break through his father (Alamein) and that he had created false images of Alamein all these years. This is arrogated suddenly by the director, Waititi, who uses the point of view shot effectively to capture Boy falling back from the bridge through Boys eyes, and showed us how he felt at that moment. It showed us that Boys valet turned upside down, literally, as he found out the truth about Alamein. This fruition of his fathers truthfulness leads to an outburst of anger. Waititis use of dialogue shows this well as Boy says Im nothing like you! in rage to Alamein. This shows he has last given in to the accompaniment that his father isnt what he thought, and in reality, Alamein is not someone to look up to. This event had both positive and negative effects on Boy. compulsive because Boys last saw the real psyche his fa...

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