Movie Your Mind example essay topic
The thought in the movie that, there is unlimited communication between the two, takes away your imagination and the curiosity of what they will say and how they will say it in the last message between the two of them. The changing of the time period was a very smart and interesting thing done in order for the movie to fit exactly into place. In the story the little details is what makes it important. Such as the marble floor in the Post Office, or that in the story, the Post Office is small. All of these little details are left out in the movie.
Although it doesn't seem like a great deal, the little details do play a large part in the importance of the Postal Office in the story. Although the story seems more simple in the "word" sense, it also leaves a lot of room for the mind to wonder what it is like back in the 1800's. Therefore the story is more open for the mind and it is more pleasing. "A girl in a high-necked dark dress with cameo brooch at the collar. Her dark hair was swept tightly back, covering the ears, in a style which no longer suits our ideas of beauty. But the stark severity of that dress and hairstyle couldn't spoil the beauty of the face that smiled out at me from that old photograph".
This above is the description stated in the story that described Helen Elizabeth Worley. This description is not of lustrous beauty, but of the true love he felt for her. This statement and description is made at the end of the story. The movie gave you the chance to make your opinion on looks before you even began to know her. You are sort of forced by your eyes to make judgments on her personal appearance in the movie. When you make judgments on appearance then you don't get the picture of this story, or any story for that matter.
The imagination is one of the most powerful tools you can have, and in the movie you don't use it that often, because the movie paints the picture for you. The unlimited amount of communication is a very important change from the story to the movie. The idea that their is unlimited communication between two distant times seems more impossible than just being able to contact someone two or three times. "The little center desk drawer stood half-open asI'd left it, and then, as my fell on it. I realized suddenly that of course it, too, must have another secret drawer behind it. I hadn't thought of that.
It simply hadn't occurred to me the week before, in my interest and excitement over the letter I'd found behind the first drawer of the row: and I'd been too busy all week to think of it since. But now I pulled the center drawer all of the way out, reached behind it and found the little groove in the smooth wood I touched. Then I brought out the second secret little drawer". It seems more possible and logical, as explained in the quote above, to be able to communicate only a limited amount of times rather than unlimited.
This also keeps great suspense on what they will say in the letters because they are more precious because they can't continue to send that many more letters. "It must easily be one of the oldest postal substations in the borough; built, I suppose, not much later than during the decade following the Civil War. And I can't imagine that the inside has change much at all. The floor is marble; the ceiling high, the woodwork dark and carved. The outer lobby is open at all times, as are post-office lobbies everywhere, and as I pushed through the old swinging doors, Is aw that it was deserted. somewhere behind the opaque blind windows a light burned dimly far in the rear of the post office, and I had an impression of subdued activity back there.
But the lobby itself was dim and silent, as I walked across the worn stone of its floor, I know I was seeing all around me precisely whatBrooklynites had seen for no telling how many generations long dead. The Post Office has always seemed an institution of vague mystery to me: an ancient and worn but still functioning mechanism that is not operated, but only tended by each succeeding generation of men to come along. It is a place where occasionally plainly addressed letters with clearly written return addresses go astray and are lost, to end up no one knows where and for reasons impossible to discover, as the postal employee from whom you inquire will tell you. And its vague air of mystery, for me, is made up of stories -- well, you " ve read them, too, from time to time: the odd little stories in your newspaper. A letter bearing a post-mark of 1906 written half a century ago, is delivered today -- simply because inexplicably it arrived at some post office along with the other mail, with no explanation from anyone now alive. Or sometimes it's a postcard of greeting -- from the Chicago World's Fair of 1893.
And once, tragically, as I remember reading, it was an acceptance of a proposal of marriage offered in 1901 -- and received today, a lifetime too late, by the man who made it and who married another woman". The quote from the story tells a very detail description that is important to the mind so it makes a clean picture of the Postal Office to all of the readers. It is one of the most important of the faults from the movie that is gone. Simply because it gives the mind a detail and mental picture of the Postal Office. Now the end is near. The above paragraphs describe why the movie is by far worse and less favored versions of "The Love Letter", by Jack Finney.
All in all their are many faults in the movie and the story.