Film Analysis: A Streetcar Named Desire

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In the 1979 blockbuster film Mad Max, starring Mel Gibson, Max Rockatansky is a police officer that is restrained by the law that he has sworn to protect. The world and life that Max once knew begins to crumble apart when he witnesses the painful deaths of his family. Soon enough everything that matters has been lost, and all that has been left is the agonizing memory of the death of his loved ones. In order to fill this void in his heart he turn to seeking revenge, just as Blanche DuBois from A Streetcar Named Desire written by Tennessee Williams seeks to find love again after the harrowing death of her husband. Blanche's life is destroyed in front of her eyes by forces that are beyond her control exemplifying that she is a Modern tragic heroine. …show more content…
While talking to Stanley about the loss of the home Blanche explains this to the reader stating, “The four-letter word deprived us of our plantation, till finally all that was left—and Stella can verify that!—was the house itself and about twenty acres of ground, including a graveyard, to which now all but Stella and I have retreated.” (Williams 44). But the loss of the house is not the only thing that blanche had to witness during her time in Laurel. As seen in that quote she mentions that all of her relatives have died, and she was all that was left in this long line of her wealthy family. Stella had run away to marry Stanley in New Orleans, forcing Blanche to have to watch her relatives all by herself die one by one and be sent to the graveyard. The deaths of her family were out of her control and all she could do was stand by and watch them slowly pass away, leaving her with no one and continuing her spiral down a depressing path in …show more content…
She lacks the moral goodness that normally comes with growing up in a noble or wealthy household. This is evident in the void that has been left in her heart after the death of her husband and that void is dying alone. Blanche tells Mitch about why she has so much sex after the death of her husband saying, “Yes, I had many intimacies with strangers. After the death of Allan- intimacies with strangers was all i seemed able to fill my empty heart with…” (Williams 146). Panic settled in because she saw no escape from the reality that she was facing of being alone in a world where she had no one to even talk to about her problems. But also what this ddi is it created a reputation of her being a un moral woman in Lauren and eventually drove her out of town and began to deteriorate her character even more. But it was something that she could no longer fix and something that amounted because of the death of her husband.
Blanche Dubois are seemingly both trying to escape the unwelcoming forces of her past, both of the living and the dead. She is left with a memory that cannot be forgotten and that she only blames herself for and the fea that she will die alone. Therefore, Blanche Dubois is a Modern tragic heroine because her life is destroyed in front of her eyes by forces that are far beyond her control. Ultimately, the world that blanche had know was taken