Jack Torrance in the classic horror film The Shining, displays his yearning for The American Dream. The Torrances suffer emotionally and physically during their stay at the infamous Overlook Hotel. Aside from the ominous past of The Overlook Hotel, the Torrances unfortunate sufferings result of Jack’s insanity caused by his drive for success. Jack’s attempts to obtain The American Dream of having the stability of a job, money, and a strong family relationship push him to insanity. His actions are…
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caused by his father over the years in Jack childhood has developed in his adulthood to gain the same abusive trait as his father. In the novel his childhood was horribly abusive, his father’s actions later on lead to jacks’ madness to his death. He turned on his family because he believes that they would take away the hotel from him mentioned later in the novel. Jack takes the role of his father and becomes an alcoholic just like him. The drinking developed jack to pick up an abusive attitude, which…
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THE SHINING, first published in 1977. Jack Torrance is a man terrorized by demons. He loves his wife, and his son Danny, but Jack is the product of an abusive father, and has a tendency to lash out when angry (and drunk)–even at those he loves. His violent outbursts cost him his teaching job, and almost cost him his marriage. He takes a job at The Overlook, a hotel set high in the Colorado mountains, as a caretaker during the winter months while the hotel is closed, hoping the time of seclusion will…
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emphasize those themes and ensure attention was brought to them. An analysis of the plot and the character’s motivations in The Shining reveals a complex set of issues; references to genocide and the way in which it is carried out pepper the film with a rich commentary on man’s ability to self-exterminate without ethical pause. During one of the first scenes in the movie, Jack is being escorted around the Overlook Hotel by Stuart Ullman who makes a specific reference to the tapestries hanging on the…
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The writer, Jack, starts to have depression and tries to kill his family after they go to the hotel to spend their winter and take care of the hotel in the Shining. As a horror film, the Shining has high tension throughout the movie, but Stanley Kubrick increase tension gradually by using camera distance and lenses in the ten shots of the Shining. First of all, Kubrick prepares the viewer to make them feel the developing tension by changing the distance of the camera. For instance, Kubrick uses long…
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In Stephen King’s classic thriller The Shining, five-year-old Danny Torrance is immersed in a world of divorce, his father’s alcoholism, and an unforgettable stay at the Overlook Hotel. Periodically throughout the book the young boy has recurrent visits from Tony, a slightly older boy who can only be seen by Danny. From his parents standpoint, Tony is the standard imaginary friend, until Danny’s out-of-reality visions and “special gift” evolves into more than his imagination alone. When Tony shows…
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Throughout the book The Shining by Stephen King, the story travels through a journey of conflicts. The main conflict began in Boulder, Colorado. Jack Torrance, one of the main characters, followed in his father’s footsteps and had become an alcoholic. His addiction to alcohol had driven him to commit awful actions causing his marriage to fall apart. Jack’s drinking habits made his anger issues worsen. Eventually, he loses control while being drunk, and he accidentally breaks his son Danny’s arm.…
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When Jack challenges the conch, the conch loses its power and influence of keeping peace and order. As the story progresses, Jack starts to disrespect the conch, saying how they “...don’t need the conch anymore. We know who ought to say things….It’s time some people knew they’ve got to keep quiet and leave deciding things to the rest of us (101-2).” Jack, even in the beginning, respected the conch, but when Jack and his group disrespect the conch, the concept…
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The settings in the two novels also contribute towards representing the idea of evil. In “The Shining” there is a perpetual blizzard occurring throughout the majority of the novel. As well as serving the purpose of physically trapping the characters, the constant movement of the snowflakes and the obscuring of vision creates a sense of mystery and confusion. Similarly, in “Jekyll and Hyde” the fog that settles over the town of Soho is a metaphor for the fog surrounding Hyde’s identity. It is “continually…
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flashback. The story told from Jack Burden’s view, the middle-aged man would have not been very significant if it weren’t for the specific devices Warren had used. Flashbacks were a reoccurring device in the novel. “This has been the story of Willie Stark, but it is my story, too” (Warren 595). Jack Burden, the main character, constantly goes back to previous events because it is his job to Willie Stark to dig up information on politicians, and because Burden is a historian. Jack Burden is telling this…
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