Pancake House Movie Vs Book

Words: 357
Pages: 2

Roy Eberhardt loved living in Montana until his dad was called to Florida for work. His new school comes with many challenges and trouble. A running boy with no shoes catches his eyes on the first day and that is when it all starts. The officer on Mother Paula’s Pancake House construction site encounters trickery or vandalism. Roy encounters problems with a bully and gets him off his back. Roy’s main goal is to find out everything about the running boy and when he does, everything comes together. The vandalisms, the newspaper articles, the boy’s name, they all seem to just merge into one story. But even after that, the biggest challenge of all is to save the little guys. A gutsy little guy with a big heart goes out and does what is right. …show more content…
I liked how the directors incorporated humor into the movie because it made me laugh and pay attention more. I also did not like how they left out so many things like Mullet Fingers’ real name and the part when Roy talked to Beatrice’s parents. Overall, I liked the movie because it had humor but the book had better events and information. I decided to put the giant owl in the middle to stress that the book I mainly about them. I also put the picture of the police car in front of the Mother Paula’s Pancake House to show that the policeman, Officer Delinko, patrolled it in order to catch the vandalism suspect. The other picture of three kids in front of a bulldozer is about how they saved the owls. The three kids, Beatrice, Roy, and Mullet Fingers, stood in front of the bulldozer, hoping to stop Chuck Muckle form running over the owl burrows. These two pictures are important events because it shows that vandalisms were taken place there and how the kids themselves stopped the killing of innocent young owls. The quote, “Its time to stand up for the little guys,” is meaning that it is time for somebody to stop hurting the baby