After reading Watchmen by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons in my pop lit class, I understood why this comic series, though I had never heard of it, was a total classic. It has so much substance to it. And the visual medium was entirely necessary to make the points that this graphic novel makes. Without the illustrations, the story could never have this kind of depth to it. The novel poses this most interesting question: what if superheroes really did exist in our world? But what if most of them were more like Batman: ordinary people who use their talents to go about in disguise and help the helpless? Yet, in some sense, they admit that this could never happen in our own world, and so there are subtle changes (which become more obvious as the story progresses) which prove that these events are happening in an alternate timeline. The addition of overly vibrant and somewhat unusual colours plays into the fictional atmosphere of the whole thing. At the same time, they use the para...
Starting in a new positions at my job, I have to admit that I've been feeling pretty co rodent about it. It seemed simple enough. And then I hit an unexpected snag. I can across some problems that I didn't know how to solve because I've never experienced them before. And I admit that when I saw the first problem I started to panic a bit. But I reached out to my friend, and when he told me what to do I realized that it's okay if things don't always go as they should. After all, I'm human, so I'm going to make mistakes. Plus I'm still very new at this job, so no one will be expecting me to be perfect yet. If the fault is mine, they'll tell me what I've done wrong and hopefully I won't do it again. But I choose to see this as a learning experience, a small wave on an otherwise calm sea that has already passed me by. It won't stop me from enjoying life if I just let it go. This doesn't affect any of the important things in life.
While this show is so popular for its reinvention of classic fairy tales, talented actors, and well-written plots, the main idea behind Once Upon a Time is the theme of hope. The writers, Eddy Kitsis and Adam Horowitz say that the show is about hope, while their first show, Lost , was about redemption. I am sure that many others like myself have seen the redemption theme appearing in OUAT as well. Still, it is clear that the main message really is about having hope, faith, and belief, no matter the circumstances. The biggest example of this is with Snow White and Prince Charming. In all of their hard times, and whenever they are separated, they always have hope that they will find each other again. At the start of the show, they have no memories of each other, yet they have a special bond. Mary Margaret (Snow) takes the time to care for him at the hospital since no one knows who his family is, and it is when she reads their stories to him that he awakens. She had always hoped that...
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