Thursday, February 16, 2012

How the movie the Road missed the point.

This post has spoilers.  Mostly my reviews aren't really reviews; they're rants.  


The movie version of The Road nearly got it right.  The casting was pretty much spot on (Charlize Theron and Guy Pearce aside).  The sets captured the feel and bleakness of the book.  It even had the correct meandering, yet tense pace.  It was hard to tear my eyes away from the screen.  And yet, the movie makers, with one bad choice, destroyed the entire point of the novel.  And the frustrating thing is ALL THEY  HAD TO DO WAS STICK TO THE ALREADY WRITTEN ENDING.  I forgave them for adding the back story with the wife.  Whatever.  It was unnecessary but it did flesh things out.  But the fact that they deviated when it mattered most makes me think that the people involved in the movie had no idea what McCarthy was trying to say.  

The point (and here comes the spoiler) is that trust is necessary.  That it is okay to reach out to others.  The entire narrative sets the boy and the man against each other, with the man going to extremes to protect the boy by not trusting or helping anyone and the boy continuing to try and convince the man to reach out to others.  At the end of the book, after the man dies, the boy makes the active choice to stop hiding and stand on the road.  It is only because he chose to be found that help was able to find him..  He actively decided to turn his back on the teachings of his father and open himself up to others.  That moment is the only moment of hope and faith in the entire story.  And the movie missed it.

In the movie, the boy is on the beach when he sees the other people.  He has no place to hide.  By the time he notices the stranger, he is spotted.  Thus, his rescue is an accident.  There is no lesson learned and no action by the boy.  In the movie, the boy did not learn or grow, he just was lucky.  There was no redemption.  What a waste.  

Friday, February 10, 2012

Monkey School: Valentines Day

I haven't been posting Monkey School lately.  So I will try and do better.  Today's lesson was all about valentine's day.

We started by reading Somebody Loves You, Mr. Hatch by Eileen Spinelli.  It is a wonderful book about the power of feeling loved by those around you.  I then had the kids find hearts (I had taped them around the room) to give to a group of sad stuffed animals.

Next, we played in our valentine's day themed sensory bin.  Thanks to the dollar spot at Target, we had heart shaped measuring cups.  The kids loved them and my homemade funnels (if I do say so myself).


Lastly, we did two art projects.  First we made those hearts where you put drops of paint on one side and then fold it over and "massage the paper" (that's how Miss M describes it) until a beautiful, symmetrical design is formed.  I used finger paints for this because I thought they would spread more easily than poster paint.  I think they turned out beautiful.

Then we used homemade stamps to decorate our Valentine's treat bags.  We will use the bags at our party next week.  and yes, the hearts are made out of toilet paper rolls.