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Essay / literary film answer - 737
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory is a remake of the children's classic Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, although the acting, setting and story may seem silly at times, the film has in makes a logical message hidden behind all this. The film's emotional connection, believability, logic, purpose, and setting are extremely valid, and when you get past the childish dissembling, it truly is a serious film. The use of pathos is very strong at the beginning and end of the film. film, first with the character Charlie. He does not come from a privileged background and his father (the only working parent) does everything he can to provide for Charlie and the rest of the family. When the golden tickets were announced you can see Charlie's hope begin to build, when Charlie wins the ticket with no hope or expectations his enthusiasm exceeds that of most children and as he runs home by calling his parents to tell him the news, one would think he would exchange the ticket for nothing. After showing it to his parents, Charlie begins to get serious and evaluates his and his family's living conditions, and states that he wants to sell the ticket for money, because chocolate cannot improve the conditions of life. Children don't normally make this kind of sacrifice, but with Charlie you can see his seriousness, and in that moment you can feel everything he describes, it reminds you of how much you wanted to help your own parents with bills as a child.Willy Wonka also has his own form of pathos, towards the end of the film Mr. Wonka decides to see his father who he ran away from as a child, so he can eat some candy. When Wonka ran away, his father said, "...I won't be here when you come back!" ยป this is what parents tell their children middle of paper ......t about their dark side and really support the use of Telos. The Factory pretty much swallows the big German kid whole after he tries to eat the Factory, using the German kid's passion against him. The champion's passion was chewing gum and the chewing gum did indeed come from the factory, but this is not a true use of kairos. The British kid and the bratty geek both get what they deserve. The young British girl is thrown into the trash by a squirrel she wanted. Thinking she can get anything she wants, she goes after the squirrel when her father wouldn't, and it ended with both of them in the trash. Bratty geeks' use of kairos is strong, as are German fat boys. The Geek was trying to prove transportation, but it turned out to be very small and proved Mr. Wonka right when he said it shouldn't be done. Like the fat German, the bratty geek was swallowed up by the temptations of the factories..