...SHE KILLS MONSTERS CRITIQUE I went to see “She Kills Monsters”. I read about the play before I went and was excited to see it because I had never seen a play that sounded so modern. I have friends that play Dungeons and Dragons, so I really could connect to the basic idea of this play. While watching “She Kills Monsters”, I was intrigued by the depth of the storyline and each character. It gave me “Wizard of Oz” flashbacks. Not only was this play highly comical and entertaining, but it had a good message: get to really know the people you love before it’s too late. This play started out funny. It continued to be funny until the very end. The sexual innuendos as well as the Dungeons and Dragons plot line kept the story fun and light, all the while floating on a much more important, serious theme. The production was not only trying to entertain us, but they were trying to teach us a very valuable lesson. You need to get to know the people you love before it is too late. They did this by using Agnes and her sister Tilly. Tilly dies, and Agnes realizes that she really didn’t know her sister as well as she thought she did. She thought she was just a nerd, but really, Tilly was strong and powerful. They kept this entertaining by working this lesson into the Dungeons and Dragons game and adding comedy to lighten the mood. This play was definitely doing. I, along with at least a majority of the audience in the auditorium loved it. I could tell this by the audiences’ reaction to...
Words: 627 - Pages: 3
...McKenna Griffiths HUMN 1120 Short Paper 1, Prompt #3 2/9/2016 Phèdre’s Monsters Phèdre, the daughter of Minos and Pasiphae, is the half-sister to the illegitimate son of her mother and a bull: the Minotaur. Theseus, Phèdre’s husband and the king of Athens, seeks to kill monsters to protect his kingdom. The literal monsters that Theseus seeks to destroy exhibit the same features that are innate in his wife due to her monstrous blood line. Phèdre’s half-brother, the Minotaur, displays physical monstrousness and destruction, whereas Phèdre is destructive emotionally and mentally. Phèdre’s feelings for Hippolytus manifest in such a way that result in literal consequences, such as the ruin of her marriage and the betrayal of her kingdom. Although Theseus seeks to eliminate literal monsters, he fails to deal with, let alone take notice of the monsters that reside inside of his wife. However, due to the fact that he is constantly gone for his job, he is not necessarily given the chance to. Throughout this story, the characters are overwhelmed with concern over killing physical monsters, and they seem to turn a blind eye to the figurative monsters within. These monsters prove to be more destructive than a literal beast. After revealing her love to Hippolytus, Phèdre states: Your father was a hero, be like him, And rid the world of one more monster now. Does Theseus’ widow dare to love his son? Believe me you should not let her escape. Here is my heart. Here, where your hand...
Words: 788 - Pages: 4
...In this novel Victor Frankenstein created a monster that he had grown to become afraid of. After the monster was created Victor left him, but when Frankenstein returned to his house the monster was gone. Victor Frankenstein becomes ill and his best friend Henry Clarval takes care of him. When Frankenstein becomes well again he goes home, but when he gets there he receives a letter that said that Elizabeth had got Scarlet Fever and Caroline Beafort took care of her, but as Elizabeth was getting better Caroline Beafort caught it and she died. After two years Frankenstein runs into the monster. The monster tells him everything that has happened in his life, but the monster wonted a female companion. Frankenstein said he was not going to do it. The monster tells him that if he didn’t do it he was going to kill others in his family. So Victor started to create the female, but he could not go thought with it. So he runs, but the monster eventually finds him and tell him that he was going to see him on his wedding night. Frankenstein is afraid to marry Elizabeth because the monster might kill her and he does. Frankenstein is so angry at this point that he wants to kill the monster, but the monster is so fast and so strong that he just plays with Frankenstein’s mind. The monster played with him so much that he lead Frankenstein all the way to the Artic where he eventually dies because he wasn’t eating right. In the Artic the monster also kills himself because he has no one to tease are...
Words: 797 - Pages: 4
...The plan is crazy, but it’s also good. We take a somewhat of a direct approach. The building is surrounded by monsters. So we have to sneak in from the outside. If we tried staying inside the building until everyone left, we would be done for because the monsters would know where we are. We sneak on a taller building the one that Marco and Lily used to scout out the area. All we see are normal people, though we have eyes of demigods that allow us to look into the godly side of the world. When we look in we see hideous monsters like Cyclops, chimera, empusa, more shadow lurkers, and lastly a Minotaur. Great I truly think Philoctetes is underestimating the importance of the artifact. At least there aren’t Hydra. “Are you sure you want...
Words: 1366 - Pages: 6
...Ciguapa Have you ever wanted to turn a famous monster into a good one, or would you rather show people that this monster or person is innocent? You have a favorite monster that you think is cool but is too mean to be considered an idol? Do you wish that you could change it to be seen as a monster? Well that's exactly what I did, I changed a latin folklore monster into a good one in the book, The Summer of the Mariposas, written by Guadalupe Garcia McCall. Now I'll explain how I did it. Modernized Monster In the book, The Summer of the Mariposas, there was a monster in the book called the chupacabra that I replaced for my own folklore monster. She is called The Ciguapa. I made her to be a nice person, kind, beautiful, helpful and is mostly misunderstood by most...
Words: 613 - Pages: 3
...the Male Monster in Halloween and Halloween H2O” wrote by Kelly Connelly, introduces a new idea about women in slasher films. In the article, Connelly states that women in films dealing with slashing, will have to learn and be able to face the masculine traits of the killer to be able to surive and be the “Final Girl” (13). Kelly uses the movies Halloween, Halloween 2, and Halloween H2O to describe the relationship that is used in each of these movies. The relationship she describes is the female-male relationship, which would be considered the male killer and the Final Girl (13, 14). A few traits that Connelly describes that the “final girl” has is that she is never sexually active and she often acts more like a boy than a woman. If she sees something that is not normal or is out of the ordinary then she is automatically assured to go check to see what it is which causes her to receive the traits of being smart and attentive of her surroundings (14). Clover has come to see that Laurie achieves empowerment as the final girl based on her ability to stay alive long enough to be rescued in the first film, Halloween (14). But twenty years later in Halloween H2O Laurie had become of age as the true final girl” by assuming the male characteristics of her attacker, which would be a necessary step in defeating the slasher film monster. The lessons Laurie learned in Halloween and Halloween 2 will permit her to finally triumph as the final girl by defeating the male monster in Halloween...
Words: 1732 - Pages: 7
...Heroes and Their Monsters Many heroes have been born or trained throughout the centuries. Most of the heroes are legends from stories or people being in the right spot at the wrong moment and living to tell the tale. Stories have been told around fires about mighty heroes battling against the atrocious monsters. These stories date as far back as 800 B. C. E. The first of these bodacious heroes was Beowulf and his battles consist of battling against the gruesome Grendel, his seducing mother, and a fire-breathing dragon. Beowulf was a Geatish warrior from Geatland which is now known as Sweden. He was a true warrior who thought he needed to fight any monster that came his way. However, Beowulf was also paid to hunt and kill. Beowulf was a selfless person who was governed by a code of ethics to help other people and his inner conflicts, whether to act selflessly to help others or to accumulate rewards and personal fame, are good examples of the human side of his personality (Homepage). The first monster up on Beowulf’s list of battles is Grendel, a lone-walker who kills at night and uses no weapons and runaways when something does not go his way. In the battle between the mighty Beowulf and the monstrosity of a being named Grendel, Beowulf severs Grendel’s arm and hangs it in the middle of the mead-hall to show of his trophy to the king. In the meantime, Grendel runs to where he lives in the swamps and bleeds to death. Beowulf’s next monster that he encountered is Grendel’s...
Words: 816 - Pages: 4
...with the novel people cant resist the urge to go back and understand the relationships between many of the main characters and why some of the characters did what they did. Mary Shelley the author of Frankenstein is known for creating relationships in novels and either leaving them unexplained or making the reader question what she was trying to reveal about society and its shortcoming though a specific characters relationship. While reading Frankenstein this happened many times with multiple relationships such as the one between Elizabeth and Victor, Victor and the monseter or the monster and society. Almost every character revealed speaks to the most inner thoughts people have. Throughout the novel Frankenstein, the reader comes to understand the human condition in many ways. In this particular novel, many times loneliness comes into effect and changes how the character acts and reacts to each other and their surroundings. When Elizabeth is first introduced into the book she is portrayed as a lonely character. She is an orphan and seems to have a assortment of problems and never to leaves her house. When it comes to her relationship with Victor, she never seems to accomplish the act of dating or getting together. Victor seems to have this exact same problem when it comes to the loneliness aspect of his life. He cannot seem to find himself. He goes off to college and has this exact same issue (quote), he sits around and tries to figure out how to make a human when at the...
Words: 1435 - Pages: 6
...is a heroic poem about a man who saves a town from many different types of monsters. The hero, Beowulf, came from a distant land where he was very famous for slaying sea monsters. He had heard of a beast that was troubling a town far away. This beast was called Grendel. Grendel was a terrible monster who loved to terrorize the town and had a thirst for blood. Beowulf is then able to slay him along with his mother and a dragon. The first main problem that occurs in the poem is the fight with Grendel. In the poem, Grendel had terrorized the town and killed many people in the mead hall. Grendel returned to the mead hall to kill many times. He also had a weakness toward loud noises. When Beowulf finally fought him , he was able to kill Grendel by breaking his arm which caused him to bleed to death. In the movie, Grendel came to the mead hall only two total times. He also had an over exaggerated sensitivity to loud noises. His main weakness in the movie was his ears, and that is how Beowulf killed him. Beowulf made loud noises to distract Grendel. He then stabbed and punched Grendel’s ears until they popped. In the movie, Grendel’s mom was a beautiful girl made of gold. She had past relations with the town’s king . The gold horn that was the symbol of the king’s monarchy was actually given to him by Grendel’s mother. She then stole the horn and Beowulf went to retrieve it and attempted to kill Grendel’s mother. This is where the movie really takes a twist and makes it...
Words: 581 - Pages: 3
...Innocence in To Kill a Mockingbird To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, published in 1960, is a novel about a little girl who experiences a trial. This novel takes place in Maycomb, Alabama during the Great Depression. In the book, a mockingbird is a symbol of innocence. Children have innocence and when the ¨kill¨ their own innocence, they grow up. Scout is a little white girl who doesn't quite understand the world yet. In the book, She keeps her innocence but is later attacked. Tom Robinson is an African American man who was convicted of rape. A crime he did not commit, which he was sentenced to death for and killed for running away. Boo Radley is a man who was said to be a monster but in reality saved scout and her brother Jem. In the book,...
Words: 995 - Pages: 4
...this is in What of a Goldfish, would you wish?, Sergei kills Yonatan without giving him a chance, he acted quickly and killed him. Another reason is in The Wife's Story, the wife thinks her husband is a monster because of what he looked like. Last reason is in The Interlopers, the two men want to kill each other. First of all, the text does not support the idea that people should accept others different from themselves because in What a of a Goldfish, Would You Wish?, Sergei kills Yonatan without giving him a chance. In the story "he seems to have taken the burner off the stove and hit the boy in the head." Sergei shouldn't have acted so quickly and killed Yonatan. He should have been more accepting of him....
Words: 441 - Pages: 2
...great strength and courage. He portrays this by killing Grendel, killing Grendel’s mother, and killing the sea monsters. Beowulf characterizes the trait of having strength and courage by killing Grendel. During the colossal fight, Beowulf is able to rip off the shoulder off Grendel, and hangs them up in Geats. A quote from the story to support this is, “A prince of the Geats, had killed Grendel, Ended the grief, the sorrow, the suffering Forced on...
Words: 563 - Pages: 3
...that of an enigma. One in particular character Frankenstein’s monster was exposed to an environment in which it was unable to benefit from typical social interactions, giving it a poor start in social intelligence. Early interactions with dangers and humans seemed unforgiving and interactions with such things were poorly executed. The main and first true admiration of the monster,...
Words: 1295 - Pages: 6
...Conocimiento Tannin Mythological Monster Citizens: Conocimientans One day Takie’s daughter Persephone was walking along the woods. Then that day the god Ninnat came out from the underworld. He saw her and was completely astounded. He wished her to be his wife, so he quickly snatches her and takes her into the underworld. When her mother couldn’t find her she traveled the world in search for Persephone. However she was to no avail. She grew sad and soon she neglected her duties and soon the world was cold and nothing grew. In this chaos a monster was born, it was called The Foot Nose Monster. In the underworld Persephone had seen a side to Ninnat no one has ever seen before. Others had seen him as cruel, evil, and Cold-Hearted. However Persephone...
Words: 935 - Pages: 4
...The book of Beowulf and the movie have a lot differences and also has its similarities. Most of the time the movie is very different from the book movies always want to give things drama and more excitement. also movies make us understand more of the book if you are not a reader. but books have those tasteful words and always a lot more detail and Beowulf was one of those. it was so much different from the book. In Beowulf the epic poem Hrothgar was not the father of Grendel. In the poem there is never any mention of either Hrothgar and Beowulf ever being involved or enticed to become the fathers of Grendel or the dragon which the major points in the movie. Hrothgar was also a good person in the poem rather than being an old drunken like...
Words: 522 - Pages: 3