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Sunday, September 14, 2014

Dead Poets Society



            Carpe Diem. Seize the day; suck the marrow out of the bone of life.  What is life without passion? Asks Mr. Keaton to his students.  Indeed, most, if not all, of the students at the school go through the motions following a path set by their parents without any say or consideration.  This sets Todd and Neil’s internal journeys in motion from the get go.  Two roommates, both with their own problems end up being each other’s pillars as their lives start over.
On one side, Todd is a young man who suffers from finding his own voice in what Walt Whitman calls the play of life.  He suffers from being painfully shy and this keeps him from accepting help from the people who care about him. Only when he is pushed to his limits does he find it in himself to become the person he has locked up inside for too long.  Mr. Keaton describes Todd indirectly, but perfectly when he quotes Thoreau by saying: “Most men lead lives of quiet desperation”.  Afraid of the world might think of him, Todd defies his own wishes and desires in order to conform to this third person view he has of himself: a frightened turtle, hiding in his shell; an ostrich sticking its head in the dirt.  At first, he refuses to join his classmates in their Dead Poets Society meeting because he is afraid of the outside world in every sense.  This is how his external journey begins: Neil gives him no excuse to not go.  In a sense, his external journey is not about travelling, but becoming vulnerable to the world and accepting the reality that life is unpredictable and sometimes the greatest risks are the ones that pay off the most. 

Next to Todd, Neil starts off as a complete opposite: an outgoing, expressive and charismatic young man. As opposed to Todd, Neil already knows what his inner voice is, but struggles to let it out.  His greatest obstacle is his father who decided that Neil must become a doctor and emphasizes how he cannot let them down and that his desires for acting are only but a whim on the grand scheme of things. Like his friend Todd, he finds liberation in Mr. Keaton’s teaching about finding passion in life and sticking to it.  He took this advice to heart and decided to join a play without talking about it with his father. He chose to ignore his problems, his external journey, and chose to enjoy the bliss of ignorance.  Like Maya Angelou wrote so beautifully: “The caged bird sings of freedom”.  The only problem being that this caged bird tasted freedom, but a false one. After experiencing life out of a cage, there was no going back and that is why he took his own life once his father locked him in once again. In his death, he brought out the voice in his own classmates, especially Todd.

9 comments:

  1. I could use this entry to explain my comment on your last entry about your script. The example of Neil's father with his future, and it's really sad to have people like that as today, is unnaceptable. Do you know how many kids have died because of the parents' pressure? It very alarming, and it must scare us if we will be parents at the future.

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    1. I've known a lot of people who told me they wanted to study Medicine, but I later found out it was because of their parent's pressure that they were doing it. At least most of them talked with their parents and fixed things before it was too late.

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  2. I really like how your metaphor Neil and the caged bird, because that's exactly how it played out. He finally got a taste for what he craved for in life only for it all to fall down in shambles.


    PS. The teachers last name is Keating, not Keaton.

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  3. I really liked your last paragraph. When you compare the story with the cage. It made me reflect and see it from that point of view.

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  4. The end of the movie was very random to me because i didn't expect that but also was very sad. He was my fav character of the movie :(

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    1. I think that's why the writers made that choice: give the audience something to love and take it away. No better way to mark the audience and leave a profound message.

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  5. That Maya Angelou quote was perfectly used, May she rest in peace. Refering to the post, it's so sad how he longed for freedom, but was forced to be something he didnt want to be.

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