Activity 1
Activity 1
Activity 1
2. Both main characters were battling for their lives, how are there problems and the way
they handle it different?
They both had trauma. To compensate with the trauma, Violet shows it to
everyone that she is still mourning by crying and being alone. Finch, on the other hand,
had to be a jolly and carefree around people, trying to judge all the insults in order to get
away with his condition.
3. What were the source of the trauma of both protagonist?
Violet lost her sister due to an accident and seem to struggle moving on to that
tragedy, due to this she cannot ride a car. Finch got his trauma, maybe also his condition,
to his dad who has been abusing them when they were young.
Toward the beginning of the Netflix movie, Violet has a conversation with a boy at
the party she goes to for a short time. He asks her when she’s going to stop acting like she is
and go back to before. It’s obviously not a great thing to say to someone and she walks off. I
thought it was Ryan but turns out he was Roamer and Ryan is not in this movie at all. In
Niven’s novel, it’s explained that her and Ryan used to date and since her sister died, they
kind of just stopped. After meeting Finch, at first Violet tries to go on a couple dates with
him but she’s not feeling it.
In the movie, it makes it seem like after he has the falling out with Violet’s parents
it’s all downhill from there for Finch. He stops talking to Violet, throws down his sticky
notes and ultimately commits suicide at the lake. However, in the book there’s much more to
it. At first, he does text Violet back about the whole thing with their parents, and they are
doing okay. But then he gets expelled from school for that fight with Roamer. He attempts
suicide first by consuming a bunch of sleeping pills. Feeling bad about it, he rushes himself
to the ER and gets his stomach pumped. This is when Violet confronts him, and he runs off.
The heartbreaking conclusion to To All The Bright Places is pretty much the same.
Finch dies. However, on the movie there is no particular scene about the death of finch but
on the book, at the moment when she finds his car and clothes at the lake, she doesn’t believe
it right away. She says to herself “People like Theodore Finch don’t die. He’s just
wandering” as she dives in and tries to find him. Later when the police come, they find his
body, ask her to identify him and she’s still in denial of it. She does call his family and break
the news. It certainly would have made for a more brutal finale to the film that might have
been too tough for many viewers to take.