OPPapers.com Essay Index >> Book Reports >> Walabout Paper
We have many free term papers and essays on Walabout Paper. We also have a wide variety of research papers and book reports available to you for free. You can browse our collection of term papers or use our search engine.
Walabout Paper Walkabout (Film 1971) 1) By no fault of their own, the two children are stranded in the Australian outback. Without enough food or water, they have
Submitted by RicebowlInc on April 26, 2007
Category: Book Reports
Words: 1141 | Pages: 5
Views: 332
Popularity Rank: 40,742
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)
Walkabout (Film 1971)
1)
By no fault of their own, the two children are stranded in the Australian outback. Without enough food or water, they have to find their way back without any help.
When they run into the aboriginal boy, the children were almost at the "end of the line". In order to survive, they are forced to work and live by the lifestyle of the aboriginal boy, who is (to quote the quote) "a spectrum opposite, who they are forced to coexist with)
2)
The landscape portrayed in the movie is the Australian outback. The outback is nothing other than a desert. Yet this setting acts as two different areas, depending on which perspective you look from (either the children or the aboriginal boy). For the two children, this desert is an uninhabitable environment. They are not used to this type of place and have a hard time adapting. But the aboriginal boy is at home in the desert. He knows where to find everything he needs to survive. So in this sense, the landscape plays a very important role to tell the story as it is.
3)
The Invasion of outsiders to a new harsh land can only refer to one thing, which is the two children being involuntarily introduced to the Australian outback, an environment they are not used to (so to them it is a "harsh new land"). Their inability to survive is shown by how exhausted they were when they reached the oasis. At some point they used up all the available water. So in a way they were extremely lucky to have met the aboriginal boy.
An example for their refusal to accept the aboriginal culture would the fact that the girl refuses to take off her clothes in front of the aboriginal boy, while her brother is very open to accepting this way of life.
4)
For me the very last scene of the movie is the most memorable. Not...
You must Login to view the entire paper.
If you are not a member yet, Sign Up for free!