Thursday, March 21, 2019

The Use of Myths in the Film Scarface :: Movie Film Essays

The Use of Myths in the Film Scarface When I began thinking constrictive the habit of myths in the Howard Hawks film, Scarface, my first images were about the portrayal of the myth of the American Dream. I started to write about it but then I began thinking about how I could relate this film to Greek Mythology. I thought of nigh interesting parallels between this story and the story of Icarus. In mythology Icarus is the son of the craftsman, Daedalus. queen regnant Minos of Crete imprisons Icarus and his father in a labyrinth that Daedalus, himself, cookd. To escape, Daedalus crafts two pairs of go from surface and feathers. Daedalus warns his son not to fly to close to the sun because it forget carry the wax. Icarus doesnt heed the warning of his father and falls to his death in the sea. In Scarface, Tony Camonte is a gangster on the rise in the globe of organized crime. He builds an empire through murder and deceit and ends up dying in a barrage of police gunfire. In t he movie, Tony represents Icarus. Tony seeks to create his empire through by any means necessary. He comes up from the humble beginnings of being a poor Italian immigrant to ultimately decent a powerful mob boss. Through alienating all those close to him, he builds his own labyrinth around himself, which can be thought of as his steel fortress. He tries to escape by crafting wax wings in the form of an insatiable thirst for power. He thinks that if he practiced has more money or more power he will be able to escape his inevitable fate. He ignores the countless pleas of his set out to straighten up his life. Her character can be seen as Daedalus, she makes a sincere effort to steer her son to safety, but ultimately it is his conclusion and he ends up flying to close to the sun.

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