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In the movie, Pleasantville, David and Jennifer are sucked through the television into a fifties sitcom sent by a television repairman under special circumstances to discover an unknown world, a world now transforming them into Bud and Mary Sue Parker.
In this town, Pleasantville, endless images are black or white, and every value, every symbol, every feeling, and every emotion is swell, or gray. Gary Ross, writer and director of the movie, Pleasantville, sought many allusions inflicted within his film corresponding with peoples’ emotions. ...
Before transported to Pleasantville, David socially showed an inferior attitude toward what he wanted in his life. ... However, in Pleasantville Bud gains his social status by taking a chance to what he has never been able to do: ask a girl on a date. ... She then feels inferior to tell her husband, someone she should be able to confide in and to be open with because she feels he and Pleasantville will not accept her color. ... A perplexed idea as to why he took that outcome of leaving a girlfriend, friends, and a greater bond with his sitcom family is due to his knowledge conceived in Pleasantville. ... Now that no one of Pleasantville knows how the final episode will end, the town will not be so pleasant and that will be okay.
Approximate Word count = 1180 Approximate Pages = 4.7 (250 words per page double spaced)
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