ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


All British Literature Videos 53 videos

1984
135158 Views

Well, if this book doesn't make you want to tape over your laptop camera, we don't know what will.

1984 and V for Vendetta
17150 Views

Imagine a world in which all literature was dystopian. Okay, so we may be getting to that point, 1984 and V for Vendetta helped start it all.

1984 Summary
136167 Views

By the end of this video, you will be brainwashed. There's nothing you can do about it; we just wanted to let you know. We like to think we're bigg...

See All

ELA 12: 1.21 This Is the End 78 Views


Share It!


Description:

The ending is arguably the most important part of any story. Luckily, with Frankenstein, we get two for the price of one.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:01

No When it comes to fiction good endings air really

00:05

important Think of planet of the apes with the statue

00:09

of liberty just jutting out of the sand and the

00:10

protagonist having a good scream on the beach Yeah spoiler

00:14

alert Sorry with that money be remembered is such a

00:17

classic if instead the protagonist had just spilled some soup

00:20

on his pants screamed a little bit and spent the

00:22

last twenty minutes of the film trying to clean up

00:24

probably not soiled pants don't exactly feel the cinema's At

00:29

least we hope they don't remind us to bring some

00:31

wet wipes next time we go to a movie but

00:33

luckily for frankenstein it has a pretty epic laundry free

00:36

scene to cap it off As we recall captain robert

00:40

walton was the guy who was listening to victor frankenstein's

00:42

long tale of woe and monsters until victor finally wrote

00:46

which was a real impediment to his storytelling career In

00:50

the books last seen walton finds the monster weeping over

00:53

his creators dead body of course he's going to be

00:55

a bit sad he might be a monster but he's

00:57

not a monster The monster delivers a bit of a

01:00

monologue with his maker dead the monster thinks that he

01:03

has no purpose in life and resolves to build a

01:06

funeral pyre for himself and die When some people want

01:10

a personal project we'll think maybe build a birdhouse or

01:13

a spice rack but not this guy And with that

01:15

his monologue completely leaps out the window onto a nice

01:18

raft which takes him out of you into the darkness

01:22

That might be an impressive exit but we don't recommend

01:24

that you ever try it One thing that's interesting about

01:26

the end of frankenstein is that depending on the addition

01:28

you're reading you might get a slightly different ending Not

01:32

that there's one where the monster goes water skiing into

01:34

the distance behind a motorboat being driven by a polar

01:37

bear The difference is air a bit more subtle than

01:39

all that well here the two last senses of the

01:42

eighteen thirty one version and has everything we just covered

01:45

jumping out the window getting on the ice raft and

01:48

then disappearing into the darkness No surprises by contrast here's

01:52

the original eighteen eighteen version it's almost exactly the same

01:56

but he had noticed any difference is one big one

01:59

Is that in the original the monster clearly pushes himself

02:03

off This gives us the image of a character who's

02:06

in control of the very end of his story unlike

02:09

one who's getting thrown around by the very strong waters

02:12

as powerful as a bath toy Well the second difference

02:15

is that in the original it's walton who loses sight

02:18

of the monster that gives us a dose of ambiguity

02:21

he's only lost a human eyes It might have a

02:23

life beyond our world While who knows he might even

02:27

skip out on the funeral pyre and make a nice 00:02:29.198 --> [endTime] birdhouse instead

Related Videos

A Tale of Two Cities Summary
75858 Views

Meet Charles Darnay, the nobleman who spends more time on trial and in prison than attending balls and drinking expensive wine. Don't feel too bad...

Beowulf
113100 Views

Written in Anglo-Saxon, or Old English, sometime between the 8th and 11th centuries, Beowulf is an epic poem that reflects the early medieval warri...

Brave New World
79224 Views

Brave New World is supposed be an exciting book about a negative utopia and the corrupt powers of authority. So where’s the big car chase? What's...

Dracula
27348 Views

What is Dracula really about? Just Count Dracula? Or is there more to it than vampires? This video addresses some major ideas in Bram Stoker’s cl...

Dracula: Father of the Modern Vampire
17556 Views

There are plenty of famous vampires that send chills up our spines, but Dracula was and still is the king of them all. No one else can touch him. N...