Huanxi
Zhang
ENG113B
TTH
Jeffrey
Klepper
December 3, 2013
Evey in V for Vendetta Analysis
There are a number
of different parts between V for
Vendetta film and graphic novel. Though they both involve repressive
governments that monitor their citizens’ behavior, hunt after any
voice of resistance. Both governments control the media, and enforce their
tyrannies with terror-inducing branches of themselves. And, most importantly,
both involve an encounter with the horrifying that tests the value of truth.
This is embodied in Evey Hammond. In this character, the creator of each film
and graphic novel reveals his opinion of the resilience of the human spirit and
its thirst for truth in not exactly same ways.
The difference is a
difference of emphasis in film and graphic novel, which deals with the
resilience of human determination. Evey Hammond and her respective torture
experiences typify this. On the other hand, reached a point where her knowledge
of what was right and true outweighed any torture or death she might face. For
her, denial was worse than death or anything else. Sure, one could argue that the first two differences were
factors that added to her resolution. Or it could be said that her torture was
not as severe.
"Remember,
remember, the fifth of November. Gunpowder, treason and plot. I know of no
reason why gunpowder treason should ever be forgot." (14)
This story is
talking about the future of the British scene, when turmoil in the world, while
the British controlled by the dictator Adam Sutler, led by authoritarian
governments to limit their freedom of speech, control public opinion, creating
panic, developed a curfew, and the clandestine manufacture virus weapons and
whatever is in the living body to do experiment. Secret police monitor air as
the people with anything, any immigrants, Muslims, homosexuals and opposition
parties, who had the plague or sent to concentration camps would die, the
people under the dictatorship of silent resentment at Sutler, tends to numb.
Evey
is not introduced as a would-be teenage prostitute, although she is supposedly
on her way to a sexual encounter with Gordon Deitrich when she is caught and
nearly raped by Fingermen during the city curfew, being subsequently rescued by
V. And the background of her family is changed. In the film, she has an older
brother who is killed by a virus that was secretly developed from the
experiments on V and other inmates at Lark Hill. Her parents become political
activists and participate in anti-government protests. The Hammonds are
arrested by the Fingermen and die in Belmarsh prison. Evey's last memory of her
mother is of watching her head being covered by a black bag as she is dragged
away. Suddenly orphaned, Evey is sent to a child reclamation camp,
"re-educated" and released back into society. (wikipedia)
In
the comic book series, V abandons Evey after he kills Lilliman; in the film,
she runs away from V, then goes to Deitrich for protection. Evey does form a
relationship with Deitrich, but the two do not become lovers, as he is
homosexual. (Deitrich's arranged liaisons with female co-workers are a ruse to
deflect suspicions about his sexual orientation, since homosexuality is
illegal.) Soon after, however Dietrich is mercilessly beaten by Party Leader
Peter Creedy as he raids Deitrich's home and captures him, official revenge for
satirising the Chancellor on television. V gets to Evey before Creedy does and
captures her himself, though she is led to believe she's in the hands of the
Fingermen. The ensuing sequences involving the torture Evey undergoes, the
inspiration she finds in Valerie's letters, with her character's
transformation, which are taken from the graphic novel.
Unlike
in the graphic novel, Evey does not personally take up the mantle of V after
his death, but she does grant him his final wish and give him a Viking funeral
in a train car filled with explosives. Unlike the graphic novel, London's chief
of police, Inspector Eric Finch, discovers her. Also, unlike the comic book
series, Creedy and his men have already mortally wounded V, thus he is dead by
the time Finch finds them. Finch, who secretly sympathizes with V's cause, lets
her pull the lever triggering the explosives. Evey and Finch then watch as
Parliament is destroyed by V's funeral car, ending Norsefire's oppressive reign
over England.
During
the scene where Eric Finch tells his partner Dominic Stone about his visit to
Larkhill - and his feelings about the chain of events of everything that had
happened and everything that was going to happen - a very short shot of Evey Hammond
can be seen. She wears a turqoise dress while tending to a bouquet of Scarlet
Carsons and then turns away: the reflection in a mirror behind her sharpens,
revealing either Eric Finch or Domonic Stone sipping a drink while in a chair.
This seems to suggest the two end up in a relationship after the film concludes
as, unlike the shots of other events, this does not occur in the movie itself.
When
Evey is tortured by the “government” into betraying V. Although we see that V
was the one who was behind the torment of Evey, she does not give in and betray
him. This change in storyline led to Evey becoming apart of the cause, in terms
of overthrowing the government. (Rich) The main character in V for Vendetta use
violence to obtain results and reaches out to the citizens in order to achieve
his goal in revolting against the government. V also helps achieve his main
goal through violence. By changing the tactics in V for Vendetta, the citizens
overthrew the government, thus having the movie end happily. The novel ends
with the main characters brainwashed and the government succeeds in stopping
the rebellion. These changes were effective because it gives the audience
feelings of hope for society in the future.
Works
Cited
Rich, Joshua. "V for Vendetta." Entertainment Weekly, 869
(2006): 10-11.
Moore, Alan. V for Vendetta. Illus. David Lloyd. New York: Vertigo-DC
Comics, 2005. Print.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evey_Hammond
http://baike.baidu.com/subview/41404/7912437.htm
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