Love itself is a simple word, but no word can compare to its power. Love can lead people to extremes and some people to ruin. In Feed by MT Anderson, the story overshadows two teenagers in love and their terrible ending. The story begins when Titus and his friends go to the moon for spring break, where they meet Violet. Shortly after a day on the moon, Titus and his friends, including Violet, are attacked by the Coalition. After they return home from the hospital, Violet has a secret; a secret that will change Titus and Violet's lives forever. Violet's power supply isn't working properly; he is dying. All this information and Violet's memory overload, wish list has made Titus separated from her. Ultimately, Titus is reunited with Violet as she dies. Titus then resolves, “Everything must go” (Anderson 299). In Pixar's Wall-E, the story set in a robotic and catastrophic earth tells a love story between Wall-E and Eve. Although the film is wordless, they are not necessary to see the love between Wall-E and Eve. Pursuing Eva relentlessly, Wall-E boards the AXIOM. After discovering the plant, the captain of the AXIOM is mesmerized by the beauty of the land. Inspired, the Captain faces a couple of battles against the technology but returns the ship to earth. Even though the earth is lifeless and adulterated, they begin to nourish it with plants. Analyzing MT Anderson's Feed and Pixar's Wall-E, both share some differences and similarities. If you were to compare an apple to an orange, you would surely think that they were not similar. In fact, they are similar in different ways. MT Anderson's Feed and Disney Pixar's Wall-E share an immense number of similarities in their plots and storylines. First, the… center of the card… Undoubtedly, Anderson chose to end Feed on a terminal note. Feed shows the world a glimpse of what the world could achieve in a couple of years. Likewise, MT Anderson's Feed and Disney Pixar's Wall-E foreshadow what will happen if technology annihilates the world. These books warn people that our addiction to technology is getting out of control. People are increasingly relying on phones or computers. Feed and Wall-E warn people of dark dystopian worlds that can transform into the world of the next generations. Feed and Wall-E symbolize our warnings for possible destruction in the near future. Works Cited Anderson, MT Feed. Cambridge, MA: Candlewick, 2002. Print.Scott, AO “In a world left silent, a heart beeps.” New York Times June 27, 2008: n. page Print.WALL-E. Director Andrea Stanton. Perf. Ben Burett, Elissa Knight, Jeff Garlin. Pixar, 2008. DVD.
tags