My favorite short story from this unit was “The Most Dangerous Game” by Richard Connell. I was pleased with the story in general. It was entertaining, suspenseful, and very well written. It offered meaningful controversy which I believed acted as the theme. While reading this story I noticed many elements of literature camouflaged in the text. A few of the elements I thought were significant to the story was the theme, setting, personification, and denouement. First off, “The Most Dangerous Game had a very captivating theme. I think the theme was Hunter vs Hunted. It caused the reader to choose a side. Do hunted animals have a thought process? Do they understand their fate? Is it possible that they feel emotions? These are questions that
It had been a week since Rainsford managed to kill the nefarious General Zaroff. The challenging part was almost over or so it seemed. There was not a clear way for Rainsford to escape. As days passed, Rainsford tried to escape. He tried making a boat from driftwood that he found, he tried swimming, he even tried sending a signal by using a flashlight. Rainsford had become so desperate that he even tried some ridiculous plans like trying to pole vault across the ocean. As a result, Rainsford ended up having huge gashes in his left leg ,which got infected, and he had to amputate it. As days turned into weeks, and weeks into months, Rainsford had lost hope and became bitter.
Richard Connell's "The Most Dangerous Game" is a very exciting story of a manhunt. This story made me think about the morality of hunting: Humans are the cleverest creatures on earth, but does it give them a license to kill the other animals and even human beings weaker than themselves? I give below a short summary of the story to set the scene and then I will explore the ethics involved in hunting as a sport. "The Most Dangerous Game" presents the story of a hunter, General Zaroff, who finds hunting human beings as the most dangerous and fascinating sport.
Rainsford wakes up from his deep sleep in the comfortable bed he had worked for in the battle agaought to himself maybe the General wasnt so crazy after all and so Rainsford said is this what it takes to be the best hunter ? Rainsford immediately locks up the celled men again and Rainsford starts his game of his own . Rainsford declares his game and tells all of the men the rules and choices , either they play the game or they play the game there is no way escaping Rainsford you must play the game and survive or their other choice is to not play the game and most likely face death . He releases the men into the wilderness and the games begin . Rainsford realizes why general zaroff would play this game its because it gives you a rush
Richard Connell’s The Most Dangerous Game is an action-packed and suspenseful short story. This tale is about a man in the early 1920s named Sanger Rainsford who falls off a yacht and gets stuck on an island that holds a bad reputation. He finds shelter in a castle where he is welcomed but then, gets outwitted into being hunted as part of a dangerous game for three days by a Cossack named General Zaroff.
In the short story “The Most Dangerous Game” By Richard Connell there are many similes used to help develop the story. One simile Connell uses in his story is “He strained his eyes in the direction from which it was like trying to see through a blanket.” The simile means that he couldn’t see at all. This impacts the text by building suspense for the reader. At this moment He heard a shot and looked around for the shot but then shortly he reached too far and fell off the ship. The fact the author chose to use this simile made the island creepy and mysterious. Another simile used in the short story is “where there’s none; giant rocks with razor edges crouch like a sea monster with wide-open jaws. They can crush a ship as easily as I crush this
In Richard Connell’s short story, “The Most Dangerous Game” the setting is essential to the plot. For example, the setting has to be somewhere isolated. The setting has to be secluded so that no one can find out what Zaroff is doing on the island. Without the isolation, Zaroff would not be able to hunt his prey, without other people finding out, and trying to put a stop to it. Although people do know about the island, people seem to realize it is a dreadful place, Whitney says “Even cannibals wouldn’t live in such a God forsaken place.”(1) Another element of the setting that is crucial to the plot is the rocks. The rocks are necessary because without them, Zaroff would not be able to destroy boats in the false channel, an area that “Indicates
When you watch the movie High Noon, and read the story "The Most Dangerous Game" you may not see many similarities or differences when you first read, or watch. But you might start to put the puzzle pieces together when you watch a second time or begin to think about what's the same or different about them. One of the main similarities in both stories is that the main characters are outnumbered by their enemies. This is a reoccurring theme in both. In High Noon, there are four bad guys coming to town to take their revenge on Will Kane. In "The Most Dangerous Game" Rainsford is hunted by Ivan, general Zaroff, and his pack of dogs. Another similarity I spotted was when both characters needed help the most there was no one who was brave enough to help them. One of the major differences between them was they both had different settings, and move at a different pace. However this helps build the stories. Both stories have their own way of building suspense. Each of these stories take showing the theme and differences to a whole new level
Perhaps the fear of imminent death is mankind's greatest fear; the film High Noon, directed by Fred Zinneman, and the short story "The Most Dangerous Game," written by Richard Connell, both present this great fear as the stories' central conflict. High Noon, an old western, shows a marshal named Will Kane who is trying to face a criminal by the name of Frank and his gang by himself as no one in his town offers to help him. The short story "The Most Dangerous Game" tells of a renowned hunter named Sanger Rainsford stranded on desolate island named "Ship-Trap"; on this island he meets General Zaroff who later hunts Rainsford as part of his "most dangerous game. " Even though these literary works have quite different settings, they share many
The Most Dangerous Game by Richard Connell is about a talented hunter named Sanger Rainsford who gets stranded on an island. On the island he meets General Zaroff who is also an extremely talented hunter who has hunted over hundreds of animals, but now has a new hunting interest. Rainsford finds out that General Zaroff’s new hunting interest is hunting men who get stranded on this island. General Zaroff gives the man a head start on hiding and when midnight comes he starts to find them. If the man last 3 days on the island without being seen by General Zaroff he wins, but if he finds him he gets hunted.
Simile: A figure of speech that makes a comparison between two things, using like or as. Example: “An apprehensive night crawled slowly by like a wounded snake, and sleep did not visit Rainsford, although the silence of a dead world was on the jungle.” -The Most Dangerous Game, page 32 Function: Context-Rainsford is hiding from General Zaroff in the forest of Ship-Trap Island.
Everyone does certain things when they can’t have what they desire and often they are mean. Whether they mean it or not it still happens. In “The Most Dangerous Game” Zaroff can’t be the best hunter in the world with Rainsford still alive, so since he could not get what he desired Zaroff hunts and attempts to kill Rainsford. In “All Summer In A Day.” Margot can remember the sun from while on Earth, however on Mars the sun comes out only once every 7 years causing the kids not to remember and to be jealous. Resulting in the kids locking Margot in a closet before the sun comes out because they can not get what they desire, which is to see the sun everyday. Both Richard Connell in “The Most Dangerous Game” and Ray Bradbury in “All Summer In A Day” we can see how the authors use actions and feelings to get across the point of people do mean things when they can not have what they desire.
“One of us is to finish a repast for the hounds. The other will sleep in this very excellent bed. On guard Rainsford.”
The Most Dangerous Game starts with “Sanger Rainsford steaming south to brazil to hunt jaguars in the amazon with a fellow hunter his friend named Whitney.” Rainsford is a heartless hunter, who hunts for sport with his fellow friend.
I’m sitting in my room, and suddenly I hear a knock at my door, and suddenly another one, I signal Ivan to go to the door and greet whoever is at the door. As Ivan opens the door, I hear a man state his name and business, but one thing stands out, the man at the door is the marvelous hunter, Sanger Rainsford. A smile spreads across my face as I ecstatically run down the stairs to meet the victim of my next hunt. I introduce myself as General Zaroff, and explain that Ivan is deaf, and slightly dumb. I also tell him that if he wants anything he can just ask, I explain that I was about to have my dinner when he had come, I tell him to go get some clothes from my room, he then runs up the stairs. I then went to my dining room, sat down and started
his balance.” “The Most Dangerous Game” is one of the if not the greatest short stories. While it isn't that short sitting at 8,426 words compared to “The Interlopers” with 2,177 words. The short story is an opportunity allowing students to read a story without wasting a whole week on one story. The most interesting of these short stories the freshman English Exploration class read was “The Most Dangerous Game”, “The Lady and The Tiger”, and “The Interlopers”.