Introductory Paragraph: In the movie “Suicide Squad”, produced by Charles Roven Richard Suckle, Deadshot (a.k.a Floyd Lawton) is a moody person and he is also known as a criminal and a dangerous, bad person, yet he still needs to fight crimes with his bad allies to save the world. He has superhuman accuracy with any weapon he touches and he is like a real life person. In the movie, he says “I don’t save people!” This refers to him being a bad person due to the fact he doesn’t use his special abilities to save people. Also, in the movie, he is having a peaceful conversation and someone interrupts him by saying “coward”, and he threatens that he will hit her by saying “I will knock you out, I don't care if you're a girl. This is an example of him being a moody guy. …show more content…
He is known to have superhuman accuracy with any weapon he touches and he is like a real life person and not like a real life person at the same time.. He is a person that is like a real life person, and he is a person that is not like a real life person at the same time.
Body Paragraph 1: In the movie “Suicide Squad”, produced by Charles Roven Richard Suckle, he is a really moody person. He could go from peaceful to angry to sad just because of little things such as if someone tells him something about his family because he can’t be with them. The jail wants him to save the world, but he peacefully says that there are conditions to that. He angrily says that if they want him to help save the world, then “I want full custody of my daughter”, due to the fact that he cannot be with her and he feels that she is
American Sniper is a book filled with strength, perseverance, and most importantly loss. As an autobiography, this New York Times bestseller recounts the exploits of Navy SEAL Chris Kyle, who had the most recorded sniper kills from 1999 to 2009. It made him the most deadliest sniper in United States military. The Pentagon has officially confirmed more than 150 of Kyle's kills (the previous American record was 109). Iraqi insurgents feared Kyle so much they named him al-Shaitan (“the devil”) and placed a bounty on his head.
He intends to free his children (at least, Jacobs wanted him to), but doesn’t. He sends his daughter
He realizes that his actions affect civilization, and he believes
He comes to this conclusion in an effort to make him feel better about himself due to a lack of confidence. While doing so temporarily rid him of his insecurities it fueled his jealousy and in turn allowing his inner war to thrive. He knew he was not as handsome nor
He must protect his father, even if it is his final act. According to the story, “They’re dead! They will never wake up! Never! Do you understand?”
Occasionally, he acts violently by attacking others. For example, while on the golf course, he and Beth get into an argument. He blames all of the family’s problems on Beth, raising his voice and
His feelings towards war seem to change, at times he shows the feeling of hatred, in other cases he’ll have the feeling of sorrow and tension, or his tone will go from humorous to solemn in a sentence. In the chapters They things They Carried, Enemies and Friends, How to tell a true War Story, Sweetheart of Song Tra Bong, and Style best explain his feeling towards war. In the
In this scene he sits in the deportation bus crying with other immigrants. when the author says “...He’ll just have to try again….” it shows that If the character wasn't wholeheartedly there for the right
His morals tell him to stay with his family and support them, but he knows he must
It’s not just a line from the drill instructor; I believe it has a lot of meaning. It’s almost like Joker’s instructions to hide behind his public persona of a warrior, a facade that helps him get through the entirety of the film until after killing the female sniper in vengeance of Cowboys death, his ultimate war face has to be shown. All in vengeance of Cowboy being killed. The death of his best friend finally made him transform into a killer, he wanted to truly kill. But once he gets to the sniper he sees that not only is the sniper critically injured, but to the point they will die, but it’s a female sniper.
One of the first few chapters, he already gives the reader a sense of short-temperedness. He doesn’t always agree with people and wants to do whatever he wants. “‘I ain’t leaving,’ I say, as they keep doing their stuff. “ (Patrick Ness, pg 42) He is short-tempered as to not leaving by himself when he is told.
This shows how the sniper’s actions without thought affect him for the worse. O’Flaherty establishes the theme of “The Sniper” by using description and irony. After the sniper turns over the dead body, he realizes what he has done. He was not thinking when he shot the enemy.
He tells his wife, “I don’t want him to be like me! I want him to move as far away from my life as he can get. You the only decent thing that ever happened to me. I wish him that. But I don’t wish him a thing else from my life” (481).
If you knew who you were shooting at, would you pull the trigger? In the story called ¨The Sniper¨ by Liam O'Flaherty, a man, who is referred to as ´the sniper´ is about a man who is in a war in Dublin. The first thing that happens is when he shoots a man in a turret and a woman. Then he gets shot in the arm. Then he shoots an enemy sniper.
He realizes he is in exile and there really is nothing he nor anyone else can do about it. By accepting his life, (luck and fate in all) of being in exile, it makes for a much calmer journey(for the time that these emotions