Bird Box Eseu
Bird Box Eseu
Bird Box Eseu
book
Josh Malerman's novel Bird Box sent nearly instant ripples through the literary community
upon its publication in 2014, with fans and critics alike touting it as one of the finest horror
books of the 21st century. It received nominations for the James Herbert Award and the
Bram Stoker Award for best debut novel, while Publisher's Weekly even compared
Malerman to Stephen King, with several other reviews echoing the sentiment.
A film adaptation naturally got underway. It took four years for Bird Box to see the light of
day, arriving in the form of a Netflix original film that also played in select theaters around
the country.
Early reviews have been mixed, with some critics claiming the film is nothing more than A
Quiet Place knockoff—a faulty argument because, one, Malerman's book came out well
before A Quiet Place hit screens in 2018, and two, besides the obvious parallels of
mysterious creatures, using sensory elements as a vehicle for terror, and terrifying birthing
scenes, the two narratives have very little in common. The beforementioned King, moreover,
believes the negative reviews had more to do with streaming platform snobbery than the
film's merits, of which he insists are plentiful.
At least in this writer's opinion, King's assessment is correct: Bird Box as a film is taut, tense,
emotionally rich, and psychologically dense. Compared to Malerman's novel, it stands on its
own, a decidedly visual and aural experience, as cinema should be.
The netflix film Bird Box was directed by Susanne Bier .The film follows a woman, played by
Sandra Bullock, who, along with a pair of children, dubbed Boy and Girl, must make it
through a forest and river blindfolded to avoid supernatural entities which cause people who
see them to either die by suicide or force others to look.
Both the book and the movie had a great succes captivating the audience/readers. While the
two are similar, the book is even darker than the movie.
Malorie’s pregnancy
In the book, Malorie is just pregnant as the wave of terror begins to sweep. With time, she
approaches her due date. In the film, we see a Malorie who’s almost due. This too connects
to the previous point. Her pregnancy was accelerated to adapt to the sudden wave of terror.
Also, Malorie’s guy in the book becomes unreachable after her pregnancy. Which pointed
more in the direction of “he got killed” rather than “he bailed on her”. The movie sees a
cynical Malorie because she was abandoned by her partner.
Death of Tom
In the novel, Gary causes everyone’s death, including Tom. No one but Malorie and the
babies survive. She brings up the kids all by herself in the house. There is no romantic
relationship with Tom. Her being alone and afraid is what makes her name the children Boy
and Girl as she believes that anything more than survival is a luxury. In the book, Tom is
shown to be someone who inspires Malorie because of his survival skills. She feeds off the
inspiration to survive when she’s left alone. In the film, after everyone else in the house dies,
we see Malorie and Tom living together for 5 years after which he dies because of the group
of psychos. In spite of her companionship, Malorie, in the film, is cynical and believes that
names are a luxury.
The Rapids
The book does not have a rapids section in the river. It’s just a long, tedious journey that
they take after years of preparing for it. There is a point in the river where it splits into 4
parts. Malorie takes off her blindfold to choose the right direction. The movie has Malorie
and the kids going through rapids. They end up doing this with their blindfolds on and end
up tumbling into the waters and making it over to the other side.
Intentionally blinded people
When Malorie makes it to the safe haven, she learns that the place is where there were
initially blind people. But she also discovers that many of the residents there have
intentionally blinded themselves and their children to survive. Malorie thinks that she and
her children are going to be made blind by force, but then Rick confirms that people have a
choice. The movie talks about no such thing. The place has both blind people and the ones
with vision who somehow made it there.