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Metaphor Analysis Of "Field Of Dreams"

 

            
             The movie Field of Dreams portrays more than just a farmer and his foreseeing of what was and what is to be, but it shows a family narrative, which includes Ray Kinsella's family and then Ray versus his father, John Kinsella. This movie revolves around metaphors that give in detail and description a feel of what Ray Kinsella went through personally. With voices to carry Ray's dream into reality, he does something that most people would think is crazy. That is to act on instinct and intuition. Everyday people are met with obstacles in which most want to take the most logical. But "Field of Dreams" shows how logic is not always the best route. The main goal of this movie was to let people know to go for their dreams, even if they are way out there. .
             The message of this movie is clearly obvious. I think it sets the mood of past regrets that are fulfilled through going after dreams. The first example I saw was with Ray not getting the chance to have closure with his father. In the beginning he explains how his father was never spontaneous or lived through the moment. He saw his father as an old man even though he was not that old. This caused their relationship to sour because Ray left for college across the country and never looked back. Shortly after Ray Kinsella got married, his father passed away. The opportunity that Ray wanted to say he was sorry never came. With Ray moving to Iowa and becoming a farmer, it seemed as if he would never be living on the edge as well. This brings up the first metaphor. Ray uses "I"m turning into my father." In this case he can't turn into him literally, but the idea of doing what he felt his father did eats at him. When Ray hears the voices in the field at first he thinks he's lost his mind or something, but he begins to concentrate on what he hears and what he can do. He can either ignore them or act on them. He begins to follow up on everything at the spur of the moment.


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