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  1. 1984. 90 minutes ‧ R ‧ 1984. Roger Ebert. February 1, 1985. 3 min read. George Orwell made no secret of the fact that his novel 1984 was not really about the future but about the very time he wrote it in, the bleak years after World War II when England shivered in poverty and hunger. In a novel where passion is depicted as a crime, the ...

  2. Personally, I really disliked the ending of 1984 because he's a broken man who is willing to do anything to make the pain stop, which includes killing his lover. It comes full circle though, he sees the men incriminating people they don't even know, realizes it's wrong and does something about it.

  3. George Orwell. 1984What Does the Ending Mean? After Winston has been broken by the rats in Room 101 and has offered Julia up for torture in his place, the final chapter of the book follows Winston for an afternoon sometime following his release from the Ministry of Love. The reader learns that Winston now leads a life of easy, meaningless work ...

  4. Aug 6, 2018 · O'Brien had always thought said that they could not kill him until he truly loved Big Brother, so I naturally assumed that that was what had happened. From comments above, mothers have interpreted it differently. However, it was the watering down of "I betrayed you" that ruined the entire movie for me.

  5. Apr 4, 1984 · 20 mins to read 7,500 words. The dystopian classic introduced the world to doublethink, thoughtcrime, and Newspeak. And while its ending may seem final, Orwell lays the clues for a much more subtle ending open for discussion. What is the ultimate fate of Big Brother, the Party, and totalitarianism after 1984?

  6. Winston doesn’t physically die. The girl ego of Winston, the rebel, the independent kind, the lover — has ceased to be. It is a metaphorical bullet to the head as the personality that once existed is no more. He lost Julia, he lost his hate, his memories, he has lost his capacity to reason.

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  8. Feb 24, 1985 · The book's skeleton is there. Winston Smith (John Hurt), the movie's protagonist, lives a squalid life in a grimy, greenish-gray, unrecognizable London of the future. (When the novel was published ...

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