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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. Regarding Henry, a film that stars Harrison Ford as the main character Henry Turner, receives a life-altering gunshot wound to the head that all but transforms him from the materialistic, insensitive individual to one filled with the warmth and compassion of an untainted child. Having lost recollection of his entire life prior to the shooting, Henry forges a path of renewal amid an otherwise unknown existence; only from memories told to him by his wife Sarah (Annette Bening) and daughter Rachel (Mikki Allen) is he able to piece together any semblance of a life he knows nothing about. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
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5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCHenry.rtf
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with the warmth and compassion of an untainted child. Having lost recollection of his entire life prior to the shooting, Henry forges a path of renewal amid an otherwise
unknown existence; only from memories told to him by his wife Sarah (Annette Bening) and daughter Rachel (Mikki Allen) is he able to piece together any semblance of a life
he knows nothing about. Along with the amnesia he suffers from brain damage that virtually wipes out any memory of his being alive before the shooting, Henry loses the ability
to perform some of the most rudimentary human tasks: walking, talking and eating. Suddenly thrust back into the physical and emotional capacity of a child, Henry is given the
opportunity to rebuild his personality, as well, to reflect an entirely different person than the uncaring one he left behind. Henry displays multiple
symptoms as a direct result of his brain damage-induced amnesia, but perhaps the most readily associated with audiences is that of his total loss of memory. Henry has simply
no idea who he is, who he used to be, what his life was about and who these people are who claim to be his wife and daughter. Even
with the unrelenting encouragement of Sarah and Rachels recollections to help him remember his familys past, Henry must go on faith that what they tell him is, in fact, the
truth. He is eager, however, to recapture any semblance of this lost life through their memories and comes to accept these cues as illustrating how the old Henry truly
did respond. Henry: No thanks, I dont like eggs. Rosella: What? Rachel: But you love eggs! Henry: Okay, then give me lots of eggs (Nichols, 1991).
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