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Now Watch This

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Now Watch This
In Andrew Hood’s Now Watch This, the strange setting represents the contrast between the father and son.
The ominous-looking correctional facility is placed right next to the beautiful and calm pond to bring out the potential for violence the father has discovered within himself. Near the beginning of the story when the father and son take their shoes off, they take in the scenery and notice something odd. “Across the pond, past the gravelly, unkempt ball diamond, the correctional facility loomed like an old world castle.” There is a clear contrast in the scenery; the beauty of nature alongside a creepy and haunting prison looming over. Similarly, there is also a contrast between the father and son. The father is a bookworm, a loner, and lazy whereas the son is athletic, popular, and a soccer star. Furthermore, the pond symbolizes Ev with his innocence and youth, and the threatening prison symbolizes the inner violence the father has inside him. Right after the kid kicked Ev during the soccer match; his father suddenly became violently protective and discovered a secret man born inside him. “Not paying attention to Ev’s penalty kick, I was imagining all the intricate ways I could kill that twelve-year-old showboat. It wasn’t movie violence I dreamt, but limbic, ancestral savagery. These were fantasies I didn’t know I had inside me.” This violent fantasy shows to how far the father would go to protect his son. The correctional facility heavily represents the hidden violence of an inmate the father possesses. It’s unexpected to see someone who looks calm and gentle to have these homicidal thoughts, just like how it’s unexpected to see a correctional facility looming over a placid and peaceful setting.
Since the father and son are both very contrary to each other, just like the setting, the father admires his son a lot for the different things he likes to do. At the beginning of the story when they are placing their shoes beside each other’s, the father gets an

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