Can some one explain V for Vendetta to me?!


Question: Can some one explain V for Vendetta to me!?
That movie was soo confusing, but i loved it!.Www@Enter-QA@Com


Answers:
V for Vendetta is based on a DC/Vertigo Comic book written during Margaret Thatchers run as Prime Minister of Britain!. It was something of a social commentary on some of her more controversial political decisions!. The movie is basically one mans vendetta against the fascist government that tortured/experimented on him and caused his disfigurment!. He recruites Eve since he see's something of the person he was in her and grooms her to take over his work in a way once he is gone!. He uses guerrialla/terrorist tactics to work the government into a paranoid frenzy in preparation for his final strike!. At the end, some of the people seen taking off their masks are people shown during the film to have died at the hands of the Arch Chancellor and his goons!.Www@Enter-QA@Com

The first adaptation of V for Vendetta ever filmed for the screen is one of the scenes in the documentary feature film The Mindscape of Alan Moore and was shot in early 2002!. The dramatization contains no dialogue by the main character, while the Voice of Fate is used as an introduction!.

Main article: V for Vendetta (film)
A feature film adaptation was released on 17 March 2006, directed by James McTeigue (first assistant director on The Matrix films) from a screenplay by the Wachowski brothers!. Natalie Portman stars as Evey Hammond and Hugo Weaving as V together with Stephen Rea, John Hurt and Stephen Fry!. John Hurt, who played the renamed High Chancellor Adam Sutler in the film V for Vendetta, also played Winston Smith in the 1984 film adaptation of George Orwell's novel, Nineteen Eighty-Four!. Originally slated for a 5 November 2005 release, to coincide with Guy Fawkes Night and the 400th anniversary of the Gunpowder Plot, it was postponed until March, possibly due to the 7 July 2005 London bombings, although producers denied this was the reason!.

Alan Moore, however, distanced himself from the film, as he has with every screen adaptation of his works to date!. He ended cooperation with his publisher, DC Comics, after its corporate parent, Warner Bros!., failed to retract statements about Moore's supposed endorsement of the movie!. After reading the script, Moore remarked:

"[The movie] has been "turned into a Bush-era parable by people too timid to set a political satire in their own country… It's a thwarted and frustrated and largely impotent American liberal fantasy of someone with American liberal values standing up against a state run by neoconservatives—which is not what the comic V for Vendetta was about!. It was about fascism, it was about anarchy, it was about England!."

He later adds that if the Wachowskis had wanted to protest what was going on in the United States, then they should have used a political narrative that spoke directly at the USA's issues, similar to what Moore had done before with Britain!. The film changes the original message by arguably having changed "V" into a freedom fighter instead of an anarchist!. An interview with producer Joel Silver suggests that the change may not have been conscious; he identifies the V of the comics as a clear-cut "superhero… a masked avenger who pretty much saves the world," a simplification that goes against Moore's own statements about V's role in the story!.
Co-author and illustrator David Lloyd, by contrast, embraced the adaptation!.[12] In an interview with Newsarama, he states: "It's a terrific film!. The most extraordinary thing about it for me was seeing scenes that I'd worked on and crafted for maximum effect in the book translated to film with the same degree of care and effect!. The "transformation" scene between Natalie Portman and Hugo Weaving is just great!. If you happen to be one of those people who admires the original so much that changes to it will automatically turn you off, then you may dislike the film—but if you enjoyed the original and can accept an adaptation that is different to its source material but equally as powerful, then you'll be as impressed as I was with it!."

A novelization of the film's screenplay was written by comic writer Steve Moore (no relation to Alan Moore)!.
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Lets simplify this answer!. >_>
V, from the graphic novel "V for Vendetta" by Alan Moore:
Was an anarchist!.
His background is shown in the movie, shown that by imprisoning him and testing on him, they only made him stronger!.
He was burned alive in the movie, but survived and for twenty years he trained and plotted, wearing the mask of Guy Fawkes whom he admires for what Guy Fawkes tried to do: Blow up Parliament!.
V fought against the oppressive, mass-killing government to not only wreap revenge upon them, but for the beautiful people that they killed to gain power!.Www@Enter-QA@Com

It's a political commentary on letting fear rule our lives and giving up our freedom to a repressive pseudo-totalitarian government!. The movie itself tries to illustrate that we are responsible for our government not that our government is responsible for us!. V's struggle is a microcosm for all political power struggles!. Go too far left and you've got a communist regime!. Too far right and a fascist dictatorship will arise instead!. Hope that helps a little! Www@Enter-QA@Com

Set against the futuristic landscape of totalitarian Britain, V For Vendetta tells the story of a young working-class woman named Evey who is rescued from a life-and-death situation by a masked man known only as "V!."


Profoundly complex, V is at once literary, flamboyant, tender and intellectual, a man dedicated to freeing his fellow citizens from those who have terrorized them into compliance!. He is also bitter, revenge-seeking, lonely and violent, driven by a personal vendetta!.


In his quest to free the people of England from the corruption and cruelty that have poisoned their government, V condemns the tyrannical nature of their appointed leaders and invites his fellow citizens to join him in the shadows of Parliament on November the 5th - Guy Fawkes Day!.


On that day in 1605, Guy Fawkes was discovered in a tunnel beneath Parliament with 36 barrels of gunpowder!. He and his co-conspirators had engineered the treasonous "Gunpowder Plot" in response to the tyranny of their government under James I!. Fawkes and his fellow saboteurs were hanged, drawn and quartered, and their plan to take down their government never came to pass!.


In the spirit of that rebellion, in remembrance of that day, V vows to carry out the plot that Fawkes was executed for attempting on November 5th in 1605: he will blow up Parliament!.


As Evey uncovers the truth about V's mysterious past, she also discovers the truth about herself - and emerges as his unlikely ally in the culmination of his plan to ignite a revolution, bringing freedom and justice back to a society fraught with cruelty and corruption!.

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I like this one too!

V for Vendetta (2005)
http://danvo!.wetpaint!.com/page/V+for+Ven!.!.!.Www@Enter-QA@Com



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