The movie "Beowulf and Grendel" has many similarities and differences with poetry. The main difference between movies and poetry is Glendel himself. In this poem he is explained as an evil monster born of two demons. In the movie, Grendel is actually a human being, it is known as a warrior and Dane's Troll. This poem does not explain the background of Glendell, it does not describe the way the Danish people killed their fathers or the reasons for revenge like a movie. If the witch Selma is not included in the movie story, the viewer does not know the important information she saw from more flashbacks.
Beowulf's legendary adaptation offers a brave form. Below is the source of the myth of Beowulf: Grendel, John Gardner's novel, Beowulf and Grendel supervised by Sturla Gunnarson. These works contain true courage, but they also depict the situation lacking courage. The courageous dissemination of cowardly juxtaposition in fiction and movies suggests that heroic behavior is contextual and depends on the features shown at specific opportunities.
After that, various literary works were recreated in the visual work. However, the visual version usually does not tell the story as accurately as the text version. In the case of the epic "Beowulf" this is also true. There are many similarities between movies and poetry, and there are many differences. Within the opening hours of the movie, you were able to see the difference in this poem. Poetry comes out of hell, Glendell, begins with a purely evil devil killing everyone and attacking Dane at the honey hall.
Then Grundel attacked; Beowulf watch was killed as a warrior. Then Beowulf was attacked. They fought, and eventually the courage of Glendel disappointed him at a critical moment (I do not trust God). They kept fighting and Beowulf tears Grendel's arms. Grundel ran away and showed that he was not dead. Humans almost died instantly, but Glendell was not. He is certainly dead. Unferth tried to give him a good sword but eventually it was destroyed; Beowulf killed several monsters on the way and began to lose with full effort until he looked up at the wall. I put on a sword. He grabbed this and killed Glendel's mother. He saw Glendall growing. (He is still alive) Beowulf took a sword and cut off Grendel's head. (This makes Glendell no longer return to spirit). Glendell is still alive, this is that the sword melts with blood.
Beowulf's way of defeating Glendell was different from how he defeated Glendel's mother. Beowulf was deadly wounded with bare hands, peeling Glendell's arm. However, in order to defeat Grendel's mother, Beowulf demanded "a sword with a good blade, Grundel's mother, an ideal weapon from the giant era". I will be jealous of any warrior "(l 1557 - 1560). For some reason, the narrator no longer depicts Beowulf as a hero who strongly trusts his god, but instead makes him a weapon-dependent warrior. This change may indicate that the poem was written by two different speakers. The first person is a person who believes in God, the second person is a brave supporter.