The Rainbow Fish Rainbow Fish, with his beautiful sparkling silver scales, was the most beautiful fish in the ocean. Despite Rainbow Fish's beauty, he was not happy; this was because he had no friends. When he thoughtlessly hurt the feeling of one of his many admirers, the other fish in the ocean began to ignore him. Rainbow Fish's beautiful scales are the most important thing in the ocean to him. Because of this he was faced to decide whether his beauty is more important than having friends.Rainbow Fish gets some very good advice from a wise octopus and learns what real happiness and belonging to friendship really is.

He then changes hes life and shares his scales and treats everyone as an equal, which makes him feel as if he belongs. The Rainbow Fish PLOT: Rainbow Fish, with his beautiful sparkling silver scales, was the most beautiful fish in the ocean. Despite Rainbow Fish's beauty, he was not happy; this was because he had no friends.When he thoughtlessly hurt the feeling of one of his many admirers, the other fish in the ocean began to ignore him.

Rainbow Fish's beautiful scales are the most important thing in the ocean to him. Because of this he was faced to decide whether his beauty is more important than having friends. Rainbow Fish gets some very good advice from a wise octopus and learns what real happiness and belonging to friendship really is. He then changes hes life and shares his scales and treats everyone as an equal, which makes him feel as if he belongs.Into the wild PLOT: After graduating from Emory University, top student and athlete Christopher McCandless abandons his possessions, gives his entire $24,000 savings account to charity and hitchhikes to Alaska to live in the wilderness. Along the way, Christopher encounters a series of characters that shape his life.

Into The Wild is the story of a young man Christopher McCandless (Emile Hirsch) who is trying to break away from the norm’s of society and the overbearing influence that his parents try to have in his life.Christopher graduates from Emory University and has the grades to go to adventure of a lifetime, tramping his was across the western United States with the final goal of his adventure, living alone in the wild of Alaska. Similarly, Into the Wild contains pastoral elements that contribute to belonging in the film. Like the ‘painted pomp’ of the court in As You Like It, Penn portrays society as ‘oppressive’, employing dark metaphors of warfare to reinforce this; fence-posts are ‘black sword-tips’ and red tiles ‘hardened blood’.

The dinner scene is muted, with the use of shaky hand-held camera emphasizing the tension and estrangement. By contrast, the wilderness acts as a catalyst for belonging in which he realizes the significance of connections with people to happiness. All scenes of him in the wild are shot in rich natural light, as opposed to the exaggerated florescent lighting used in the civilized scenes. This contrast in lighting suggests that both Arden and the wild are places of healing where characters learn about the nature of belonging and the importance of connections.