Loss and Dispair
The
ending of the movie is indicative of the dispair of a husband losing his wife,
and a woman going mad.The horror that the husband feels at the symbolic death of
his wife is overwhelming. The problem with this film is that it is based upon a
story by Gilman that descibes the ordeal of a woman going through the ineffective
cures of her time. The era was one of pain--the men and women both held things
to be true that even in their own life experiences had proven to be false. They
held these views as steadfast civil human beings should; and deserved thier
misery as well. The truth is that no one should go mad in a mad world; their
husband or wife should be there for them. The characters in both the story and
the badly adapted movie have a long way to go before they can equitably deal with
humanity.
Return to the film ending site, to the Yellow Wallpaper site, or to the American Literature
Survey Site.