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Please share with us. Roberts, J. Giant Edna Ferber. Dune Frank Herbert. The Comedians Graham Greene. Dune Messiah Frank Herbert. Children of Dune Frank Herbert. The vote goes to Ralph, not Jack. Initially, Ralph is able to steer the boys all of whom are aged between about six and fourteen towards a reasonably civilised and co-operative society.

They meet in regular assemblies during which the conch is passed around, signifying which boy may speak. The choir boys make wooden spears, creating the appearance that they are warriors within the group.

Crucially, Jack has a knife, capable of killing an animal. The boys build shelters and start a signal fire using Piggy's spectacles. With no rescue in sight, the increasingly authoritarian and violence-prone Jack starts hunting and eventually finds a pig. Meanwhile, the fire, for which he and his 'hunters' are responsible, goes out, losing the boys' chance of being spotted from a passing aeroplane. Piggy chastises Jack, and Jack strikes him in retaliation, knocking his glasses off, and breaking one lens.

Ralph is furious with Jack. Soon some of the boys begin to talk of a beast that comes from the water. Jack, obsessed with this imagined threat, leaves the group to start a new tribe, one without rules, where the boys play and hunt all day. Soon, more follow until only a few, including Piggy, are left with Ralph.

Events reach a crisis when a boy named Simon finds a sow's head impaled on a stick, left by Jack as an offering to the Beast. He becomes hypnotised by the head, which has flies swarming all around it. Simon goes to what he believes to be the nest of the Beast and finds a dead pilot under a hanging parachute. Simon runs to Jack's camp to tell them the truth, only to be killed in the darkness by the frenzied boys who mistake him for the Beast.

Piggy defends the group's actions with a series of rationalisations and denials. The hunters raid the old group's camp and steal Piggy's glasses. Ralph goes to talk to the new group using the still-present power of the conch to get their attention. However, when Piggy takes the conch, they are not silent as their rules require but instead jeer.

Roger, the cruel torturer and executioner of the tribe, pushes a boulder off a cliff which falls on Piggy, killing him and crushing the conch.

Ralph hides in the jungle. Jack and his hunters set fires to smoke him out, and Ralph staggers across the smoke-covered island. Stumbling onto the beach, Ralph falls at the feet of a naval officer who stares in shock at the painted and spear-carrying savages that the boys have become, before turning to his accompanying landing party.

One of the youngest boys tries to tell the officer his name, but cannot remember it. The last scene shows Ralph sobbing as flames spread across the island. As with Golding's book, the pessimistic theme of the film is that fear, hate and violence are inherent in the human condition — even when innocent children are placed in seemingly idyllic isolation.

The realisation of this is seen as being the cause of Ralph's distress in the closing shots. Brook noted that 'time was short; we were lent the children by unexpectedly eager parents just for the duration of the summer holidays'. Wallace commented: 'One could almost hear William Golding, 4, miles away in England, chuckling into his beard. The 60 hours of film from the shoot was edited down to 4 hours, according to editor Gerald Feil.



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