The protagonist is the main man in the story.
He does not have a name. He represents any normal worker. He shows what everyday life is like for many people.
The main theme is how work can make people feel like objects instead of humans.
The film shows that in this world, people are used like things (like lamps, chairs, or tools).
This represents how jobs sometimes make people feel unimportant or replaceable.
The conflict is man vs. society.
The man is not fighting one person.
He is living inside a system where people are treated like objects.
The problem is that the system makes everyone part of this cycle, and no one questions it.
The climax happens at the end.
The man arrives at his job, and we see that he also becomes an object — just like the others.
This is the big surprise.
We understand that he is not different. He is part of the same system.
There is no big happy ending.
The story ends by showing that this cycle continues.
The message is for us, the audience, to think about our own lives and jobs.
Classic Story: Little Red Riding Hood
1. Change the setting:
The story takes place in a dangerous neighborhood in a big city, not in a forest. Little Red Riding Hood has to walk alone through unsafe streets to bring food to her grandmother.
2. Change the conflict:
The “wolf” is not an animal, but an unknown man who follows her and tries to trick her into telling him where her grandmother lives.
3. How does the ending change?
Little Red Riding Hood feels scared, but she remembers her mother’s advice: do not talk to strangers and ask for help if you feel in danger. Instead of trusting him, she goes into a store and calls a family member. The man is arrested by the police. The story ends with a strong lesson about the importance of caution and safety in real life.