not sure what this question asking....but the climax of the scene where Ewell attempts to kill Jem and Scout would be when Boo Radley steps in and kills Ewell. Jem and scout are walking back from their school from a production, and Scout is in a ham costume. She can't see very well out of the costume, and the book is in her point of view. Therefore, the part where boo steps in is kind of mysterious since Scout can't really see. In fact, I think she thinks it might have been Jem!
In "The Kill Order" by James Dashner, the climax is when Thomas and Teresa discover the true intentions of WICKED and the extent of their manipulation. As they uncover the organization's ruthless experiments and betrayal, they ultimately decide to fight back against WICKED to protect themselves and their friends.
Climax - 1954 No Right to Kill 2-42 was released on: USA: 9 August 1956
The climax of the book Thirst is when Yaksha (Sita's creator) is searching for Sita trying to kill her.
Wolves and Humans are pursuit predators they hunt by whittling down there pray until it exorcised and then kill it. Whereas Climax predators attack the pray and attempt to kill it in a single strike after only a short chase.
The climax in The Most Dangerous games is killing people is a good thing are bad to kill with out now you are a staccato or a breaking rock.
If you are talking about Freytag's pyramid, the "climax" is always Act 3. In terms of dramatic tension, this reaches its peak when Othello is about to kill Desdemona.
They kill it. The death of the bull is the climax of the bull fight.
The task of destruction enfenetly easier than the task of creation
The problem sets the stage for the story, followed by the setting providing the background for the events. The climax is the turning point where the conflict reaches its peak, leading to the denouement where the conflict is resolved and loose ends are tied up. They go in this order: problem, setting, climax, denouement.
Complication, climax, resolution, exposition
Complication, climax, resolution, exposition
Complication, climax, resolution, exposition
An order to kill is typically referred to as an assassination order or a hit.