Do you mean Scout and Boo? if so the movie is "to kill a mockingbird"
It can be shocking because its new its unexpected its interesting....
A Shocking Accident was created in 1982-04.
A Shocking Accident was created in 1982-04.
Again and again, thinking 'my turn, When started for the luck: not in summer, in May, not fall in the scent of hay. No, it was the winter time, It was cold and snowed, but in the hall, as we danced, and I said to you in love: The snow, snow, snow, snow waltz we dance: You with me, I with you! When snow, snow, snow, snow waltz arm in arm is you and me is also in the winter so toasty warm! And when the roses bloom red, and the meadows are so green, and the moon sees our happiness, I should think many times and fond memories the snow in January, when the world was enchanted at the first dance with you and then you sing as he did with me: The snow, snow, snow, snow waltz we dance: You with me, I with you! When snow, snow, snow, snow waltz arm in arm is you and me is also in the winter so toasty warm!
Scout becomes convinced the world is ending when she hears Miss Maudie saying that it's a sin to kill a mockingbird. In her young mind, she believes this is an omen that something terrible is about to happen.
Because its the first time they have seen snow and Jem doesn't want Scout to ruin it by leaving lots of footprints in it.
Everything revolutionary is shocking. So was Beethoven's music whwn new.
Scout
Dill meets Jem and Scout when he visits his aunt, Miss Rachel, who lives next door to the Finches. Scout describes Dill as small for his age, with blue eyes and snow-white hair, and she finds him fascinating and full of adventure.
I guess so
Mr. Avery says that bad children cause cold weather. This is ironic because Jem and Scout's reaction to the snow is one of excitement and joy, demonstrating their innocence and goodness.
They tried to make a snowman out of dirt and what snow they could find.
She says that like it takes a plant to grow, it will take time to forgive Jem and Scout.
During one winter, Scout witnesses a rare snowfall in Maycomb, which shocks her as it is an aberration of nature being in the South. The unseasonal snow in Maycomb adds to the eerie atmosphere that surrounds Boo Radley's house, making Scout feel uneasy and adding to the suspense in the story.
An easy scene to draw from "To Kill a Mockingbird" would be Scout and Jem playing in the street or on the front porch with their friend Dill, as this scene captures the innocence and playfulness of childhood that is central to the novel.
Scout believes the world is coming to an end in Chapter 8 of "To Kill a Mockingbird" because it is an unusually cold winter, there is snowfall, and Miss Maudie's house burns down. These events, along with the tension in the town over Tom Robinson's trial, contribute to Scout's feeling that the world is falling apart.