Big Friendly Giant
The
BFG (which stands for “Big Friendly Giant”) is a children’s book written
by Roald Dahl and illustrated by Quentin Blake, first published in 1982. An
animated film based on the book was released in 1989 with David Jason providing
the voice of the BFG and Amanda Root as the voice of Sophie. The
story is about an orphan girl named Sophie, a name possibly inspired by the
author’s granddaughter Sophie Dahl. Roald’s mother was Sofie Magdalene
Hesselberg Dahl. One night when Sophie cannot sleep during the “witching
hour”, she sees a giant blowing something into bedroom windows down the
street. The giant notices her; although she tries to hide in her bed, he reaches
through the window and carries her away to his home. |
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Fortunately
for Sophie, she has been abducted by the world’s only benevolent giant, the
Big Friendly Giant or BFG. Operating in the strictest secrecy, the BFG catches
good dreams (which manifest themselves in misty Dream Country as floating,
blob-like objects) and blows them via a trumpet-like blowpipe into the bedrooms
of children. When he catches a nightmare, he explodes it, bottles it forever, or
uses it to start a fight among his neighboring giants. The other giants are not so pleasant; each night they go out into the world to steal and eat “human beans,” (a mistaken for beings) especially children. There is little else for them to eat where they live; the BFG, because he refuses to eat people, must survive on a revolting vegetable known as a snozzcumber. Luckily |
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he
is also able to make a delicious drink called frobscottle, which is fizzy and
infinitely refreshing. It is rather unusual in that the bubbles in the drink
travel downwards and therefore cause the drinker to break wind instead of burp;
this causes noises known as Whizzpoppers. Sophie
and the BFG become friends. Eventually, Sophie persuades the BFG that something
must be done to stop the anthropophagous giants. Together they develop a plan to
get the Queen of England to help them. The BFG mixes a dream, which will show
the Queen what the giants do; when complete, it is the worst nightmare he has
ever encountered. They set off for Buckingham Palace and blow the dream into the
Queen’s bedroom. The BFG then leaves Sophie on the Queen’s windowsill and
retreats into the palace gardens to hide. When
the Queen awakens, Sophie tells her that all of her dream was true. Because the
dream included the knowledge that Sophie would be there when she woke up, the
Queen believes her and speaks with the BFG. After considerable effort by the
palace staff, the BFG is given a lavish breakfast, and the Queen begins work on
eliminating the other giants. She calls the King of Sweden and the Sultan of
Baghdad to confirm the BFG’s story, then summons the Heads of the Army and the
Air Force. The said officers, though initially belligerent and skeptical, are
brought to cooperate. Eventually
a huge fleet of helicopters follows the BFG to the giants’ homeland. While the
child-eating giants are asleep, the Army ties them up, hangs them under the
helicopters, and after a brief struggle with the Fleshlumpeater, flies them to
London, where a special large pit has been constructed from which they will not
be able to escape. As
punishment for their lifetimes of child-eating, the giants are forced to eat
snozzcumbers for the rest of their lives. The BFG is given a nicer place to live
and a personal teacher to teach him English, and he eventually becomes a writer,
while Sophie lives next door in a little house. The
nine anthropophagous giants in the story are called: Fleshlumpeater,
Bonecruncher, Manhugger, Childchewer, Meatdripper, Gizzardgulper, Maidmasher,
Bloodbottler and Butcher Boy. A
possible tenth giant, the New Zealander-eating “Welly-Eating Giant” is
mentioned only once and is mysteriously never referred to again. This may simply
be a reference to one of the known giants, however. Most
of the nasty giants are only mentioned by name; some are given a larger role,
such as Fleshlumpeater, who is the nastiest of them all, and Bloodbottler, who
invades the BFG’s cave early in the story. Later, the BFG narrates the hunting
methods of Childchewer, Gizzardgulper, and Meatdripper. It is also remarked that
each giant has his favorite hunting ground, though they vary at times. Because
all humans taste differently, the giants have certain preferences; all detest
Greece as a hunting ground, however. This is because the flavors supposedly
reflect the names and/or principal exports of their native land: therefore,
Greeks taste greasy, Danes taste canine, and Swedes taste both sweet and sour. The Snozzcumber is a fictional foodstuff featured prominently in this novel. The Snozzcumber resembles a cucumber but differs in various respects. The snozzcumber varies from nine to twelve feet long. It is striped lengthwise black and white, with wart-like growths all over its surface. It, along with Frobscottle, is the sole diet of the BFG until he has captured the man-eaters. Having done so, he feeds them snozzcumbers for the rest of their lives – an apparent act of revenge, due to the snozzcumber’s repulsive flavor. |