

Unfortunately, people who are around taking that happiness away and put suffering in the place of happiness.

When everyone is born, he or she has happiness assigned to him or her (Murray Para. Lamorisse uses the red balloon as a symbol of happiness. Nevertheless, what is the reasoning behind the children’s desire to destroy the boy’s balloon? The reasoning behind the Balloon’s Destruction Nevertheless, even though these bullies manage to destroy Pascal’s balloon, all balloons in Paris come to rescue him and take him on a ride. Pascal’s age mates are envious of his red balloon and they try their best to destroy it. In school, the balloon gets Pascal into a problem with the schoolmaster who seeks to punish Pascal. While the boy tries to rescue it, the balloon grows weary-looking, settles to the ground, and is stomped on, signaling a peculiar call to arms.However, the balloon does not leave Pascal even after letting go its string and it hovers over his head even in town.

A gang of older boys chases the boy down, captures the balloon, and takes it to an abandoned place where they torment it with rocks and slingshots. It follows him to school where, dodging playfully out of reach, it escapes the groping hands of the other children and gets the boy in trouble. Here's the story: A young boy (Pascal Lamorisse) untangles a bright red balloon from a lamppost and tries to give it away, but the balloon returns to him. The balloon ducks into alleys, rises suddenly to escape grabbing hands, and pauses in front of a mirror to admire itself. The parable unfolds in carefully plotted images and beguiling actions that give the balloon more personality than some A-list actors.

THE RED BALLOON is an allegorical story of a boy and his red balloon has only a few background words of dialogue.
