In the novel "The Great Gatsby" by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Jay Gatsby is shot in his swimming pool by George Wilson, who mistakenly believes that Gatsby is responsible for his wife Myrtle's death. Gatsby dies without anyone by his side, except for Nick Carraway.
He was shot and drownd in the pool.
In F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel "The Great Gatsby," Jay Gatsby was shot by George Wilson, who mistakenly believed that Gatsby was driving the car that killed his wife Myrtle. Gatsby was shot while he was lounging in his swimming pool.
he was shot whilst in his swimming pool on his lilo
In the novel "The Great Gatsby" by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Jay Gatsby dies at the end of the story. He is shot while floating in his swimming pool by George Wilson, who wrongly believes Gatsby was driving the car that killed his wife Myrtle.
George Wilson commits suicide in the great gatsby.
Wilson kills Gatsby and then himself. He is led to believe that Gatsby is responsible for Myrtle's death since Gatsby's car was involved in the accident. Wilson is devastated by his wife's death and seeks revenge on Gatsby before taking his own life.
Most of the film was shot in Australia. This is odd as the film is set in New York.
Jay Gatsby is the focus of the story. The narrator is Nick, but the main symbolism of the story comes in Gatsby's quest for Daisy, which is itself an allegory for the quest for the American Dream. Gatsby is shot after taking the blame for Daisy, and saves her life
Joe Gillis dies in the swimming pool of Norma Desmond's mansion in Sunset Boulevard. Jay Gatsby dies in his own swimming pool in The Great Gatsby. Both deaths occur in luxurious settings that reflect the characters' aspirations and illusions.
All of the characters contribute to Gatsby's death, escpecially Daisy because he loved her and she didn't want to leave Tom for him. The fact that Tom is having an affair with Myrtle contributes to Gatsby's death because if it weren't for the affair, Gatsby would have never been involved with Myrtle's death. Everyone's greedy grabs for the "American Dream" was the cause of Gatsby's death. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- More precisely, when Gatsby and Daisy were driving together in Tom's car, Myrtle came out and waved at them. Daisy decided not to swerve the car away and ended up killing Myrtle (most likely because Myrtle was Tom's mistress). Tom told Wilson, Myrtle's husband, that Gatsby was driving the car, so Wilson decided to go and take revenge by killing Gatsby. Thus, Tom's affair with Myrtle triggered Daisy's hatred for Myrtle which triggered Myrtle's death which triggered Gatsby's own death by the hand of Wilson.
Gatsby's fate in The Great Gatsby was influenced by a variety of characters, including Tom Buchanan, Daisy Buchanan, and even Jay Gatsby himself. Ultimately, Gatsby's fate can be attributed to the moral emptiness of the society he lived in, where wealth and status were prioritized over personal integrity and genuine connections.
In the movie "The Great Gatsby," Nick throws the cufflinks in the water as a symbolic gesture of his disillusionment with the wealthy and extravagant lifestyle exemplified by Jay Gatsby and Daisy Buchanan. It represents his rejection of materialism and artificiality, and his desire to distance himself from the superficial world he had been drawn into.