In the beginning of the film The Perks of being a Wallflower Charlie who is the protagonist and also a dynamic character is portrayed as high school freshman who is really shy and nerdy looking and he is also very observing of his surroundings. Charlie has all the traits of being a dynamic character since he goes through a mayor change throughput the film. He goes from being not being important to anyone to being important to others. He is clearly also the main character and their change reveals the theme of the novel. Which are the perks of being a wallflower. Being able to have a group of friends who care for him, where he does not feel alone anymore. Suffering from apparently not only his friend but his best friend suicide and also the death of his aunt Helen he feels alone. He also has no friends at all; he only seems to have this one person who he writes to whom we only know as “friend” or simply a diary where he always writes. He seems to be his only friend. He always tells him everything that goes on in his life. His character is very carrying he seems to always put everyone before himself making sure everyone is doing well. The first friend he makes is Patrick; he encounters with him at a football game and tells him how they have freshman shop together and all. Sam comes along because she is Patrick’s step sister they are both seniors. They invite him to have dinner with them and from there they head to a party. While driving to the party they drive through a tunnel and a song is playing which they think it is pretty cool, Charlie tells them that he feels infinite. With them his new friends expose him to world where he was never part of, the party scene and the drug scene. While he is baked on a cannabis brownie Sam and Patrick realize he has no other friends since he confessed Sam his best friend suicide a year ago. Patrick tells everyone that Charlie is one of them now that he is a wallflower. In one of his many letters to his anonymous friend he starts to talk about aunt Hellen, and how she died trying to get him a present, and how he feels guilty. Then he ends up at the hospital since he was on drugs and was hallucinating things. Throughout the story he seems to fall for Sam but she never lets her know because he is really shy. Instead he gets asked by Mary Elizabeth to the Sadie Hawkins dance. After the dance, Mary Elizabeth takes Charlie to her house and they kiss. She declares how glad she is to have him as her boyfriend. Charlie is too nice to break up with her but he eventually does in a mean way. One night all the group of friends and Charlie are playing truth or dare. Charlie is dared to kiss the prettiest girl in the room and kisses Sam. Mary Elizabeth breaks up with him. Everyone is mad at Charlie for a while but in the end they forgive him. They decided to forgive him because Patrick’s ex-boyfriend gets in a fight in the cafeteria and all of his ex-boyfriends friends jump in so does Charlie and beats everyone up, after he tells them not to ever try hurting his friend ever again, after everyone is all good, he finally has an encounter with Sam but as she starts touching him he has a flash back from aunt Hellen which kills the moment. Since school has finished and now his friends who are all seniors will graduate and he realizes he will be alone once again he begins to break down. Charlie then calls his sister blaming himself for aunt’s Helen’s death. Her sister realizes that he has problems so then she calls the police, they break into Charlie’s house, he blacks out. After he wakes up in a mental hospital because he comes to the realization that his aunt Helen had molested him ever since he was a child. Charlie undergoes therapy and recovers and returns home where he is visited by Sam and Patrick. Sam explains what college life is like, and how she has found "The Tunnel Song"—"Heroes" by David Bowie. The three revisit the tunnel, where Charlie kisses Sam again and sits in the back of the truck. Charlie acknowledges that he feels alive and in that moment and how he actually feels important to them: "We are infinite." Charlie gradually evolves from a shy, innocent wallflower that lived in books to an adventurous high schooler that learns that life needs to be lived and not watched. Year, Sam and Patrick show Charlie the perks of being a wallflower. At the end he says that he does not think he will have anymore time to write letters anymore because he will be too busy trying to participate he confessed that he was in a bad place before he started high school and the person whom the letters were to helped him he made him not feel alone even if he did not know what he was saying. We can relate this film to many others such as To kill a mocking Bird because just as Charlie changes so does Scout, they are both static characters. They both develop throughout the film.