YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Eyes in Film
Essays 331 - 360
forest, which would later represent the convergence of Brazil, Paraguay, and Argentina, symbolically depict a convergence of the h...
Jerry and chase them through the hotel. The two hide under a table in a banquet room, only to discover that its the very room in ...
In five pages this 1943 film by director Michael Curtiz is examined in terms of both its Second World War period history and how i...
the Bond films (Antulov, 2004). They all seem to come together on some lonely little island, in the middle of nowhere, where th...
theater, they rolled a cannon ball down a wooden trough that then fell onto a large drumhead (Brunelle, 1999). In films, sound eff...
is completely unique and no two are alike. Therefore, what takes place is a kind of power struggle between the subject and the ob...
religion is treated in Hollywood film; what forces of religion are considered "box office" (i.e., profitable); and what values do...
who comes to love Mag and he persuades her to marry him. This step, of course, completes Mags ostracism from white society. "She w...
successes to his credit. A total of 112 sets were built, including a scale model of Paris Arc de Triomphe and an entire reproducti...
truth and the search for meaning in life. It was no longer a time for people to sleep and hide in their supposedly perfect illusor...
to tell what might appear on first glance to be a tired old story. First, there is the scintillating color that enables the film ...
of human existence and the ways in which all human beings relate to stress, desire, and feelings of social and personal alienation...
neorealistic filmmakers, such as Rossellini, Vittorio DeSica and Cesare Zavattini, was to make a "moral statement," which forces ...
names this "one of the great recent crime movies" (Ebert, 2002). Devil in a Blue Dress references a theme, subject and time perio...
her husband, and knew herself to be near death. Her digestive system had been destroyed by the disease, and, in intense pain and u...
way for actresses who were interested not simply in portraying stylish roles but were also interested in exploring characters of s...
Belafonte, and the two eventually become sympathetic toward each other. The movie portrays a culture which is seemingly opposite t...
of these men (Broken Sword, Sky, and Flying Snow). In essence, the central protagonist in the film takes it on himself to find an...
politics. Gore Vidal wrote the screenplay, as well as the original Broadway play on which the movie is based. Vidal was friends wi...
exact) and the censorship had begun to relax. Other firsts included showing the two lovers naked on their wedding night. What one...
the whole trilogy and uses a heavily layered story that involves high action sequences that are purely designed to attract those w...
understand and come to terms with life as they know it. Their father is a small town minister. Fly fishing seems to be their only ...
and he refuses to do so. Mary Kate abides by her brothers wishes, which confuses and frustrates Sean. The plot complications tha...
that wracks him with confusion (Nassal, 2002). "I still see things that are not here. I just choose not to acknowledge them. Li...
In three pages cinema is defined as 'writing in images' with differences between visual and written texts considered along with fi...
other horror films. For example, in many subtle ways there is the age old suspense that we often saw in Hitchcock films as subtle ...
in 1992 and directed by Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky for New Video Group. It concerns the fate of Delbert Ward, one of four ba...
single, concise action, one cannot help but recall the inherent ambiguity and independence of Camus Mersault, the protagonist of "...
instance), and externally (how the cinematic techniques used communicate with one another, and with the audience, to convey some t...
over the credits, signifying that Judah has recovered from his burden of guilt and is prepared to get on with and enjoy his life (...