YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Oliver Stones Films
Essays 601 - 630
known in postmodern films beginning in the late 1970s because it was a significant way of breaking down the stifling barrier of ge...
the director and the male filmgoer) receive a sexual thrill from watching the victimization of women (Williams 706). As one of th...
of a visual masterpiece that demonstrates that Scorsese is an artist who understands the tone of the original work from which he c...
Gibson. From a simple understanding of history and the constant struggle between Scotland and England, as Scotland fought to rem...
artistic advancements, including a color sequence at the end" (Review of The Birth of a Nation, 2002). Furthermore, this film gre...
harmed, though he will herald her with poetry if he is an artistic sort. These are fairly simple definitions, but they help to set...
the world, but only derive essence later. In other words, a human is nothing to start with, and the essence of the person comes fr...
at the other end looks miniscule (Holme, et al, 1972). This perception is based on visual assumptions, and these same assumptions ...
somewhat difficult; she appears to be one of those writers who will not use one word where she can cram in three. In addition, she...
three. In addition, she seems to have been vaccinated with a thesaurus: why use "mimetic" when "copying" will do? Her pretentious ...
successes in Roman Holiday, for which she won an Academy Award, and Sabrina. This was exactly why Audrey Hepburn was perfect for ...
overall philosophical tone of the work. Whatever the reasons, the James Whale 1931 film is meant to frighten audiences, and it wor...
Graham is having an affair with his partner, Ria, who is of Latin American descent; however, Graham cannot seem to remember that ...
his dashboard. There is a common thread between the two men, but Hanson reacts to the fantasy he has constructed, not the reality,...
examined, one could perhaps argue that this is the one film wherein music was almost non-existent. Ethan Coen, in relationship to ...
to the settlement of the American frontier, Drums Along the Mohawk. It is the story of farmer Gil Martin and his privileged bride...
the face of her addiction (Simon, 1994). No matter what he does its wrong "because of Alices defensiveness, which perceives concer...
and complicated issue of AIDS (acquired immune deficiency syndrome) in any notable fashion" prior to this movie (Tepper, 1995). Fi...
film is much more complicated than the "how." On the day that Tyler emerges from Jacks subconscious, the airline loses Jacks lugga...
abuse (cocaine, alcohol and amphetamines), brain tumor, Huntingtons disease and Alzheimers (Durand et al, 2006). III. PORTRAYAL ...
is simply the record captured by a filmmaker who sets up a camera somewhere and lets it run, then even a documentary is not truly ...
do it because you believe in the mission, but there is something about killing people at close range that is excruciating" (Schick...
arrives, its not to help the Tutsis, but to evacuate the Europeans (Taylor, 2004). Oliver, a decent man whose hands are tied by re...
through exploring the screen writers intent and vision can one figure out why the changes were made. First, it should be said th...
time our doomed hero...enters the house, he is mistaken for an undertaker... Outside the house is the swimming pool, at first fil...
Expressionists were predicting an urban catastrophe even before the First World War, and within the ruins that still existed in th...
indicates that a well-written interview with Williams could show that the murder was not premeditated, but due to his psychologica...
which is at the "heart of this piece, cannot stand such a strong dose of reality" (Brode 98). There is artificiality in abundanc...
by persistent discomfort with ones sex" (Meyenburg, 1999, p. 305). This gender identification with the opposite sex typically com...
quest for the Holy Grail that were considered by filmmaker Terry Gilliam and screenwriter Richard LaGravenese in the 1991 movie Th...