YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Titanic the Film
Essays 1711 - 1740
that allows the director to alter the internal pace of the scene, directing the audiences attention to specific aspects of the sce...
the inherent flexibility of a non-sequential narrative, because things get too confusing. Tarantino apparently decided to let it b...
happiness. However, as Mickey would soon discover, his newfound wealth brought unwelcome changes and obstacles he could have neve...
hes written the book in blank verse. This means that it calls attention to itself but it does so with a purpose. Each poem, becaus...
works for her husband, and hes supposed to show her a good time and do what she wants, so shut up and dance because she wants that...
very essence of what it means to be a human being, demonstrating how and why a person acts the way she does, how she attributes mo...
the lower class has now become the primary population. The upper class has since been sequestered to their living quarters far ab...
child who was very, very much wanted, previously in the film, scenes featuring John and Jenny have shown them thrilled over her pr...
funeral, which is for seven-year-old Daniel Nicholson. Edward Walker, played by William Hurt, the apparent leader of this colony, ...
Odysseus and Polyphemus (or Cyclops), the protagonist and antagonist in "The Odyssey." Like Odysseus, Todd is banished from his w...
Danvers seems almost supernatural in her ability to simply appear, starling the current Mrs. De Winter, who is played by Joan Font...
Portugal, which makes more sense from a historical perspective, as Spains colonial possession are the most prominent, Brazil being...
in the way different characters are presented, as well as beauty in different meanings at different levels. It may be argued tha...
In the film generally, gender is marked by an exaggerated sense of male and female. That is, the men are aggressively male while t...
Peruvian interior, complete with "the chattering of monkeys, the cries of exotic birds, the unidentifiable clicks and hisses of th...
(Ebert, 1988). As Ebert says in his review, "`The Accused demonstrates that rape victims often are suspects in their own cases. .....
who are unfamiliar with it; then if the instructor has any sense he or she will run the Kenneth Branagh uncut version the followin...
was able to successfully leverage despite its late entry into the digital camera market (Thompson, 2007). The company has been abl...
the feminine.1 Woolfs gendered city is found in her "all-pervasive metaphor of street life as river-like, conveying a sense of dyn...
of the "X" are very creative: sometimes its a sign, in one case its the straps on the back of Cescas dress. But its also an obviou...
Warner Bros. marketed the movie very smartly, relying on its stunning visuals and unique look to entice viewers to the theater; it...
the idea that as father and son they belong together and belong to the same family group, but at the same time, as individuals, th...
the stats that Moore cites about gun deaths, which compares the US to other countries. Yearly, there are "381 (gun deaths) in Germ...
or even the last thing, that may cross their minds and this is more of what Denby argues in his article. Denby notes...
enthralling" (1995). The film is a romance, but it avoids the trap of being formulaic; often films of this kind rely "more upon ac...
government (or any government, really), Communist China has to create the illusion that the system is the best for its people. Thi...
wit; he has also been a concerned environmentalist since before it was "cool." This paper discusses one of the issues raised in hi...
first released, but since its debut it has grown in popularity until it is now generally considered one of the greatest films of a...
totalitarian government (or any government, really), Communist China has to create the illusion that the system is the best for it...
aesthetic qualities of film noir. Even with the seductiveness of film noir, there is no dropping the history out of the debate. Th...