Various camera movements and the effects No Romeo and Juliet The Great Gatsby At the beginning of the movie when the ball is taking place and extreme wide shot is used to show what is happening on set, who is all there and who is enjoying the party. The first time Juliet sees Romeos face there is an extreme close up and this shows the expression on their face of absolute love and admiration. After this there are continuously camera cuttings and this shows the pace quickening like how the lovers
Chuck Close Art Chuck Close is the name of a famous and fantastic artist. He has been drawing for decades, but in the more recent years he has had a different technique for doing so. Well, at least he has ever since his accident. The artist has dyslexia and a condition that makes it hard for him to remember faces, but that doesn’t stop him from drawing portraits anyway. If he had a single most famous painting, it would probably be his big self-portrait, drawn in 1968. He truly is a magnificent
Reflective Statement, The Stranger Throughout the interactive panel discussion for The Stranger, I learned about how Camus’s views were reflected in his novel and differences between the societies of the novel and of real life. The story’s protagonist, Meursault, is seen by reader as an existentialist but he has certain traits where he could be perceived as someone who wants a connection but has difficulty receiving it. I also learned about how other people viewed Meursault's character
Symbols often play large roles in connecting stories with readers. Writers use symbols to refer to larger ideas, meanings and feeling, allowing readers to think and further connect to the characters in the story. In Lawrence and Lee’s Inherit the Wind it is shown that a symbol is a concrete thing that represents something abstract, something completely different from itself to show an idea. In the book there are three big symbols, Drummond’s “Golden Dancer”, Darwin’s Origin of Species, and monkeys
The Group of Seven, first known as the Algonquin School, was a group of Canadian artists. Arthur Lismer is credited with naming the group which was founded in 1920 and lasted until 1933. The group’s purpose was to create an art style that broke European art traditions and raised awareness for the Canadian landscape. The original seven members were: They were later joined by A.J. Casson in 1926; Edwin Holgate in 1930; and LeMoine FitzGerald in 1932. When not painting on location, they all lived
Yassien Elpalla ARTH 1101 Professor Easton January 18th 2016 Exhibition Review/ Visual Analysis The name of the exhibition is “The cure For Anything”. It is located at the Walsh library at Seton Hall University. It will be displayed on January 19th to March 11th. This exhibition has been curated by Katherine Tedesco and Chelsea Levine. This exhibition features a lot of historical objects and contemporary art. The exhibition mainly focuses on Moby Dick. “The cure
SWOT Analysis One strength of Southwest Airlines is the strong fleet base, which enhances the company ability to deliver services effectively. The airline has one of the biggest fleets of Boeing aircraft globally, with multiple models of the aircraft, which helps with the effectiveness of their services. Other strengths are the revenue-increase using point-to-point service strategy, and the low-price strategy, which helps to maintain the volume of the passengers. The point-to-point services save
editing of Robert Wise. Welles starred in his own film along with Joseph Cotten, Everett Sloane, Ruth Warrick, Dorothy Comingore, and George Coulouris. Citizen Kane is set in the United States of America (for most of the film), tells the story of an empire directed by Charles Foster Kane (Orson Welles). The story however is told by people who knew him in his past and the story is collected by Mr. Bernstein (Everett Sloane) who travels over the states to try and find the meaning of Kane’s last words:
Citizen Kane "I know too many people, I guess we're both lonely." This quote by Charles Kane, in the movie Citizen Kane, sums up what I believe is his entire character. He is a very lonely man, portrayed as someone who is always grasping at love. He doesn't know what it means to be loved as he was given away as a child to a very wealthy man and was raised up in a rich household. As an adult he tries to buy affection from everyone but he is never truly satisfied. This uneasiness around the main
Citizen Kane has been the critics choice for a number of years now, however I found that it was nothing special. While its cinematography and acting are superb the story is a tangled mess with seemingly little direction or reason. With that being said the symbolism is well presented and conveys a good message about what happens when capitalism meets socialism. That symbolism is was what kept me watching the film despite how poorly the story was written and I believe that the symbolism is the reason
some scholars are under the impression that the river is intended to be a negative symbol that is aggressive towards Jim and Huck. The river brings trouble to Jim and Huck, causing them to loss the little freedom they had on the river. Dr. David Sloane, who is a professor of English and education at the University of New Haven, argues in his article “Huck’s Moral Reasoning as Heroism” from Bloom’s Major Literary Characters: Huck Finn that the pattern of the river acting as freedom or safekeeping
Citizen Kane is an Orson Welles American drama film released in 1941. Orson Welles worked with Herman J. Mankiewicz on the script and with Gregg Toland in cinematography. The film is about a reporter who wants to unveil the meaning behind the word, “Rosebud” Charles Foster Kane last uttered. Citizen Kane was based after Anatole France’s novel, "Thaïs.” It was nominated in nine categories in the Academy awards and won the Academy Award for Best Writing (Original Screenplay). Film critics consider
Rosebud is the emblem of the security, hope and innocence of childhood, which a man can spend his life seeking to regain. It is the green light at the end of Gatsby 's pier; the leopard atop Kilimanjaro, seeking nobody knows what; the bone tossed into the air in “2001.” It is that yearning after transience that adults learn to suppress. “Maybe Rosebud was something he couldn 't get, or something he lost,” says Thompson, the reporter assigned to the puzzle of Kane 's dying word. “Anyway, it wouldn