Gregg Toland Essays

  • Light And Light In The Shawshank Redemption

    1270 Words  | 6 Pages

    The element of lighting is a sophisticated element to a movie. It has the power to control what you see and also overwhelm you when it needs to. During my discovery of this movie, I found that colors told the story just as much as the dialogue. It just goes to show that the most significant films cover all the ends of telling a story through the medium of film. Now the fun part, the analyst of The Shawshank Redemption’s use of light and color in painting the picture of its theme of hope. “Studies

  • Shot Analysis: Citizen Kane

    1038 Words  | 5 Pages

    Shot Analysis: Citizen Kane Orson Welles, director of “Citizen Kane”, is well known for his unusual directing methods that defied conventional cinematic techniques. Welles provided his audience with original forms of cinematography, narrative structures, and music. The scene I chose to analyze is extremely important to the plot of the film because Kane begins to realize that he is going through some serious financial problems. During the scene, Kane maintains a sarcastic mood, until he finally decides

  • Billy Blitzer Research Paper

    479 Words  | 2 Pages

    Sophie Hosbein Hosbein 1 Digital Production 1 Ms. Hoffman September 22, 2015 D.W Griffith and Billy Blitzer Essay D.W Griffith and Billy Blitzer were an incredible pair and made many lasting contributions to the world of cinema. Before meeting each other, Griffith had been an actor and playwright and Blitzer was trained as a silversmith, but worked as an electrician in New York City. They first worked together in 1908 at the Biography Company, but later moved to the Mutual

  • Citizen Kane Research Paper

    1099 Words  | 5 Pages

    Citizen Kane is a 1941 American drama film by Orson Welles, its producer, co-author, director and star. The picture was Welles 's first feature film. Nominated for Academy Awards in nine categories, it won an Academy Award for Best Writing by Herman J. Mankiewicz and Welles. Considered by many critics, filmmakers, and fans to be the greatest film ever made, Citizen Kane was voted the greatest film of all time in five consecutive Sight & Sound polls of critics, until it was displaced by Vertigo in

  • Furman Vs Georgia Essay

    891 Words  | 4 Pages

    Furman v. Georgia. Furman v. Georgia was a famous supreme court case that put restrictions on the death penalty in the state of Georgia and across the Unites States. Before this case, the death penalty had many unfair, racist, and random results (Blanco). Set in the late 1960s, Furman v. Georgia was a case most famous for withholding the death penalty on historically oppressed people in the state of Georgia. There is not much on William Henry Furman other than the fact he was a poor black man who

  • Furman Vs Harvard Case

    1590 Words  | 7 Pages

    Troy Gregg was convicted of robbery and mass murder, and jurors sentenced to him to death. He fought this sentencing, just like in the Furman case the defense attorney said that they had violated his eighth and fourteenth amendment. The Supreme court in a seven

  • Legal Brief Case Study

    1343 Words  | 6 Pages

    Legal Brief CRIJ 4430.02: Law and Society Group Members: Jonovan Jeffery and Dominique Thompson Individual Analyses: Jonovan Jeffery March 26, 2017 CITATION: WILLIAM HENRY FURMAN v. STATE OF GEORGIA, 92 S. Ct. 2726 ... (1972) FACTS : Furman’s case, joined by the cases of Jackson v. Georgia and Branch v. Texas, was granted certiorari and heard jointly by the Court. Furman, at the time, was burglarizing a home and was caught doing so by a member of the household. Furman attempted to escape

  • Advantages Of I Have A Dream Speech

    947 Words  | 4 Pages

    Speeches in America’s history have been very powerful and moving. The speech given by Colonel Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain before the Battle of Gettysburg that changed the minds of 114 mutineers to fight alongside him in this battle. I feel like I could compare Colonel Chamberlain's speech to the wonderful “I Have a Dream Speech” spoken by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Both of these amazing and powerful words spoken by Martin Luther King Jr. Colonel Chamberlain’s speech were trying to move these mutineers

  • Death Penalty: Francis V. Resweber

    1653 Words  | 7 Pages

    Research Paper: Capital Punishment Capital punishment is one of the most controversial and talked-about topics in the United States today. It is an issue that is not explicitly mentioned in our constitution, so states have been left to interpret the law. As of April 2017, 32 states in the US legally allow the death penalty. Of the 18 states that have banned it, the most recent was Maryland in 2013. The topic is so controversial that the Supreme Court has gotten involved many times, deciding on more

  • Furman V. Gerogia Case Analysis

    1766 Words  | 8 Pages

    Secondary Annotated Bibliography Brewer, Thomas W. "Race and Jurors' Receptivity to Mitigation in Capital Cases: The Effect of Jurors', Defendants', and Victims' Race in Combination." Law and Human Behavior 28, no. 5 (2004): 529-45. The article begins by explaining the importance of Furman v. Gerogia (1972). Furman v. Gerogia (1972) was a Supreme Court case that decided that death sentences were being handed down in an arbitrary and standard less manner. In response to this ruling many States began

  • Self Control Theory Of Crime

    1424 Words  | 6 Pages

    The organizing concept of this study is the self-control theory or the general theory of crime (Gottfredson & Hirschi, 1990). The theory posits that lack of self-control in an individual can greatly affect one’s criminal behavior. Gottfredson and Hirschi (1990) contended that self-control is nurtured during the childhood of an individual, where child-rearing played a vital role in developing the child’s self-control. Accordingly, low self-control manifests itself in the “absence of nurturance

  • Analysis Of The American Dream: I, Too By Langston Hughes

    876 Words  | 4 Pages

    The american dream is the idea that everyone in the U.S. citizen or not should have an equal opportunity to achieve success and prosper through out hard work and determination. For almost 100 years the American Dream was and has been implanted to us as people throughout the technical evolution. The American Dream is not attainable because the odds of it being achieved fluctuate depending on race, gender, and social classes. The American Dream is something that we can all argue with and what we

  • What Is The Case Of Furman Vs Georgia

    877 Words  | 4 Pages

    Furman V. Georgia Robert Lloyd CJS/221 January 11, 2016 Ebony Pullins-Govantes Furman V. Georgia Furman V. Georgia is a landmark case in the criminal justice system in America. This was the first time the Supreme Court had to face the difficult decision of capital punishment. Capital punishment has and will always be debated in the United States. When you put in racial discrimination the situation gets worse. This case is so controversial because of the speculation that Furman was only sentenced

  • Suspense And Fear In Don T Breathe

    735 Words  | 3 Pages

    Don’t Breathe portrays suspense and fear in similar ways to other thriller films. In the beginning Rocky acted by Jane Levy, Money acted by Daniel Zovatto, and Alex acted by Dylan Minnette begin by robbing different homeowners as a means to acquire money to support their family as well sell the unneeded items. This excitement ended when they decided to rob a blind veteran who supposedly has $300,000 in cash in his home. Money without thinking of the repercussions decides to break in and attempt at

  • Similarities Between Kane And Hearst

    657 Words  | 3 Pages

    “Citizen Kane” was produced in 1941. In the year 1941 there was a lot going on throughout America such as getting over the great depression with FDR. Hitler’s run in Germany also affected the US with WWII, but that didn’t stop the young director Orson Welles. “Citizen Kane” was Welles first Hollywood film and he was only 26 years old when he directed it and acted in it. Welles was known before this film because he had a popular radio broadcast called “War of the Worlds.” Orson Welles wrote this film

  • How Did Citizen Kane Achieve The American Dream

    1604 Words  | 7 Pages

    her name. In this scene, Mrs. Kane, her husband, and Thatcher are having a discussion on legal matters over the acquired wealth and Charles Kane. While most would use shallow focus to guide the audience to centralize on this conversation, Welles and Toland decided to use deep focus in order to also show Charles Kane playing outside in the snow. This was used to show that he has no control of what is going on, while Mrs. Kane, who is closest to the camera, has most of the power over this

  • Synopsis Of The Movie 'Citizen Kane'

    476 Words  | 2 Pages

    (Robert Werlein, Keeley gray, and Nick Mackay) Citizen Kane, released in 1941, was written, produced, and directed by Orson Welles with the assistance of Herman J. Mankiewicz in writing the screenplay, co producer George Schaefer, cinematographer Gregg Toland, music by Bernard Herrman, and the 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

  • Why Is Citizen Kane Important To The Film Industry

    623 Words  | 3 Pages

    from the lives of several famous American tycoons, but Hearst was the most obvious. Photography Gregg Toland, the cinematographer for Citizen Kane, considered the film the high point in his career & thought he might ‘learn something’ from the boy genius (Welles). Welles, used to setting up his own lights in the live theater thought the movie directors were also responsible for the lighting. Toland would let Welles determine the design of most of the lights, but quietly instructed the camera

  • Citizen Kane Challenges Classic Hollywood Cinema

    523 Words  | 3 Pages

    dimension of depth, adds to the mystique of Kane’s character. The use of lighting added another expertly utilized tool in creating this masterpiece. The film “makes great use of darkness and shadow. Welles, working with the gifted cinematographer Gregg Toland, wanted to show a man's life that was filled to bursting with possessions, power, associates, wealth and mystery. He created a gloomy, dark visual style for the picture, and because of Toland's famous deep-focus photography, the frame is filled

  • Citizen Kane Film Review

    789 Words  | 4 Pages

    comprehension. The more clearly the physical manifestation of the film presented, the more the audience moved by its mystery. We can say that it is one of the legacies of cinema that in 1941 a first-time director worked with an innovative cinematographer, Gregg Toland in this case, and a group of New York stage and radio actors were given a chance to make a masterpiece—Citizen Kane is beyond greatness of any movie could be; it is a collection of all the element from the rise of sound era, just how “Birth of