Strangers on a Train Essays

  • Stranger On A Train Analysis

    1782 Words  | 8 Pages

    Is Bruno Anthony “real” or simply a figment of Guy’s imagination? Is Guy Haines “real” or simply a figment of Bruno’s imagination? Or should both be seen as real life characters in Hitchcock’s Strangers on a Train? Certainly Bruno and Guy are portrayed as mirror images of each other. And perhaps even alter egos of one another, like opposite sides of a single coin. Guy is handsome, educated, and a hard working tennis player while Bruno is unpredictable, impulsive, and a charming psychopath.

  • Strangers On A Train Morality

    1249 Words  | 5 Pages

    Alfred Hitchcock’s Strangers on a Train confronts the concept of morality through the use of two seemingly different characters, Bruno and Guy. In the beginning, Bruno and Guy appear to be simplistically presented as contrasting individuals. Bruno being an insane murderous maniac, and Guy representing justice, fairness and an overall character of virtue. During the scene in which Bruno reveals to Guy that he had murdered his wife, Guy’s character begins to unravel. Hitchcock utilizes the use of light

  • Duality In The Film, Strangers On A Train

    2051 Words  | 9 Pages

    Strangers on a Train The movie, Strangers on a Train started as a taxi arrived in the station with the music to be played in a grandioso. The music makes the audiences feel as more focused into the movie. Two men’s feet were heading to the station. In this point, the director Hitchcock unfolded his picture of the movie with duality. Guy had two tennis rackets. Bruno was wearing two tones of the shoe, black and white. The feet moved left to right. Camera movement focused on the feet as the beginning

  • Hitchcock's Film Strangers On A Train

    905 Words  | 4 Pages

    The plot also includes crucial elements that mark it as a Hitchcockian film. A common theme in his films includes the accusation of an innocent man. Strangers on a Train centers on the implication of Guy during the investigation into the murder of Miriam although he has no connection to the actual crime. Throughout the film different people suspect that Guy actually committed the crime from Anne Morton (Ruth Roman) to the police in Metcalf, Washington D. C., and New York. While the police in the

  • Hitchcock Film, Strangers On A Train

    1145 Words  | 5 Pages

    paper, I chose the Hitchcock movie ‘Strangers on a Train’. Warner Brothers released Strangers on a Train in the summer of 1951. This movie takes place mainly in Washington D.C. and Metcalf. Guy Haines and Bruno Antony are the two principle characters. 2. Conflict between Guy and Bruno is continuous throughout the film and starts in the opening scene where Guy Haines accidentally taps Bruno Antony's foot when attempting to cross his legs after boarding the train. The foot tap leads to Bruno striking

  • Alfred Hitchcock's Film Strangers On A Train

    1278 Words  | 6 Pages

    Around the 1950’s Hitchcock released one of his greatest thriller films, Strangers on a Train (1951). This film was essentially based on Patricia Highsmith’s novel. Even though the film incorporates many aspects of the novel, Hitchcock decided to change many parts of the novels plot. Some of his major changes were seen within the characters. First of all, in the novel Guy was not a tennis player, instead he was an architect. The plot in the novel was also completely different than the film. For instance

  • Motifs In Alfred Hitchcock's Film Strangers On A Train

    1043 Words  | 5 Pages

    This paper will discuss the motif of the double in Strangers on a Train. While the double is a recurring motif in Hitchcock’s work that he routinely employs in order to explore questions of moral responsibility, identity, and guilt, it receives its most overt and thorough treatment in Strangers on a Train. Studies of the film have consistently understood Bruno as a stand in for Guy’s unspoken desire, the chaos held at bay by societal order - Guy does indeed want to ‘get rid of’ his wife, but he transfers

  • Insecure Avoidant Behavior Video Analysis

    686 Words  | 3 Pages

    gives him a toy. In phase two, the stranger enters the room. The child reacts to the door being open. When the stranger walks in, the child scoots away from him and turns around facing the opposite direction. When the father and the stranger begin talking, the child turns to look at the father possibly trying to gauge his reaction to the stranger. At this point, the child turns around, now facing the men, and continues playing with the toys. The child

  • Process Essay: How To Train A Guard Dog

    1543 Words  | 7 Pages

    How to Train a Guard Dog? If you have a pet dog who is amiable with all the people he meets including strangers and you want him to train to make him a guard dog then this article will help you a lot. Although most of the dogs can scare anyone with their bark and alert their owners at the same time but training them to become guard dogs can help you in times of emergency. A well-trained dog will guard you at all the times and will also attack the person causing you harm. Training a dog to make him

  • Describe My Defining Moment

    819 Words  | 4 Pages

    parking close to the museum. Therefore, when he saw a parking space several blocks away, he pulled over and parked. His plan was for us to take the train to the museum. Taking the subway had never been pleasant for me. I disliked the crowdedness, and the pushing and shoving as people boarded and exited the train. I was upset when dad decided to take the train. After parking the car, we got out, and dad told me to wait on the sidewalk while he got the camera out of the trunk of the car. While waiting,

  • The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night-Time By Mark Haddon

    889 Words  | 4 Pages

    into an unfamiliar environment during his trip to London as he is forced to converse with strangers; “And I didn’t want to talk to either of them because… I had already talked to lots of strangers, which is dangerous… But I didn’t know how to get to 451c Chapter Road… So I went up to the man in the little shop and I said, ‘Where is 451c Chapter Road?’” (Haddon, 186). When he details that talking to strangers is dangerous he is referring to the fact that when something is dangerous it is likely to

  • Pitbulls Should Be Banned Essay

    664 Words  | 3 Pages

    judged by their name. Here’s why, they will not snap if they are not abused and neglected. there is no evidence that banning them is going to make communities safer.Pitbulls are good pets if you train them. Pitbulls can be really good if you need something to watch over and protect your kids from strangers or even other animals that you think may be a threat. People may say, “Pitbulls could be a loveable pet then snap into a vicious dog”. This is not true because if you are good to your Pitbull it

  • Irish American Culture Essay

    501 Words  | 3 Pages

    In Ireland, it’s normal to meet and connect with someone new everyday—on the train, in class, or even just walking along the street. It’s an atmosphere of welcomeness, and I find that is a quality that transfers to the Irish community of Holyoke, near my hometown of Chicopee. Holyoke holds a large St.Patrick’s Parade every year, and during that time, I have fond memories over the years of joining strangers for a barbecue and sharing decorations with children we had never met. I did not at

  • Essay On Jewish Parents

    461 Words  | 2 Pages

    Jewish parents in Germany and people in other countries work together to save Jewish children from the Holocaust for many reasons. For example Jewish parents wanted to be able send their children out of the country to safety on trains and boats. The countries that the Jewish kids stayed at for safety, they helped because they cared and the were kind enough to let kids In their country. The Jewish kids parents must of been strong to let go of their children. They must of been strong because the Jewish

  • Review Of Desperate Passage: The Donner Party's Perilous Journey '

    302 Words  | 2 Pages

    Party’s Perilous Journey West, Ethan Rarick, Oxford University Press: Oxford, 2008. Desperate Passage is a good book that sheds light on a perilous journey taken by a group of strangers who come together to form a wagon train. It was written by Ethan Rarrick. In the book a group of strangers band together to form a wagon train to make the perilous journey west. Along the way they woud have to deal with Indians, mountains, weather, and many other obstacles. Since the story is told in chronological

  • Pride And Figurative Language In Joy Kogawa's Obasan

    791 Words  | 4 Pages

    this one specific account. Throughout this journey, the narrator is surrounded by complete strangers; however, their fates are all the same, as “not [one] on this journey returns home again.” Despite such a depressing time period in the lives of many of the Japanese, the Japanese mannerism of respect still remains, as the narrator refers to strangers as “ojisan” or “obasan”. This honorary title for even strangers shows the respect that the Japanese have for one another and even the pride they still withhold

  • Comparing Rainer's Epilog And Erez Tadmor

    834 Words  | 4 Pages

    the composer’s opinions on societal practices, which automatically makes it their viewpoint. This is evident in Tom Tykwer’s 1992 short film Epilog and Erez Tadmor and Guy Nattiv’s 2003 short film Strangers. Epilog provides social commentary on society’s lack of personal accountability while Strangers criticises unnecessary construction of barriers between race and culture while they would unite for a common adversary. By effectively utilising mise-en-scene and non-diegetic sound, both composers

  • The Role Of Villains In Hitchcock's Film

    496 Words  | 2 Pages

    Villains are human, vulnerable, frightening and at the same time they are afraid observes Truffuat in the context of the film Notorious which is applicable for the rest of Hitchcock’s films too. Notorious, Shadow of a Doubt, and Strangers on a Train remain three great movies due to the presence of three best villains namely Claude Rains, Joseph Cotton and Robert Walker. Hitchcock’s film Stage Fright (1950) breaks the cardinal rule that the more successful the villain, the more successful

  • Analysis Of Alice Munro's Wild Swans

    978 Words  | 4 Pages

    In Alice Munro’s story “Wild Swans”, Rose is imagining things that may confuse people into thinking that she is being sexually harassed. Rose is a young girl who rides on a train for the first time and is seated next to an old man. She feels the old man 's hand on her leg in a disrespectful manner but it is all in her head. It is proven that Rose was only imagining the old man’s hand on her leg in a sexual manner in the since of: her own desire of wanting pleasure, the old man 's kindness and age

  • Essay On Rottweiler

    865 Words  | 4 Pages

    Which is easier to train – Rottweiler or German Shepherd? Rottweilers and German Shepherds are among the most popular dog breeds nowadays with people admiring not only their beautiful coats but their intelligence and courage too. But have you ever wonder which dog is easier to train – the Rottweiler of the German Shepherd? This might look like an easy question, but to find the answer we have to take a good look at both breeds and their history and personality. History of the breeds You probably