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436 Essays on Film Bowling Columbine Explores Connection. Documents 151 - 175

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Last update: July 1, 2014
  • Emergence of Musical Film and Its Influence on Society

    Emergence of Musical Film and Its Influence on Society

    Essay Question: Critically discuss and describe the emergence of musical film and its influence on society. “The musical is one of the most popular film genres among both audiences and film scholars, probably for many of the same reasons - the spectacle, the music and the enjoyable predictability of the outcome weighed against the pleasure of the varied details.” Bill Marshall and Robynn Stilwell A proverb once claimed that “in life, you are either being

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    Essay Length: 3,457 Words / 14 Pages
    Submitted: December 25, 2009 By: Monika
  • Career Exploration

    Career Exploration

    CAREER EXPLORATION My ultimate value is my family. My vision for my own self is to live happily with my family in the future. I love to spend my spare time with them. Hanging around with friends and family make me feel well. I love to play on computer. I also love to play with the magical numbers. I like surfing on the internet, exploring new things, reading articles related with health, life, and economic

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    Essay Length: 1,696 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: December 25, 2009 By: Stenly
  • American Memory the Great Gatsby Compare and Contrast of the Film and Book

    American Memory the Great Gatsby Compare and Contrast of the Film and Book

    American Memory: “The Great Gatsby “ Compare and Contrast of the film and book As a top selling mind wrenching, interesting book the film industry decided to make a film. Discussed is a compare and contrast of the book, “The Great Gatsby” written by F Scott Fitzgerald and the 1974 movie directed by Jack Clayton. There are few differences in the book and the movie. The biggest contrast between the movie and the book would

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    Essay Length: 1,138 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: December 26, 2009 By: Max
  • The Power of one’ Could Have Been the Title for All the Films.

    The Power of one’ Could Have Been the Title for All the Films.

    'The Power of One' could have been the title for all the films. The topic i have chosen for my essay is "The Power of One could have been the title for all the films." I believe this proves true in the three movies we watched which were "The Emerald Forest","The Empire of the Sun", and finally the "The Power of One". When one thinks of the term "The Power of One" i presume most

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    Essay Length: 1,204 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: December 26, 2009 By: Janna
  • Our Country’s Good - Drama Exploration

    Our Country’s Good - Drama Exploration

    Our Country's Good by Timberlake Wertenbaker "Our Country's Good," a play by Timberlake Wertenbaker, is about a group of English convicts bound for Australia by sea in 1788. In the first scene, Sideways, a convict on board the ship, is being brutally whipped and we are introduced to the constant, overwhelming fear, hunger and despair that the convicts are going through. We are also introduced to all the officials on board. They are debating the

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    Essay Length: 5,854 Words / 24 Pages
    Submitted: December 26, 2009 By: regina
  • The Black Dalhia Worst Film Essay

    The Black Dalhia Worst Film Essay

    Snickers really satisfy; “The Black Dahlia” does not! If all that mattered in movie-making was that the end result was pretty to look at, I would be giving Brian De Palma's The Black Dahlia a rave review. There's no denying the film's visual virtues: the cinematography, the set design, the costumes, the hairstyles and the makeup. The screenplay, however, is another matter. For about 90 minutes, it moves at a fast pace, the movie is

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    Essay Length: 764 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: December 27, 2009 By: regina
  • Bowling: A Growing Sport

    Bowling: A Growing Sport

    Bowling: A Growing Sport Statistically speaking, bowling is the most popular sport played among Americans each year. On average, within the last four years there have been eighty-two million Americans per year participating. For a relatively small cost friends and families can go roll balls for sport and fun. The sport itself dates back several centuries. Rolling a ball to knock down various targets has been the object of many games in different countries

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    Essay Length: 1,670 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: December 28, 2009 By: Mike
  • A Sufi’s Connection to the World

    A Sufi’s Connection to the World

    A Sufi’s Connection to the World 11/18/99 The attributes of the followers of the Sufi tradition are attributes that serve to loosen their connection to the world while bringing them closer to God. The attributes they have distinguish them from ordinary people. According to Teachings of the Sufis, by Carl Ernst, they are strict followers of a master, strive to be humble, and try to live without worldly possessions and desires. At the core of

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    Essay Length: 642 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: December 29, 2009 By: Anna
  • Taxi Driver: A Modern Version of the Western Film

    Taxi Driver: A Modern Version of the Western Film

    There have been many genres of film that are included in American film history; one of which is the Western. In the mid 1900’s Western films were at their peak and Saturday afternoons would be spent watching cowboys and Indians battle until the end while watching comfortably from a movie theatre. Knowing this, it’s not hard to understand why film makers later on would base plots and characters off of these mystifying films. The

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    Essay Length: 914 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: December 29, 2009 By: Vika
  • Film Noir

    Film Noir

    Film noir is a film style and mood primarily associated with crime films, that portrays its principal characters in a nihilistic and existentialist world. Film noir is primarily derived from the hard-boiled style of crime fiction of the Depression era (many films noir were adaptations of such novels) and the gritty style of 1930s horror fiction. Film noir is first clearly seen in films released in the early 1940s. "Noirs" were historically made in black

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    Essay Length: 558 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: December 30, 2009 By: Top
  • Birmingham Bowling Centers

    Birmingham Bowling Centers

    BIRMINGHAM BOWLING CENTERS The first bowling house in Birmingham is somewhat of a mystery. As happens so many times, it depends on whom you ask. Some say there was a bowling house on 1st Avenue North near the Old Terminal Station; while others say the YMCA had the first, with either two or four bowling lanes located in the YMCA building. It is agreed, however, that the first regularly used bowling center was opened in

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    Essay Length: 555 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: December 30, 2009 By: Max
  • Bias in Twelve Angry Men (film)

    Bias in Twelve Angry Men (film)

    ‘It’s very hard to keep personal prejudice out of a thing like this. And no matter where you run into it, prejudice obscures the truth.’ [Juror 8, page 53] Perhaps this best sums up the basis of ‘Twelve Angry Men’ by Reginald Rose. This play is about a young delinquent on trial for the murder of his abusive father. The jury must find him guilty if there is no reasonable doubt, and in turn, sentence

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    Essay Length: 1,027 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: December 30, 2009 By: Janna
  • The Spectacle of Violence in a Post-Chc Film

    The Spectacle of Violence in a Post-Chc Film

    The Spectacle of Violence in a Post-cHc Film During the era of classic Hollywood cinema, oftentimes the violence that was part of a film’s narrative was often downplayed or even eliminated from the actual script and substituted by means of implication or through verbal narration. This was largely in part because of The Production Code which was enforced in 1934, which forced filmmakers to censor blatantly violent scenes. But later in that century, when American

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    Essay Length: 710 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: December 31, 2009 By: Artur
  • Requiem for a Dream Film Response

    Requiem for a Dream Film Response

    In Requiem For A Dream, the story revolves around four main characters: Harry, Marion, Tyrone, and Sara. All four of these individuals are shown as expressing what is generally believed to be deviant behavior, and a couple of theories that explain how these characters are deviant include labeling theory and conflict theory. Anomie theory also plays into their stories. Sara Goldfarb is shown to be affected by labeling theory by the fact that she becomes

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    Essay Length: 992 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: December 31, 2009 By: Mike
  • Bowling Alone, Chapter 1

    Bowling Alone, Chapter 1

    1.14.03 Response Paper #1 In the first chapter of Bowling Alone, Robert D. Putnam claims that in the last several decades community groups have decreased in number and among the groups still in existence membership is low. Yet he also says that Americans now have more time on their hands. Could this be the effect of our world’s rapidly changing technological abilities and is this new technology decreasing one’s social capital? I think that it

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    Essay Length: 608 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: December 31, 2009 By: Wendy
  • Beauty and the Beast: the Exploration of Society’s Inferiority Toward Women

    Beauty and the Beast: the Exploration of Society’s Inferiority Toward Women

    Beauty and the Beast: The Exploration of Society’s Inferiority toward Women Women are entering the global labor force in record numbers but they still face higher unemployment rates and lower wages, and success in crashing through the “glass ceiling” to top managerial jobs remains slow, uneven and sometimes discouraging . Women represent more than half of the world's working poor. A separate updated analysis deals with trends in the efforts of women to break

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    Essay Length: 330 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: December 31, 2009 By: Tasha
  • To What Extent Do the Conventions and Codes of Film Noir Used in Double Indemnity Reflect the Social, Economic and Cultural Content of the Period?

    To What Extent Do the Conventions and Codes of Film Noir Used in Double Indemnity Reflect the Social, Economic and Cultural Content of the Period?

    Double indemnity was made just after the war, during a period of time where men felt insecure, as women had become more powerful and independent. This is represented in the film by a negative portrayal of Phyllis. A common type of woman featuring in noir films is the femme fatale, which challenges the most traditional role of the woman and the nuclear family. She refuses to play the role of devoted wife and loving mother

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    Essay Length: 742 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: January 1, 2010 By: Max
  • The Maroon as Metaphor for Resistance in Latin American Film

    The Maroon as Metaphor for Resistance in Latin American Film

    Third World Film Professor: Andrew Millington Student: James Cheek Date Due: May 3, 2004 FINAL PAPER: The Maroon as Metaphor for Resistance in Latin American Film Cultural surrender is more than a matter of rejecting one’s father and mother culture. It means that one accepts a new definition as a person. The culturally dependent person is a mere spectator, a receptacle for the creativities of others. To demand freedom from slavery only to use that

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    Essay Length: 2,101 Words / 9 Pages
    Submitted: January 2, 2010 By: Vika
  • Exploring the Affect Society Has on the Shaping of Human Behavior

    Exploring the Affect Society Has on the Shaping of Human Behavior

    There are numerous aspects of social interaction used in the shaping of social relationships. For the purpose of this paper, I thoroughly examined the theories of “Self-perception” and “Social perception “I decided to focus on the views given by Sociologist’s Erving Goffman and Charles Darwin throughout chapter four. According to sociologist Erving Goffman, social interaction should be compared to a theatrical performance, with the members of society playing the roles of actors or actresses. Performers

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    Essay Length: 628 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: January 2, 2010 By: Bred
  • The Decline of the American Horror Film

    The Decline of the American Horror Film

    Decline of American Horror Films American horror films have undergone several series of change in the past 50 years. The claim most often directed against modern horror is that it is somehow “sick”. Some viewers declare its preoccupation with violence and sexuality is excessive and politically incorrect. However, the horror films of the 1960’s redefined and distinguished American horror with racial undertones as in Romero’s “Night of The Living Dead,” and indirectly addressing social and

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    Essay Length: 1,089 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: January 3, 2010 By: Mikki
  • The Heroic Journey in Film - Shrek

    The Heroic Journey in Film - Shrek

    The Heroic Journey in Film- Shrek “… Once upon a time, there was a lovely princess. But she had an enchantment upon her of a fearful sort which could only be broken by love’s first kiss. She was locked away in a castle guarded by a terrible fire-breathing dragon. Many brave knights had attempted to free her from this dreadful prison, but none prevailed. She waited in the dragon’s keep, in the highest room of

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    Essay Length: 1,839 Words / 8 Pages
    Submitted: January 3, 2010 By: Kevin
  • A Short Film

    A Short Film

    [Camera pans in on a caterpillar nest. Nest is covered in sprinkles for no apparent reason. Steve Irwin type narrator is standing beside the nest] Narrator: Here we get our first exciting glimpse into the mysterious world of the caterpillar. These nests are like training centers where the baby caterpillars grow and learn. All young caterpillars are called Ernesto, this causes terrible confusion but it keeps the caterpillars from mobilizing a force and rising against

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    Essay Length: 933 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: January 3, 2010 By: regina
  • The Human Mind Exploring the Evil Side of Human Life

    The Human Mind Exploring the Evil Side of Human Life

    The Human Mind Exploring the Evil side of Human Life The human mind is very complex and mysterious. The human mind is a topic that is very common throughout history and also found in poems. In the two poems that show this topic is: “One need not to be a chamber-to be haunted” by Emily Dickinson and “The Haunted Palace” by Edgar Allan Poe. These two poems share similarities and also differences. The similarities are

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    Essay Length: 515 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: January 4, 2010 By: Jon
  • Blacks in the Film

    Blacks in the Film

    In studying and understanding the politics and artistic ideologies of film, not in the popular "Hollywood" tradition, films of different cultures must be examined to explore the political and social history of the struggles for cultural identity. The film becomes a means of consciousness and of creating political awareness. Films of revolution and social change cross all cultural boundaries and bring to the screen revolutionary movements in developing and underdeveloped countries. The power of film

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    Essay Length: 1,891 Words / 8 Pages
    Submitted: January 4, 2010 By: Yan
  • Pi: Transcendence Through Film

    Pi: Transcendence Through Film

    God Is In The T.V. No system can understand a system of equal or greater design. A human being can study the human brain and know how it works; electrical impulses are sent between nerve endings which then communicate with the rest of the body, but no man knows why the brain works. It is the same way a computer cannot understand why it computes. It is able to read binary code and process information

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    Essay Length: 1,954 Words / 8 Pages
    Submitted: January 5, 2010 By: David

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