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Help With Arts and Theater Papers
Comparison Of Mary Shelly's Frankenstein To Movies And TV Show's Frankenstein
... He was unable to talk or read. The monster would just rome the
world looking for people to torment. But, in the movie "Frankenstein, with
Boris Karloff, the monster befriended a blind man. I think he had this
friend because the man could not see the face of the monster.
Mary Shelly's Frankenstein was very different from the movies and
T.V. shows. For one thing the monster was not even called Frankenstein.
Victor Frankenstein was the name of the doctor who created the monstrosity.
Before the doctor created the monster he was a work of art.
"I had selected his features as beautiful. Beautiful!," ...
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Movie: The Last Emperor
... going on in his country and
he couldn't even see beyond the walls of the forbidden city. Also at the age of
twelve it was accustom for him to get married, so he married two seventeen year
old girls, one as a wife and one as a secondary console.
One time he was so mad that he wasn't aloud to leave the forbidden city to go
see his mother that had just die of swallowing a opium ball, he took his mouse
and through it against a wall.
Towards the end he gets arrested and brought to jail for crimes he didn't commit
such as trying to reform the empire. In jail the guards found that he was
getting special treatment like ge ...
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The Cinema Of Ernst Lubitsch
... a National director. As a director, he “demonstrated the subtle humor and the virtuoso visual wit that would in time become known as ‘The Lubitsch Touch.’” (www.his.com/~scottb/lubitsch/biography.html). His style was characterized by a parsimonious compression of ideas and situations into single shots or brief scenes that provided an ironic key to the characters and the meaning of the entire film.
In his early films, The Marriage Circle (1924), One Hour With You (1932), and Trouble in Paradise (1932), elements of Lubitsch’s style, such as deception and corruption, role playing and performance, relationship ...
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Bob Roberts: Race And Color
... "hoods" and the whites live under better living conditions.
This is the way our television is, because this is the way the regular white people think. They are always stereotypical of the two races. Black, brown, red, purple yellow or whatever color the person is, they will always be discriminated against. Not just because they are not the same color as white people but also because they are different.
People complain about all the violence on the television and the sexual activity on television, but they are missing the point that kids need to learn about all races for them not to grow up and be discriminato ...
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Death Of A Salesman: Willy Loman - A Tragic Hero
... were problems were scarce. He uses this escape as if it were a
narcotic, and as the play progresses, the reader learns that it can be a
dangerous drug, because of it's addictiveness and it's deadliness.
The first time Willy is seen lapsing off into the past is when he
encounters Biff after arriving home. The conversation between Willy and Linda
reflects Willy's disappointment in Biff and what he has become, which is, for
the most part, a bum. After failing to deal adequately with his feelings, he
escapes into a time when things were better for his family. It is not uncommon
for one to think of better ...
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"Twelve Angry Men": Reasonable Doubt
... be a unanimous conviction.The first vote is taken and one man stands out; his confidence to stand alone is strong. He is the only man voting not guilty. His opinion is reasonable; he feels that there is no way to prove it was the boy, saying the testimonies given were shaky. The others do not agree on this, arguing that the boy comes from a slum and one can't expect more from someone with this upbringing. Eight goes into the case assuming the boy is innocent, while the others attribute guilt to him. He first brings in a knife directly like the one used in the killing, to prove that it was not one of a kind. H ...
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Is There Evil In Lady Macbeth And Edmund?
... Two of the most dangerous criminals in this play are Lady Macbeth and her husband. Together they commit the most dreadful murder by killing the King, Duncan. Lady Macbeth would prepare the plan and then encourage Macbeth to go through with it. Macbeth did the actual murdering; he was also the first person who thought about killing Duncan. Lady Macbeth did not have any involvement in these cases.
The first murder in this story was committed on Duncan. This crime was planned by both Macbeth and Lady Macbeth. Lady Macbeth just talked about committing the crime, but she never actually went through with it nor wo ...
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Hamlet: Contrast Between Laertes And Hamlet
... the individual spying on his
conversation with Gertrude is Claudius("Nay, I know not: is it the King?"
Act 3, Scene 4 line 28). Consequently, Hamlet consumed with rage
automatically thrusts out attempting to kill Claudius, but instead strikes
Polonius. Hamlet's and Laertes's imprudent actions are incited by fury and
frustration. Sudden anger prompts both Hamlet and Laertes to act
spontaneously, giving little thought to the consequences of their actions.
Hamlet and Laertes share a different but deep love and concern for
Ophelia. Before his departure for France Laertes provides lengthy advice
to Ophelia pert ...
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The Crucible: John Proctor Is A Hero
... Prynne internally destroys Arthur because no one could know. This
is exactly what happens to John. He can not tell anyone and it destroys
his marriage.
John confesses to lechery with Abigail and he also confesses to being
a witch. It was not easy for John to do that. Most people confess
and sign away their lives to a lie. John does not see the point in it. He
can not live a saint so why live at all? John dies with everyone knowing
the truth about him. John says, “You have made your magic now, for now I
do think I see some shred of goodness in John Proctor.” John rips up the
confession he has just sig ...
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Talk Shows And Their Effects On The Audience
... v. Oprah Winfrey. Both lawsuits involved opinions or statements voiced on the talk show that profoundly affected many lives. In the following paragraphs, I will list the specifics of the two cases, the outcomes of the two cases, their effects on audiences and talk shows today, and their relevance to mass media law.
The first case arose from a taping of The Jenny Jones show on March 6, 1995. Jonathan Schmitz, 26, agreed to appear on a secret admirers segment of The Jenny Jones talk show expecting his admirer to be a woman, not his gay neighbor. When Schmitz found Scott Amedure, a 32-year-old unemployed gay man, te ...
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