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Help With Arts and Theater Papers
The Changes In The Movie Industry
... Fox took apart its lot. This act was one that led to a chain reaction. Studios were assuming the role of distributors. This would allow the independent companies to come in and add a new flavor to the silver screen. During this time films changed it’s traditional film making ideas. Things started to get graphic, more violent, sexual and more expressive. Movies had found a new look and with the production codes now gone and the blacklisting ending, there was an explosion of ideas that would be presented to the United States.
The change in the U.S. can be said to be a social revolution. People were growing si ...
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Hamlet
... the ghost's wishes, but he does eventually knock off Claudius, but to many others bad fortune they too get caught up the mess. is also loyal to his mother shown by his willingness to obey her and pretty much do what she tells him to do. Gertrude is pretty stupid in this story; she betrays her dead husband by marrying his brother and doesn't even notice her fault. She does attempt to redeem herself though, she is loyal to and over all is a pretty honest woman.
has friends who are both loyal, and that are trying to betray him. The soldiers: Marcellous, Bernardo, and Francisco show their loyalty to by comin ...
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Analysis Of The Final Scenes Of Alfred Hitchcock's Notorious
... above tools lead to a better understanding of the
character's motivations.
The most obvious recurring object in the final scenes is the poisoned
coffee cup. In the first scene of the portion being analyzed, Sebastian
suggests to Alicia that she drink her coffee, and Hitchcock zooms onto the
object as she slowly takes a sip. In a later scene, Mrs. Sebastian pours the
coffee into the cup for Alicia, and sets it on a small table in front of her.
Here, Hitchcock not only zooms in on the small teacup, but heightens the sound
it makes connecting to the table, includes it in every shot possible, and shows
us not only t ...
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Rhetorical Genders: Performances Of A Lifetime In Thelma And Louise
... (52)
What I wish to suggest is that the tension between these opposed readings of Thelma and Louise results from a similar tension within the film. Through a carefully crafted tension between realistic narrative and surrealistic image, Thelma and Louise problematizes such oppositional readings as well as such familiar oppositions as masculine and feminine, positive and negative images of women, reinscription and subversion of patriarchal ideologies. The tension between the film’s uses of narrative and image works to interrogate and problematize both feminist and antifeminist assumptions about gender, power, ...
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The Play "Amadeus" Is Mainly Concerned With The Destructive Nature Of Jealousy
... had not restricted
the amount of work actually shown to the general public, then Mozart could have
been wealthy, and quite possibly selected as the new Kapellmeister.
Mozart doesn't understand the importance of pleasing members of the Viennese
court. He has no comprehension of the value of money, for when he successfully
earns any, he spends it on lavish food and clothes immediately, instead of
saving it. He spends all his time churning out music in final copy, which,
although beautiful, doesn't earn money as would teaching music.
Mozart is really the one who should be jealous, as he has little in the way ...
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Broadcasting, Programming, And The Audience
... and sitcoms and their
second choice.
This model says that the audience will watch their first choice first
and then the second choice, but only is their first choice is not available.
Let's say that the Federal Communications Commission licenses station A
in their market. Looking at the viewer preferences, station A would start to
broadcast soaps. By show soaps, it would capture a market of 2600 viewers. All
viewers would watch because soaps is their first choice or it is their second
choice but their first is not available.
The FCC then offers a license to station B. After examining the audie ...
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King Lear: Three Sisters Comparison
... three. Cordelia first introduces herself and her personality when we hear her talking to herself in this quote, “What shall Cordelia speak? Love, and be silent.” (1.1.). When this quote is first heard in the play it helps describes Cordelia as a person aware of her conscience. Here she is deciding what she is going to say to her father when he has asked his daughters to profess their love for him and in return receive his land. Just shortly after Cordelia is heard again, “I am sure my love’s / More ponderous than my tongue,” asking herself again what she is going to say. This helps prove the first po ...
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An Analysis Of Hamlet
... pen, and saying "I hope
it runs a year."
Yet Hamlet is an extremely complex play. To appreciate the
imagination which went into the creation of this tragedy, let's first delve
into what is putatively Shakespeare's most complex tragedy, King Lear. Lear
has three daughters: Cordelia, who is faithful and unappreciated by Lear,
and Regan and Goneril who receive everything at his hands and betray him.
These themes of misplaced love and filial betrayal are mirrored in the
subplot of the play, the relationship between the Earl of Gloster and his
two sons, Edmund, who is supported and approved by Gloster and betrays him, ...
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The Effects Of The Speeches Of Brutus And Antony
... the Romans that the murder was unjust,
invoking their rebellion. Brutus, head of the conspiracy, also gave a good
speech, but the Romans didn't react to it. A battle erupted, and most of the
conspirators committed suicide. The styles of the two speeches were very
different from each other.
Brutus's speech was logical. It contained facts about Caesar's ambition.
He reminded the people that Caesar would have become a tyrant and would have
enslaved everyone. Brutus also explained that he didn't hate Caesar, but that
he loved Rome more. The people didn't understand, however. At one point, they
wanted to cr ...
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King Arthur And The Knights Of The Round Table: An Epic Hero For Modern Times
... life from when he meets his
future wife Guenevere to the beginning of his siege against Sir Lancelot's
castle in France. The short excerpt of Morte d' Arthur tells of how King
Arthur abandons his assault on Lancelot to defend Camelot and all of
England from Mordred. Because Camelot seems to immediately precede Morte
d' Arthur and there is no overlap in the story, the way the plot is handled
in each work cannot be debated. I will however, discuss the mood, tone,
and characterization of a few key figures in the two works.
One difference in character that I found was that in the
introduction to Morte d' Arthur, ...
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