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Help With Arts and Theater Papers
Review Of Three Movies: Trainspotting, Ferris Bueller's Day Off And Jurassic Park
... a family. Choose a
[beep] big television, choose washing machines, cars, compact disc players and
electrical tin openers. Choose good health, low cholesterol and dental insurance.
Choose fixed-income mortgage repayments. Choose a starter home. Choose your
friends. . . . "But why would I want to do a thing like that? I chose not to
choose life: I chose something else. And the reasons? There are no reasons. Who
needs reasons when you've got heroin?" It is very difficult to resist the film's
great energy.
"Trainspotting's" subject matter is raw and raunchy, including AIDS, overdoses
and violence as well as obsce ...
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The Crucible: Reverend John Hale - A Dynamic Character
... of this is when he
said to Betty, “In nomine Domini Sabaoth sui filiique ite ad infernos,” which
means: In the name of the lord of hosts and his son get thee to the lower world.
This shows reverend Hales views on witchery. Another example of Hale's
character and his savings of witches is when he said, “Now Tituba, I know that
when we bind ourselves to Hell it is very hard to break with it. We are going
to help you tear yourself free-”
The point when Reverend Hale begins to change is in Act III during the
trial of John Proctor. “I am a minister of the lord, and I dare not take a life
without there b ...
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Romeo And Juliet As A Tragedy
... him like a portly gentlemen;
And, to say truth, Verona brags of him
To be a virtuous and well-govern'd youth.
I would not for the wealth of all this town
Here in my house do him disparagement"(I.IV.65-70)
This means that among the people of Verona, Romeo is very well respected, and he
would not do any harm to Romeo at that time. Romeo is the hero in this story.
Romeo must die along with Juliet in order to stop the families' feud.
The conflicting force which Romeo opposes is the fact that he is a
Montague that is in love with a Capulet; his family's sworn enemy. The
Montagues and the Capulets have been ...
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Hamlet: Antiheroism
... or
an environment. In William Shakespeare's Hamlet, the protagonist, Hamlet, is
depicted as an antihero. One main factor which gives Hamlet such a label is that
he draws sympathy, as well as admiration, from the reader since Hamlet feels the
pain of losing his father along with the burden and obstacles in avenging his
murder.
Act four places a special emphasis on Hamlet's intelligence. In scene two,
Hamlet is very insolent and rude towards Rosencrantz and Guildenstern with such
phrases as,
That I can keep your counsel and not, mine
own. Beside, to be demanded of a sponge, what
replication should ...
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Images Of Light And Darkness In Romeo And Juliet
... that either has ever experienced for another human being; it is allsonsuming, and it is genuine. Juliet says of their relationship in II, ii, line 118: "It is too rash, too unadvised, too sudden; Too like the lightening, which doth cease to be/ Ere one can say 'It lightens.' "
Friar Lawrence in KK, iii also expressed concern that the relationship berween the two lovers is moving too quickly; after all, Romeo was pining away because Rosaline rejected him just one day before. However, he too sees the difference in Romeo's depth of emotion and in light of that, and the possible political benefits (namely peace be ...
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27 Years Of Influential 60 Minutes
... television programs being shown today are also a result of 60 Minutes
and its bold, gutsy, "gotcha" style of television journalism. 60 Minutes
changed the way that the American public receives its television news, stemming
forth a whole new format of television broadcast journalism.
60 Minutes has a vast history of stories covered, yet the format has
remained unchanged. Don Hewett, creator and producer of 60 Minutes, has been
the subject of much criticism for his stubbornness. Since its origin, 60
Minutes has continued to adhere to the same formula that made it such a success.
The hidden-camera intervie ...
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Hamlet: In His Right Mind's Eye
... front of certain individuals shows he was only acting. He acts insane in
front of Polonius, Claudius, Gertrude and Ophelia, while remaining perfectly
normal in front of Horatio, Marcellus, the players and the gravedigger. Hamlet
convinces Ophelia of his madness by going into her room “with a look so
piteous in purport as if he had been loosed out of hell to speak of horrors,”
(2.1.92)and grabbed her and examined her face. Then he let out ”a sigh so
piteous and profound as it did seem to shatter all his bulk and end his being.”
(2.1.106) After that incident, Polonius believes, that Hamlet's madness ...
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The Crucible: Abigail’s Revenge
... Betty is in bed unable to wake. The
girls are talking about what they are going to say if they are questioned
about their dancing in the woods. Mary Warren, John Proctors servant girl,
comes in ranting about the town talking about witchcraft, and wants to
confess what they have done. Abigail will have none of it. Betty wakes up
and she says, “You did, you did! You drank a charm to kill John Proctor’s
wife! You drank a charm to kill Goody Proctor!” Abigail: (smashes her
across the face). “Shut it! Now shut it!” Betty: (collapsing on the
bed). “Mama, Mama!” (she dissolves into sobs.) Abigail: ...
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The Crucible: Struggle For Conformity
... should dedicate their entire lives to the almighty God, which
was clearly evident within the society in Salem, Massachusetts. Refusal to abide by the rules of
the church was considered offensive and heretical, and was not tolerated. Hence, when Abigail
Williams and her friends are caught practicing witchcraft in the woods, their actions are seen as
acts of the devil, and unfortunately are not forgotten. Strange things started occurring within the
village and witchcraft is deemed culpable. This galvanized quite a disturbance in the village and
the girls start making accusations about who is practicing witchc ...
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