Mcmurphy breaking the picture window was a turning point in the story. The picture window was a prized possession of Nurse Ratched. It was the difference between her and the patients. She was on one side of the window while the patients were on the more unfortunate side. In a therapy session, R.P breaks the window, in the movie and in the novel, to get cigarettes. The glass breaking wasn't only a turning point in the story, but also for Mcmurphy. McMurphy became a larger than life character to the patients.…
The Great Depression was a hard time for Americans. The time of the depression was a time of recession in the economy. Nobody's life was easy during this time; People tried to make the best of it though. The Great Depression affected people in many different ways.…
Based solely on the novel of Divergent a movie was made lasting two hours and nine minutes. This isn't a short span of time for a movie yet, could it be pure coincidence that they left out some details. Could it have been some of the effects were to gruesome for a film rated PG-13? Or were these actions of leaving the details out more purposeful? Does it give the movie somewhat of a different meaning than the original script of the book? So it brings into question, who wrote it better the writer of the novel Veronica Roth, or the director of the film Neil Burger?…
“Inconceivable!” Stated Wallace Shawn in The Princess Bride. This amazing cinematography was written by William Goldman. This cinema is a lovely fairy tale adventure about a beautiful young woman named Buttercup and her true love Westley. He must find her after a long separation and save her. In this classic film, they have to battle the evils of a mythical kingdom of Florin to be reunited with each other. The Princess Bride is based on William Goldman’s novel.…
The 1961 movie Breakfast at Tiffany’s directed by Blake Edwards and based on the novel of the same name, is about Holly Golightly a young woman who is living independently as a socialite in New York during the 60’s. The movie is regarded as a large reflection of American culture and the different values and opinions that were held by many people during the time. The movie is also a great example of filmmaking in the mid-20th century and how it compares to today’s style of filmmaking.…
When adapting a well-known and loved play into a movie, the adaptor must keep in mind how the audience will react to a new version of a beloved story. An example of this is A Raisin in the Sun, which was adapted into a movie in 2008. Lorraine Hansberry wrote the original play and Paris Qualles adapted that play into a TV movie. The main themes of the story are family, faith, and hope. Following the narrative of a lower-class family living in Chicago in 1959, the play deals with racial tension, family issues, the journey from childhood to adulthood, and how each individual person impacts others around them, within the family unit and out in the world. Some minor issues with the play were resolved in the movie, such as the role of women and how they did not seem to have lives outside of the apartment. The 2008 movie adaptation stayed true to the original framework of the play while enriching the story for a modern audience.…
Edna’s first awaking happens in response to her being around people of Cajun descent who openly communicate and touch. While spending time on the beach with a Cajun women Edna is touched, this touch is not in a sexual way, but is outside the norm and starts Edna’s journey towards what she will accept versus what is socially acceptable. Edna says that mother-women “created the embodiment of every womanly grace and charm” {Baym 567). Edna does not consider herself to be a motherly-women. Edna’s second awakening occurs when she pushes the bounds of her immortality by swimming out farther than she thought that she could, but still makes it back to shore. This leads her to try new thing even to the point of speaking back to her husband. To speak…
The Awakening is a novel written by Kate Chopin first published in 1899. The novel centers around the character Edna Pontellier, a twenty-eight year-old woman married to a man she never loved. Edna struggles throughout the novel to be either the perfect Creole woman or to be true to herself. She reaches her breaking point at the end of the novel and takes her own life by drowning herself in the sea.…
In the early nineteenth century, African Americans were involved in the "Second Awakening". They met in camp meetings and sang without any hymnbook. Spontaneous songs were composed on the spot. They were called "spiritual songs and the term "sperichil" (spiritual) appeared for the first time in the book "Slave Songs of The United States".The negro spirituals "The Gospel Train" and "Swing low, sweet chariot" which directly refer to the Underground Railroad, an informal organization who helped many slaves to flee.The meaning of these songs was most often covert. Therefore, only Christian slaves understood them, and even when ordinary words were used, they reflected personal relationship between the slave singer and God.…
Have you ever encountered that a distinct and spectral whisper keeps revolving around you? Actually, this plot was presented in a movie called “Field of Dreams” which was filmed in 1989. In the movie, such an odd thing happened to a young man, Ray. What is more ridiculous is that Ray decided to follow the instructions given by the phantom voice, even though he was on the edge of bankruptcy, whereas most of us are afraid of pursuing or following our yearning hearts, eventually, there is no chance to regret.…
Gloria Ladson-Billings is an American author, pedagogical theorist, and researcher who wrote the critically acclaimed book The Dreamkeepers: Successful Teachers of African American Children (2009). Ladson-Billings currently serves as the Kellner Family Chair in Urban Education at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and is known for researching and examining pedagogical practices of teachers who are successful with African American students. In 2005, she served as the president of the American Educational Research Association and was elected to the National Academy of Education. She has received numerous scholarly awards and distinctions in honor of her contribution to the field of Education including the H.I. Romnes faculty fellowship, the…
Stephen King is one of the most famous writers of the horror, science fiction, supernatural fiction, and suspense genre.…
The Awakenings was based on a group of patients with a disease called Encephalitis. The first sign of Encephalitis is normal flu like symptoms then starts getting more severe and will cause muscle pains, upper body weakness, tremors, neck rigidity and behavioral changes. Once it becomes severe there is a high chance the person will enter a coma-like state also known as Akinetic Mutism. In the movie, the Awakenings, this state would give the patients the name ‘Statue’. They will physically be there, but mentally they are gone.…
In Cynthia Griffin Wolff’s analysis of the novel The Awakening, Wolff identifies Edna’s struggle with sexual identity, and exploits in conveying her experience of displaying primitive behaviors, through utilization of Freudian psycho analysis. Wolff further supports her thesis through utilization of literary and cultural analysis. It is argued that her interactions with others sexually is uninteresting, and devoid of any sexual gratification, “… however, once she is by herself, left to seek restful sleep, Edna seems somewhat to revive, and the tone shifts from one of exhaustion to one of sensuous, leisurely enjoyment of her own body,” (Wolff,…
While reading the interesting novel of Unbroken there were lots to think about. Along with the prompts on which this paper will answer, the novel was a very good portrayal of what World War Two was like. This novel was told from the point of view of someone who lived through it, and it was a very in depth detailed report over Louie’s life, in the nonfiction literary category. This paper will describe and answer in detail all about the novel and how Louie could survive through the War. Some of the main topics of this paper include, Louie’s characteristics, how Louie survived, Louie’s reconciliation, and an important life lesson from throughout the novel.…