Each assignment in this course will help you prepare your Final Paper. For each assignment, you will use the movie character or historical figure you chose in your Week One journal. Remember, after submitting this week’s assignment, you will not be allowed to change your movie character or historical figure.…
In 1952 there were multiple fantastic films that made it a close competition for best picture. I narrowed down my list of movies to The Quiet Man, High Noon, and The Greatest Show on Earth. I narrowed it down to these three because Moulin Rouge and Ivanhoe did not perform up to the standards it needed to have a chance at best picture. By thoroughly evaluating these films it has been determined that The Greatest Show on Earth clearly deserved to win its best picture award becuase of its emotional scenes, creative film techniques, and an impactful ending with a twist.…
A Stoic is a person who is seemingly indifferent to or unaffected by joy, grief, pleasure, or pain. One who is not touched by the outside world seem to live inside themselves always thinking that today might be the last. Stoics detach themselves from things of this worlds including objects, people, and to a certain extent their own lives. In Marcus Aurelius’ Meditations and Epictetus’ Discourses they both explain how to properly be a stoic, learning to deny their feelings, respect themselves and nature, and detach themselves from the useless things of this world.…
Citizen Kane is a film open to many interpretations and analyses. It tells the story of its main character through the complex points of view of those who knew him. Or thought they knew him. The character of Charles Foster Kane is played by, and done so in an enigmatic performance, by Orson Welles. The intrinsic bias and prejudice of the “narrators” in this film creates conflicting accounts of who Charles Foster Kane really was. Kane was a private man; closely guarding his true identity, making it difficult to differentiate the private Kane from his public identity. Throughout the film’s development of Kane, several inconsistencies and contradictions arise in the depiction of the character’s personality. All of these issues make it difficult to form a solid portrayal of whom Kane actually was. However, there is enough evidence to conclude that Charles Foster Kane was a noble figure sabotaged by his own anti-social behavior and his search for love, his inability to find and provide it, and the way this haunted him to his dying day.…
High Noon, a western film mostly respected by conservative viewers, and endlessly ranked over by critics. This was an exciting movie considering it was a black and white film. The whole movie was about the loyalty of a town marshal named Kane and the betrayal of the town. After watching High Noon, there were a lot of fallacies that were depicted through out the movie such as begging the question, ad hominem, slippery slope, and Inconsistency. The characters in the movie do a great job at portraying each of these fallacies.…
Cited: Kesey, Ken. One Flew Over the Cuckoo 's Nest. New York: Signet, 1963. Print.…
‘Choose two or more of the central characters and describe them. How has Ron Howard directed your response to them? Do these characters change during the course of the film?’…
Aurelius is a stoic that believes that individuals of a polis should live according to nature, and that nature is moral and rational. Though stoics believe that there are no social bonds on society, they do believe that other norms of the polis orient individuals behavior towards nature. Marcus Aurelius, an advocate for stoicism, believed that man should fulfill his duty in life and live according to nature. He believes that actions should follow the right of reason. The right of reason, according to Aurelius, refers to the idea that “following God in an orderly fashion, never uttering a word that is contrary to the truth nor performing an action that is contrary to justice” (Aurelius, 22). This quote shows the importance of justice in politics and society in Ancient Rome. The interpretation of justice is the same regardless of philosophy and ideology. Justice relies on the individual to make the correct choice in any given situation. Alongside justice, Aurelius believes that order is made up by people who are “following right reason and with dedication, steadfastness, and good humous… and if your present action is in accordance with nature, and if all that you say and utter accords with the truthfulness of an earlier and purer age, you will live a happy place” (Aurelius, 23). Though Aurelius believes that there are no social connections amongst people in the polis, an inherent collective meaning can be distinguished if everyone follows the same beliefs of natural, rational law. Aurelius believes that the best community is a community where everyone fulfills their own function, thus creating a society where individuals positively impact the…
Within this film it is clear that the styles of narration used by the screenwriter's are classic Hollywood narrative styles, which is when there is a "strong central protagonist and neatly resolved climax" (Bordwell and Thompson, 2005). Another way of proving that this is a classic narrated Hollywood film is by looking at what Bordwell (2005), states as the action revolving around a central character that by the end of the film fulfills his/her goal. By looking at all of the above, the point argued in this essay is clear that this film is a typical Hollywood narrated film, even though there are some techniques used by the screenwriters and directors that lean towards the way non Hollywood films are narrated.…
Marcus believed that we should be not as concerned with the things outside of our control, but to make ourselves happy and content with the things that we can control. Marcus believes in “things indifferent” , which is the belief of not being affected by events and happenings around us. In the case that you are affected by something out of your control Marcus says that the event is not to blame, but your perception of it is. “If you are distressed by anything external, the pain is not due to the thing itself but your own estimate of it; and this you have the power to revoke at any moment”. I agree with what Marcus is saying here; that we are not effected by external events unless we allow them to do so. This is a Stoic Ideal, and one I hold to be very true.…
Although I am not very familiar with poetic readings and readings from our Literature book, I did enjoy and was able to comprehend the book Daphnis and Chloe by Longus because it was fairly easy wording and I am somewhat familiar and interested in Greek mythology. Upon reading Daphnis and Chloe, I found a connection to a movie and novel I have seen before. I couldn’t figure out what it was until the professor brought it up in class. It was tied to The Princess Bride movie. I remember watching this movie over and over again and now I can see why I loved reading this novel in class and being able to understand its context. This essay will evaluate the movie The Princess Bride and the novel Daphnis and Chloe. I believe both of these stories’ timelines…
Francis Ford Coppola is an emblematic face for the American auteur. To illustrate this point, the main characters in The Conversation and Apocalypse Now serve as perfect models for Coppola’s placement within the first and second phases of the New Hollywood Cinema (NHC) and for highlighting his auteur qualities in creating relatable characters who undergo significant psychological trauma, and fully submerge the audience in their psyche. The viewer becomes aware not only of being a spectator in a theater, but also of viewing these narratives through the eyes of Harry Caul and Captain Willard, underscoring the subjectivity of experience. Therefore, in both The Conversation (1974) and Apocalypse Now (1979), Coppola’s distinct auteurism is highlighted…
Epictetus’ handbook, Enchiridion, was compiled by his disciple Arrian and first published in 125 AD. In this writing, Epictetus offers Stoic advice on how one can live well given the circumstances within one’s world. Epictetus firmly believes in the strategy of detachment as a means to survive; to not project any intrinsic value onto things outside one’s control and to be dependent on oneself for one’s own happiness. As Dr. Enns mentions in lecture, Epictetus proposes coping strategies for one’s particular circumstances within one’s particular environment. However, I thoroughly believe that instead of using Epictetus' techniques of detachment as a way to endure one's circumstance, one should be aiming to better one's circumstance.…
The actions of the Stoics should lead to peace as well, therefore they are to keep unpleasant speech, thoughts and behaviors at bay (Arrian 137). Arrian states that as Stoic philosophers act in this manner, they will be subject to persecution because their beliefs and way of life are contrary to the Greek culture of pleasure and indulgence (137). The Stoics are also to see death indifferently and the Greek culture as undesired, as Arrian infers, meanwhile creating a simple, low standard of life, which embraces poverty through rejecting materialism and maintains a proper character (137). In addition, the continuation of life and their character within the Greek culture is also important. Pride is a trait that is shunned in Stoic philosophy, and thus Stoics are to humbly accept any position in society, whether it be due to social constructs such as one’s profession, race, age, or gender, or by Nature’s choice (Arrian 138).…
In Epictetus’ Enchiridion, Epictetus claims that people are upset not by the things themselves but by their judgements about the things. This is because people are not in control of what happens to them, but they are in control of their own response. Therefore, the only things in life worth worrying about are those that are within the individual’s control. Worrying about anything else is destined to end in disappointment or sorrow.…