Denzel Washington played an important role in the movie as he created the connection between Antwone Fisher’s past and present. As a director though, Carol rightfully argues that “Washington’s directorial debut as formulaic and unimaginative”. But as far as the…
Mulholland Drive is a twisted and exhilarating movie directed by David Lynch. The movies tells the story of a Canadian women, Diane Selwyn, who moves to Los Angeles to pursue a career in acting. For the most of the movie, we are thrown into a dream Diane has. In this dream many of the characters and people in her actual life are integrated into her dream with new identities. The last part of the movie we are brought back to Dianes actual reality. Only once I was brought into Dianes reality did I realize the importance of the fantasy. I believe Diane has realized the hard, cruel reality of Hollywood and this has caused her to have a breakdown. She has lost the love of her life to this Hollywood scene and is faced with the fact that she is a failed actress. These inner conflicts and struggles have caused her despair and ultimately her demise.…
A serial killer could be dining, sitting, or even living next to you at this very moment. Most killers offer little to no obvious clues that will lead anyone to detect their often secretive, undercover actions. I ask myself, “How can we be so naive to these types of people?” Serial killers amongst us are often well educated, portray an All-American image, yet have a psychotic side to them.…
The director made this movie was to catch the viewer’s eye with a true story. It was very interesting to watch because of all of the parenphena going on through out the movie. The director produced this in a way of everything being very precise but at the same time giving it a Hollywood twist. All of the lighting, soundtrack and imagery are on spot and having Leonardo play the role of Mr. Belfort was excellent casting. It felt as though the movie had more than one climax as it as so exciting.…
Hannibal Lector and Fear of the Uncontrollable Society values conformity and cooperation because it is safer, and more efficient for a community as a whole. Naturally, individuals who create their own values get rejected by society, and if they stray to far from society's norm, they become despised and feared. Hannibal Lector’s practice of serial murders and cannibalism, both acts that his society condemns, makes him an outcast, locked in a cell like an animal, because that is the way society sees him. Society fears him because he uncontrollable; his unwilling to submit to societies standards, and his unusual intelligence makes him an unpredictable and unprecedentedly dangerous entity.…
He has assigned her to interview Hannibal “Cannibal” Lecter which most people wasn’t able to do, due to his refusal. Dr. Lecter was a psychiatrist and he was an incarcerated cannibalistic serial murder. Cannibalism is the practice of someone who devours the flesh of humans or the internal organs of human beings, which a person who studies it is a cannibal. This assignment that Starling was learning from related to the serial killer of Buffalo Bill. Buffalo Bill started out as a bad joke in Kansas City homicide. I would consider Buffalo Bill a serial murderer who kidnaps and murder his victims. A serial murderer is someone who kills three or more people due to abnormal psychological gratification. As presented thirty five minutes into the movie, he killed three or more victims then became lazy as Crawford mentioned. He would also skin his victims because it excited him and I’m guessing he has a motive to kill overweight women to make him a “woman…
Starring: Morgan Freeman, Anthony Hopkins, Djimon Hounsou, Matthew McConaughey, Nigel Hawthorne Stellan skasgård, Harry Blackmun, Anna Paquin.…
The film also stars Frances McDormand, Brad Dourif, R. Lee Ermey and Gailard Sartain, and was written by Chris Gerolmo and directed by Alan Parker. It won the Academy Award for Best Cinematography, and was nominated for Best Actor in a Leading Role (Hackman), Best Actress in a Supporting Role (McDormand), Best Director, Best Film Editing (Gerry Hambling), Best Picture and Best Sound.…
The Norwegian artist Edvard Munch’s painting “The Scream” was painted in 1893 during a unique transitional period in art history. “The Scream” was painted after the end of the photographic Realist era, when artists wanted to show off their technical skills. Moreover, the painting present location was Oslo, Norway. According to Munch’s personal diaries, the idea for the modern art painting “The Scream” came to him while looking down over the Norwegian landscape from an elevation. While a mountaintop or a scenic view from a summit might sound like a beautiful natural landscape to paint, Munch’s personal interpretation of “nature” below was very different than you might imagine.…
Violent, angry, crazy, incapable, weak, these are all words that come to mind at the thought of mental illness. People tend to assume that a person with mental illness is more violent than the average human however, that is not the case. In reality, people with mental illnesses are more often the target for violence rather than the catalyst for it. Some other misconceptions and stigmas associated with mental illness include: incapability of being social, having a childlike perception of the world, and having a weak mind. All the misconceptions and stigmas do not just come out of nowhere. They stem from society and grow from the media is an incorrect portrayal. With such a sensitive subject such as mental illness the media can have a grave effect.…
John Williams has composed over one-hundred film scores of which he has received forty-five Academy Award nominations. He has become a household name through his memorable music motifs. These themes capture the essence of the film and as one fan summarized:…
In the poem “The Lamb”, Blake formulates questions regarding the maker and characteristics of the “Lamb” as the main theme using a symbolic setting and a peaceful mood, and concludes with the assertion that He knows who the “Lamb” is—presenting an imagery of its sovereign attributes. Who might this “Lamb” be?…
In Blake’s poem “The Lamb” it has two main themes childhood and spiritual development. Throughout the poem Blake writes about a creator and innocence. The poem begins with a child asking a simple question of “Little Lamb who made thee”? (pg.134) As children we have all asked this question wanting to know where did we come from or how did we get here? Even after many years scientist and bible scholars still argue over this issue. The child in the poem wonders how the lamb got its wool coat and how it survives outdoors in the elements. He knows it is not by chance or luck. The child thinks that it must be someone greater who created him and the lamb.…
A lamb is a gentle and meek creature that is both daring and submissive. A lamb is very much like a child. In “The Lamb,” William Blake creates a childlike tone through a very songlike form and structure. What this does is give the poem an innocent view, more in the first stanza than in the second. Through the use of apostrophe, the entire poem being an apostrophe, William Blake attributes human qualities to a lamb, the lamb being the listener, the child being the speaker. Throughout the entire poem the lamb and the child are interchangeable, the child is a lamb, the lamb is a child, it’s a metaphor that extends throughout the poem. William Blake uses symbolic language to create extended metaphors about the lamb. He talks about the creator of the lamb giving it “clothing of delight.”…
Following the phenomenal success of The Silence of the Lambs and Hannibal, Anthony Hopkins returns as brilliant madman Hannibal Lecter in this thriller based on the novel in which author Thomas Harris introduced the character. Will Graham (Edward Norton) is an FBI agent with a rare gift for tracking serial killers who brought Hannibal Lecter to justice; however, his confrontation with Lecter proved to be a bloody, near-death experience, and afterward Graham retired from the Bureau, moving to Florida to spend his time with his wife, Molly (Mary-Louise Parker), and their son. However, a particularly grisly killer is on the loose, and Jack Crawford (Harvey Keitel), Graham's one-time mentor at the Bureau, asks him to return to duty to find him.…