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    Norman Bates

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    2014 Norman Bates: Two Lives Within A Soul Sigmund Freud ’s Psychoanalytic Theory of Personality Development states that there is a structural model of the psyche‚ which splits the human identity into three instances of Ego‚ Superego‚ and ID. In Psychoanalytic Stage of Development‚ there are five stages: Oral‚ Anal‚ Phallic‚ Latency‚ and Genital. Even though Sigmund Freud never was writing about the movie _Psycho_‚ theories of Freud‚ have a great connection with the personality of Norman Bates. According

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    that Norman bates displayed sinister nature threw his attitude‚ the camera angels of when he is being filmed and the lighting. Everything is put together to portray Norman bates and a very evil and sinister Character. This adds a lot of suspense to the movie.  Norman bates has a very evil attitude whenever he is alone with his mother and he thinks that it is ok because no one has told him otherwise. When his mother died he tried to keep his mother alive by being his mother. Norman bates has multiple

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    gothic theme. The son‚ Norman Bates‚ is the perfect representation of the masculine gothic theme incorporating things such as a male being dominated by a woman and victimizing the heroine. The classic gothic theme of murder is also incorporated into the film. Norman Bates mother murders are heroin in a scene .that has gone down in cinema history as being one of the best horror scenes ever made. The whole movie has an underlying dark tone and also a mascline gothic theme. Norman Bates does what any good

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    sound is also brought to light through the manipulation of voices. Like for example‚ after Marion has stolen the thousands of dollars and the guilt builds in her mind‚ the audience begins to hear the voices of other characters. The same goes for when Norman is exposed to being a psychopathic killer and hearing the voice of his mother. These voices symbolize the mental breaks when guilt and evil have affected the mind. Tying into the element of diegetic sound‚ the second major element that expresses

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    first‚ when Norman Bates walks in the camera focuses on the shadow behind the shower curtain and the music starts when Bates is revealed behind the curtain with a knife. The music starts (same sound as a curtain reel moving that screechy sound)‚ when Marion Crane starts screaming it zooms in on her face. The camera flicks between the two characters showing that there is a struggle. Camera doesn’t show Bates’ face as it’s supposed to be a surprise as to who is the murderer. When Bates finally starts

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    Compare and Contrast “The Flowers” and “A Rose for Emily” In comparing Alice Walker’s story “The Flowers” with that of William Faulkner’s “A Rose for Emily‚” there are similarities and differences. The main difference in the stories is the way the characters react to the deaths. There are similarities such as the main characters of both stories personally face a dead body‚ both stories share the symbolism of flowers‚ and both present a theme of death. In “The Flowers‚” Myop innocently stumbles

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    Student’s Name Instructor’s Name Class Name Date Compare and Contrast Emily and Miss Brill Miss Brill in Katherine Mansfield’ short story “Miss Brill” and Emily in “A Rose for Emily” by William Faulkner exhibits interesting similarities and differences. The differences and similarities are evident in their characters. The two stories appear different but the relationship they share is very profound. The stories openly to the reader the realization of similarities and dissimilarities in them

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    Character Comparison and Contrast “A Rose for Emily” and “The Yellow Wallpaper” The character Emily‚ from “A Rose for Emily” by William Faulkner and the Narrator‚ from “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman were both young women from similar time periods. Their belief system reflected the era in which they lived. Emily lived in a post-civil war mansion that was dilapidated‚ she was the unmarried daughter of a once very influential member of the community. At one time‚ her family had

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    really know about the people in our lives. After putting on a show for so long‚ do we even know who we are without the show? We should all be glad that there isn’t a mirror that exists somewhere that shows you who you really are underneath it all. Emily Dickinson’s poems “A wounded deer leaps highest” and “To fight aloud is very brave” touch on this idea of outward appearances versus inward appearances and the importance behind both of them. Focusing just on outward appearances and its importance

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    Compare and Contrast of Emily Rose and Roderick Usher Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Fall of the House of Usher” and William Faulkner’s “A Rose for Emily” are two examples of Gothic literature. There are many characteristics of Gothic literature ghostly settings‚ glumness‚ and evil predominant over good. All of these traits exist in both stories. Gothic literature was more often than not set in an old building‚ house‚ or castle that depicted human decomposition‚ which formed a feeling of unknown and

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