"Psycho shower scene shot analysis" Essays and Research Papers

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    Show how the opening scene introduced ideas that were concluded in final scene. The movie Gattaca directed by Andrew Niccole‚ it a dystopian film a bout a man Called Vincent Freeman who is known to be a “God child” which in certain cases you would think to be a good thing but in this movie natural born children are considered the bottom of the heap. In this film discrimination exists not based on skin color‚ socio-economic class‚ culture or religion‚ but on whether or not you were genetically

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    Sophia Grzeskiewicz Understanding Film Reflection #1 Psycho In the movie Psycho‚ we see a character that is the one at fault but is so sweet she is obviously the victim here. When the $40‚000 is no longer what we see from Marion Crane‚ it is because she was murdered‚ she is now the victim. Robert Ebert‚ from the Chicago Sun Times states “Marion Crane does steal $40‚000‚ but still she fits the Hitchcock mold of an innocent to crime.” She was originally at fault here‚ and then she is brutally

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    A sequence shot involves both a long take and sophisticated camera movement; it is sometimes called by the French term plan-séquence. The use of the sequence shot allows for realistic and dramatically significant background and middle ground activity. Actors range about the set transacting their business while the camera shifts focus from one plane of depth to another and back again. Significant off-frame action is often followed with a moving camera‚ characteristically through a series of pans within

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    Scene Analysis: Mrs. Kane

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    The action of this scene primarily takes place inside the Kane’s house in Colorado.The establishing shot begins in a descent into the snow using a long shot‚ it sets the location for the scene. As the Listology (2013) review describes‚ “The scene is nostalgic and artificial‚ the exteriors visually trapped in a false boundlessness with the surrounding sky above Charles appearing like misted glass. It seems as if we are enraptured in Kane’s lost childhood‚ essentially inside the snow globe that represents

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    acknowledged that what he was doing was wrong. He noted that he had been depersonalized and that he had lost the ability to feel compassion for others‚ but he was unable to understand why; he was also unable or unwilling to do anything about it. Analysis: Psychosexual Stages of Development Freud would likely say that Patrick Bateman had a normal Oral Stage of psychosexual development because he did not seem to have any of the "symptoms" that would result in having problems in this area such as smoking

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    about the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. I found James L. Swanson’s book enjoyable because of its descriptive words‚ and the author’s deep knowledge and love for the subject. Another book by Mr. Swanson I find very good is “The President Has Been Shot.” Swanson writes about the gruesome events in Dallas on November 22‚ 1963. The book is thrilling‚ suspenseful and sometimes even a little bit ironic‚ as it tells two sides of the story. Peter Ackroyd’s

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    “They tell you to be yourself‚ and then they judge you.” A person getting bullied is not something unheard of. Most of us have gotten bullied at least once in our lifetime. I get bullied all the time‚ because I’m not afraid to show that I’m different. Bullying can be physical‚ verbal‚ or even online. Whatever the case‚ bullying is something that cannot be ignored. Being different can cause many problems. One of those problems is being bullied. If you seem to be an outcast of a group‚ you will

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    The opening scene in David Lynch’s Blue Velvet portrays the theme of the entire film. During this sequence he uses a pattern of showing the audience pleasant images‚ and then disturbing images to contrast the two. The first shot of the roses over the picket fence and the title track "Blue Velvet" establishes the setting (Lumberton) as a typical suburban town. The camera starts on a bright blue sky with birds chirping and flying by and then tilts down to bright red roses over a bright white fence

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    order to coincide with the time period. With this being said‚ two films particularly enforce this post-modern “horror” and yet both contain an array of sub-genres‚ mutating “genre” into a more complex idea. Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho along with Mary Harron’s American Psycho are both post-modern “horrors” with a collection of sub-genre’s attached to them‚ leading the audience to question the originally believed “horror” genre. Horror-fiction generally manipulate the emotions of their

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    PSYCHO In the film Psycho director Alfred Hitchcock successfully uses a variety of different film techniques that enhance the understanding of significant themes that engage the audience. The major themes in Psycho are the notion of a dual personality‚ women’s role in the 1960’s and the idea of voyeurism and how that joins into the concept of the gaze. All of these underlying themes link into the central theme of Psycho‚ which is identity. Psycho is set in the year 1960. The dominant ideology

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