"Similarities in alice in wonderland wizard of oz and peter pan" Essays and Research Papers

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    Wizard of Oz

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    The Wizard of Oz (1939) uses both mise en scène and sound to create an immense sequence of dream imagery‚ particularly in the second to last scene where Dorothy is at the point of going back to Kansas. This scene is distinctly significant in terms of mise en scène and sound as it concludes the film and highlights the themes that have been revealed throughout‚ giving a clearer message to the film’s audience. The mise en scène is used to describe what it is the frame and why it is there. The scene

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    Alice in Wonderland

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    Chapter I Lewis Carroll in Wonderland : the Influence of Lewis Carroll on Alice Charles Lutwidge Dodgson‚ better known under the pen name Lewis Carroll‚ was a British author‚ mathematician‚ logician and photographer and he has always delighted the audience from the most naive to the most sophisticated‚ with his facilities at word play‚ logic and fantasy. Carroll suffered from a bad stammer‚ but he found himself vocally fluent when speaking with children. The relationships he had with

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    Peter Pan

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    Peter Pan is no doubt one of the most appealing subjects for "deep" psychological analysis. Interpretations of this character run from the pop-psychology term the "Peter Pan Syndrome" coined by Dr. Dan Kiley (1983) to refer to adult males who refuse to grow up and face their responsibilities‚ through Kenneth Kidd’s (2004) sociocultural study of boys and the feral tale which questions Peter’s masculinity and sexuality‚ to his alleged homosexuality which‚ according to Dore Ripley (2006)‚ reflects Victorian

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    Alice in Wonderland

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    Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass‚ Lewis Carroll depicts the world of Wonderland as an enchanting place where magical and fascinating things seem to happen. However despite its fairytale qualities‚ Wonderland comes across as a bit strange and unconventional fantasy land appropriate for that of a child’s imagination. In Wonderland‚ there are no charming human beings or friendly animals who sing along to cheerful tunes‚ as we see in most children’s story books. Instead‚ Wonderland is filled

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    Alice in Wonderland

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    Eating‚ drinking and identity in Alice in Wonderland. Alice in Wonderland is a very imaginative book written mainly for children‚ but adults can also enjoy it. The big theme through the whole book is growth and how people change from being a kid to eventually growing into an adult. The whole mystery of not knowing who you are and being confused about your position in life. The biggest example of growing is when Alice eats the cake and that makes her grow larger‚ and when she drinks the liquid

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    Alice in wonderland

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    to make his films unique and differ from other directors‚ Burton has a style that no other directors can match. He has a quirky yet creepy imagination‚ he brings characters to life by putting them in a habitat they don’t belong‚ His movies Alice in Wonderland‚and Edward Scissorhands all demonstrate how one of a kind his movies are. Using cinematic techniques‚ Burtons points out the misfit character and shows how different they are then everyone else. Burtons use of camera angles‚ lighting‚ and sound

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    alice in wonderland

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    Child Alice in Wonderland is a Disney movie based on Lewis Carroll’s novel Alice’s Adventure in Wonderland. The movie Alice in Wonderland is one of Disney’s unique productions with distinctive characters and also a plot line. The initial story started with a plot in which Alice was sitting by a river bank with her older sister as she reads a borrowed book. The book was boring‚ didn’t have any images‚ had no conversation‚ and wasn’t interesting for Alice. In the Disney version of Alice in Wonderland

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    Alice in Wonderland

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    ------------------------------------------------- Alice in Wonderland You may have thought Alice in Wonderland was just a children’s tale that everyone takes too seriously but there is more philosophy‚ metaphors‚ and spirituality in this revolutionary children’s book than you can fit into one teapot! It seems everyone from my generation and up has heard the story‚ read the book‚ or watched the movie at some point in their lives. Alice in Wonderland started as a book written in 1865 by Charles Lutwidge. It is about a girl named Alice who sees

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    Alice In Wonderland

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    Did you read and enjoy Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland books as a child? Or better still‚ did you have someone read them to you? Perhaps you discovered them as an adult or‚ forbid the thought‚ maybe you haven’t discovered them at all! Those who have journeyed Through the Looking Glass generally love (or shun) the tales for their unparalleled sense of nonsense. Public interest in the books--from the time they were published more than a century ago--has almost been matched by curiosity about

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    Alice In Wonderland

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    point of view. The most effective way to change one ’s perspective of the dominant fantasy is to have them not only think outside the box but being able to experience ideas that oppose the customary ideas first-handedly. Looking at Carroll ’s "Alice in Wonderland" and Cohn ’s "Sex and Death and the Rational World of Defense Intellectuals"‚ the characters within these stories experience a reconstruction of their beliefs of the dominant fantasy through metamorphosis. In contrary to the dominant fantasy

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