Narrative Report Essay

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    In 1943, James M. Cain wrote one of his most selling novella “Double Indemnity”. A year later, Billy Wilder, a movie director, with the help of Raymond Chandler, a screenwriter, took the book and adapted to the big screen while keeping the original title. Eventually, the movie became very popular and nowadays, “Double Indemnity”, widely regarded as a classic, is often cited as paradigmatic film noir and as having set the standard for the films that followed in that genre. The movie adaptation is…

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    In a time where technology and cinematography were starting to come together, the Matrix became the major movie that showed the possibilities for what technology could do for cinematography. The Matrix is a thrill ride that not only entertains but also makes us question reality, which is a key talking point when it comes to philosophy. The Wachowskis (directors) used the technology at hand to their advantage to easily demonstrate multiple philosophical theories and make them simple for the…

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    getaway is marginally more radical than Lieutenant Jimmy Cross' reaction, in any case. The section, "The Sweetheart of the Melody Tra Bong," permits the peruser an opportunity to assess a more compelling response to the feelings of war. The narrative of Mary Anne starts with her beau who is a piece of a little restorative regiment situated along a waterway, called the Melody Tra Bong. Rodent Kiley is the storyteller of the story; he was additionally a some portion of this regiment,…

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    the films Shane and Pale Rider, the heroes save the town and the townspeople are saved from the bad guys, which is the overarching plot of many western films. The similarities and differences between these two movies are apparent, but on the surface can be hard to differentiate. During films, people tend not to see small details. Camera angles, lighting, and costumes play an important part in films, but yet the viewer does not see most of these details. The power of these production techniques…

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    characters and their relation to each other, but the layers of narrative points of view also causes the reader to remain questionable of the speaker’s reliability throughout the story and instill a sense of mystery. By receiving insight from multiple different perspectives, rather than just one first person or third person point of view, the readers have the ability to know the characters on a…

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    went through. Logos is showed the least because Vladek is a credible source and does not need much factual support to believe and understand his story. Art shows the audience that the inner story is believable, through him writing down his father’s narrative in the outer story; this creates ethos. Even though some of the appeals are utilized more than others, all of them are present in Maus. These different constructions of ethos, pathos and logos support Vladek’s story and help the audience…

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    Haiti is a place where Edwidge Danticat’s heart lays in. It is where the saying Krik? Krak! came from.” Krik? Krak!” is the title of Danticat's book and she uses the saying in one of her stories. When someone says Krik? another person says Krak! and tells a story. People are able to connect to with each other and bond in a way. Edwidge uses juxtaposition in her book Krik? Krak! The juxtaposition is when you compare two things that are the very opposite. In the series of short stories, Edwidge…

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    Mockingjay Part 2 Analysis

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    The epic conclusion to The Hunger Games quadrilogy arrives one year removed from the series’ previous installment, Mockingjay Part 1 – and does so with a high-rising wave of anticipation. What will be the fate of Katniss Everdeen and her quest to defeat the villainous President Snow? Who will Katniss select on the romantic front? Can the rebellion capture the capital? All pressing questions that cinematic fans are dying to have answered… Well, book readers have obviously been clued in for…

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    “ Memories, may be beautiful and yet what’s too painful to remember.” Barbara Streisand's lyrics in her song, “The Way We Were” shows that memories are brilliant but many can have a negative emotional effect as well. F. Scott Fitzgerald had a difficult time naming the book “The Great Gatsby” even though it’s truly a story about memories the name is misfitting. After all, “The Way We Were” would have been a more fitting title. Memory is what manages us, if we couldn't recall the who, what, when,…

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    Last Stop on Market Street is an award winning picture book about a little black boy called CJ and his grandmother who take the bus to work at a soup kitchen after church on Sundays. The author uses words and phrases very effectively within this book to really paint a picture of the city and it's people. At the beginning of this book the author uses figurative language to describe the air as smelling 'like freedom, but it also smelled like rain' this phrase goes a long way in identifying the…

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