Francis Capra

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    Veronica Monologue

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    “So you do associate with the riff-raff now and again?” Weevil spoke close to her ear over the music, from behind; she surprised him by being here, he figured he could at least return in kind. A shady dive in the ‘02, it’s exactly the kind of place she shouldn’t be but somehow always ended up. Spotting the blonde, wavy bob from across the bar, Weevil just couldn’t go back to his drink the same way. It was her, alright, but it was a version of her Weevil didn’t find wholly familiar. Seeing her, seeing the guy she was talking to practically salivate over her dress… Betting everything in his wallet that she was here for a job, as she turned around to face him he couldn’t help but eye the drink in her hand. “Now and again,” Veronica conceded, and internally groaned. Originally, she’d considered asking him to co-pilot this job, and ultimately decided against it. Seeing him there by coincidence, Veronica wondered if he would play along. “Dance with me,” She demanded, with a tug on Weevil’s wrist, waving apologetically to the guy at the bar she’d been talking to. “What are you doing here, V?” Weevil stone-faced the way the music moved her body against him on the dancefloor. It wasn’t her, it wasn’t Veronica dancing with him, here. It was whoever she was being in the dive, whoever she was being to the guy at the bar. But her perfume smelled like Veronica, her hips dug into his like Veronica’s might. Wrapping her hand over his neck, mostly to angle him so she…

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    Would the documentary Amazing Grace by Bill Moyer be effective in a Christian University setting? The simple answer is no. This film fails to engage and educate young Christian people. Moyer should have played the emotional aspect and explained grace deeper, but this film could be used educationally. The definition of a documentary is; consisting of official pieces of written, printed, or other matter. The definition of an effective documentary would be official pieces that inform by educating…

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    Prior to the Revolution, Cuba had been a leading Latin American producer of commercial radio and television and a leading consumer of Hollywood movies (Chanan, 1997, p. 33). After its establishment in 1959, ICAIC emphasized on documentary filmmaking as one of the its principal activities. Documentary film and fictional production were expected to apply new thinking and to experiment with revolutionary aesthetics, engaging the audience in a way that reflected the new social order (Lopez, 1992).…

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    global war” The World War II became the biggest propaganda period for the cinematic industry of the United States. Best of the Hollywood propaganda films were produced to contribute to the nation’s morale. The war years saw record attendance in theaters, despite a large federal tax increase on the admissions, which added a big portion of money to help to finance the war effort. Propaganda documentaries played an enormous role in shaping American public opinion during World War II. Hollywood…

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    “Music has power – especially for individuals with Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias.” (AFA Website 2016). Alzheimer’s disease is an irreversible neurodegenerative condition (that deteriorates significantly over time) of a patient’s memory and daily bodily functions. Since humans are living longer and our older population is increasingly getting larger there are more and more people suffering from Alzheimer’s than ever before. There are currently over 5.4 million Americans suffering…

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    when the modernist period began, along with less strict censorship and blossoming feminist movements, women are depicted as much more capable and independent while still desiring love, as demonstrated in Love with the Proper Stranger (1963). Although It Happened One Night and Love with the Proper Stranger both uphold the classical constituents of the genre in that both films follow the journeys of unlikely heterosexual pairings as they fall in love and eventually get married, It Happened One…

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    Assessment 2 Australian Film Essay Topic 2 KPB205 Approaches to Contemporary Documentary Semester 2 2015 Name: Dermot McNamara Student Number: n9161988 Due Date: 16th October, 2015 Introduction Since one of the first documentary or non-fiction narrative films in 1922, innovation has dominated this area of filmmaking becoming immeasurable just how much it has changed. Film theorists such as Bill Nichols, continue to push the boundaries of documentary filmmaking with…

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    A documentary can best be defined as a visual representation of a past occurrence. Taking this simple definition and applying it to a large-scale production is challenging, therefore, it will be stated that in order for a film to be considered a documentary, the film must contain authentic material from the subject matter. In the text Visible Traces, Gregory Currie takes multiple cases and explains how each of them might add to the viability that documentaries are a collection of loose…

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    Despite different genres of the documentary, first-person filmmaking still stands out as one of the most unique styles. Not all filmmakers are attracted to this genre of documentary, and every filmmaker has their own special interest in a genre. The autobiographical documentary has raised a lot of issues in concern with the growth of our ideas towards the documentary. Therefore, this paper presents the real context of autobiographical filmmaking, about the film Tarnation. In relation to this, my…

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    King Corn is an eye-opening documentary that highlights the huge role that corn plays in American society. The film was produced in 2007 by college friends Aaron Woolf, Ian Cheney, and Curtis Ellis, who together moved from their familiar urban city to an Iowa farm. The film follows Cheney and Ellis as they rent a one-acre plot of farmland and plant their own crop of field corn. The documentary serves to demonstrate the American food industry’s reliance on corn and how corn has come to be in…

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