The Final Scene

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    only truly be answered based off each person’s own opinion about what they saw in the movie. As well as second to none visuals and crisp execution of every single scene. From the incredible work the climax is comprised of, to dialogue between two characters late at night in a quiet warehouse. The perfectionist nature behind the scenes lays the groundwork to appeal to an audience who unconsciously find interest in pairing of fast…

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    place in their lives, whether it is a place for peace or a place to express their true feelings and guilt. In Nathaniel Hawthorne’s novel, The Scarlet Letter, Throughout the novel, the meeting place at the scaffold presents the three most important scenes. It symbolizes shame and sin as well as sight of redemption for Hester. Hester’s punishment comes full circle at the scaffold, as it starts with humiliation and ends with salvation for herself, Pearl, and Dimmesdale. Hawthorne’s story begins…

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    displayed to snap to judgement. The first scene that introduces the character Farhad to the film is the arrival at the gun store. The gun clerk assumes Farhad is Arabic because the trait supporting that notion is the foreign language Farhad speaks. However, unbeknownst to the gun clerk the actual language is Persian. Regardless the judgement escalates and has the gun clerk assume the worse, that Farhad is a terrorist, causing him to kick him out the store. In this scene another attribution bias…

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    cause the end of their relationship, making the relationship only "momentary [like] a sound" (Act 1 Scene 1). Two lovers time together can be "as swift as a shadow," as "short as any dream," or as "brief as the lightning in the coiled night"…

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    In Scott Pilgrim, this is observed during fight scenes at different emotional points in the film. Edgar Wright has said that treating the fight scenes as musical numbers allowed him to incorporate ideas from the comics that would normally render the whole film ridiculous, in the way that in a classic movie musical, a character would break into song…

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    Romeo and Juliet, namely extreme close-up; low angle shot; tilt; zoom and flashback, and why Baz Luhrmann has chosen to use each one of these filmic devices. Luhrmann has chosen to use all these different camera shots so that he creates a meaningful scene full of mixed emotions. Extreme close up is when the camera zooms in very closely to a particular subject, for example, the nose, eye or mouth fills most of the frame. One of the reasons why photographers or filmmakers use extreme close-up is…

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    One of the opening scenes begin from behind the mother seeing only the daughter as she tries to break the news. Right as she begins to repeat his name, John enters the room and the shot focuses on only him, a parallel to the mothers shock and overwhelming thoughts. When Joanna introduces John to her father, it takes him a while to put every thing together before they announce the engagement. The scene includes a continuous shot of him walking into the house before…

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    Hamlet Sanity In Hamlet

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    maintains the ability to think analytically and demonstrate self-control in a way that bespeaks his exemplary understanding of the world around him and how its occupants function. The first example of Hamlet’s analytical thinking capabilities is in Act II Scene ii where Hamlet develops his plan to have the players perform The Murder of Gonzago in order to observe Claudius’s reaction. Hamlet understands that forcing Claudius to watch his wicked deeds replayed might make him act in a guilty manner…

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    Tim Burton uses to create the perfect mood for a particular scene in many of his well known movies. An example is when low-key lighting is used to fill the screen with darkness. Just barely any light left in the movie, which can give the sense danger and fear throughout the scene of the movie. In contrast high-key lighting is used to do the opposite of low-key lighting. It’s used to fill the screen with brightness, which can give the scene a sense of warmness and happiness. For instance in the…

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    The third and final example of their use of the rhetoric device pathos is during the scene were the record producer of Girl Talk named Gregg Michael Gillis talks about his work in medicine. This scene in the film was a very well executed use of pathos in many ways. For one they show us that medicine could be much further than it is now but because of the patents that companies have on the most basic of ideas, they cannot use the information that was found to add to their own personal idea. This…

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