Category: Movie Analysis
-
Godzilla as the Personification of a Nuclear Bomb
The most common reading of the monster stands as being a metaphor for the nuclear bomb. One can track this throughout the movie through cinematic techniques, dialogue and complementary timelines. It is most clearly demonstrated in the opening scene, where the destruction of the ship mirrors the events of Bikini Atoll. A test that threatened…
-
Rhetorical Question and Symbolism in Breck’s Last Game
With a rise in the popularity of online gaming in the last 10 years, there has also been a subsequent rise in phishing, grooming and the manipulation of minors. Breck’s Last Game, directed by David Whayman and globally released in 2019, tells the story of Breck Bednar, a 14-year-old whom was manipulated online over a…
-
I Am Mother’: Movie Analysis
Grant Sputore’s debut film ‘I Am Mother’ is a science fiction thriller that circles the story between a child and her mother living in an advance bunker years after the self-destructive behavior of humans that caused their extinction. Giving a hint that the world outside the facility is no longer fit for human life. The…
-
Analysis of the Movie ‘Crazy Rich Asians’ in Context of Social Norms
Introduction to ‘Crazy Rich Asians’ and Its Cultural Context This movie analysis is based on ‘Crazy Rich Asians’ movie that come out last year in 2018. It produces by Jon M. Chu, a Singapore producer based on novel with the title ‘Crazy Rich Asians’ wrote by Kevin Kwan in 2013 (Jose, 2018). The main actor…
-
Bride And Prejudice As An Indian Film Adaptation Of The Famous Novel Pride And Prejudice By Jane Austen
What makes the ideas of love, marriage and relationships universal? These ideas are relevant to all cultures around the world. All humans are capable of love and create relationships, whether they are familial or romantic. Gurinder Chadha’s Bride and Prejudice is a modern adaptation of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, and explores the enduring themes…
-
Bride And Prejudice As An Indian Film Adaptation Of The Famous Novel Pride And Prejudice By Jane Austen
What makes the ideas of love, marriage and relationships universal? These ideas are relevant to all cultures around the world. All humans are capable of love and create relationships, whether they are familial or romantic. Gurinder Chadha’s Bride and Prejudice is a modern adaptation of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, and explores the enduring themes…
-
British Pride to an Indian Bride: Problems of Retaining the Indian Essence in a Western Scenario
ABSTRACT Adapting literary texts into films, often disregarded as a secondary activity, is a crucial process that requires the effort and time equal to that of creative writing. An adaptation’s success depends on its ability to amalgamate the gist of the literary text and the necessities of a visionary medium, without the objective of the…
-
Film Mao’s Last Dancer: Perseverance Is The Key To Success
Often success is overtly demonstrated in seemingly naturally talented or gifted people. Overnight successes are celebrated in athletes, performers, authors and artists, scientists and even students. But how did these people really achieve their success? Are they smart? Are they talented? Maybe. But more than likely, success is achieved through years of perseverance and grit.…
-
Rhetorical Analysis Essay on a Movie
Rhetorical Analysis: Breakfast at Tiffany’s Breakfast at Tiffany’s is a romantic comedy film that focuses on the eccentric Holly Golightly, and her new neighbor and friend Paul Varjack, who she calls Fred, after her brother that he shares a striking resemblance to. Their friendship is threatened when Holly’s husband tracks her down and talks to…
-
Recurring Organizational Behavior Theories in the Movie ‘V for Vendetta’
The movie ‘V for Vendetta’ is based on a graphic novel by Alan Moore and David Lloyd. It’s a dystopian political thriller, set up in the year 2032, in England. The protagonist named V is trying to instigate a revolution against the ruling government. V convinces a young girl Evey played by Natalie Portman, to…