Shingo Takatera CTVA 425 Navigator 90 pages script Act 1 In a dream, KENT CLAY (14), stands on the waterfall basin. In the waterfall His friends call Kent to jump. “Come on. It’s fun.” “Can he swim?” “Maybe not, cause he always read books”. Kent flashbacks that he is drowning. Someone says “Don’t do stupid things”. KENT CLAY (28) wakes up in his room. Kent stops alarm beeping. The morning in Tokyo. At the living room, Kento and DAN CLAY(60), Kent’s father, have a breakfast without a conversation. The TV says that “It has been 5 years since the disaster.” Dan turns off the TV. Dan gives Kent an envelope and asks him to submit it to the city hall. Kent in a suit chooses his special necktie from his sheriff and leaves for a work. At the office, Kent opens the envelope. The letter says the certificate of death. Kent enters to the city hall after the work. Kent returns to his home. Dan asks Kent whether he submitted it or not. Kent sees the empty collapsed sake bottle on the dining table when he opens the door. Kent leaves his apartment without answering. Kent visits movie theatre to kill his time. Kent takes a train and falls asleep. Kent wakes up at the unfamiliar station. The announce tells that this is destination. Kent asks the station employee where he is now. The station employee turns back and he is a kappa, Japanese traditional monster, NICO. Kent runs away, but Nico chases him and tells stop. Kent runs until an old bridge, but the bridge breaks. Kent falls
Ta-Nehisi Coates discusses the topic of white America often throughout his book, Between the World and Me, as well as the struggles he has as a black American. The dream he portrays in his book consists of maintaining a well-paying job and eventually striving to become a wealthy, upper class citizen. Little do people know that the dream is not obtainable by everyone, Coates asserts that the American dream revolves around being white. Often times, blacks will begin to “act white” in order to achieve this American dream or achieve happiness in White America. Black people leave their natural physical appearance and language form in order to achieve this idea of “being white”. Personally, I find this to be bothersome. Still to this day we are
Having a dream and living with passion is very important because I believe living without passion is like being dead. Someone like Tony Hawk could agree. Tony Hawk has been a professional skateboarder for over 24 years. However, he did not receive that title overnight; Tony got his first skateboard when he was only 9 years old. Since then, Tony worked extremely hard and put a lot of his focus on skateboarding. He did it because that was his Dream. Tony’s Dream was frowned upon by many of his teachers and adults alike. One of his teachers even told him that he “would never make it in the workplace if he didn’t follow directions exactly” (Hawk), but he never gave up his Dream. He kept working hard and eventually became a pro at the young age of 15.
Psychodynamic therapists find that free association is helpful in treating their clients because it allows them to say whatever comes to mind. The client is encouraged to talk about anything and everything seeing as it may help them accept any kind of limitations or discord they may have. This process of treatment would not be the best route for Antwone’s therapist to take. Antwone struggles in creating conversation out of nothing and when it comes to talking about his issues, that process is no different.
The movie, Requiem for a Dream (Selby & Mansell, 2000) exposes the multiple faces of addiction. Addiction can change a person’s identity and therefore, impacts each person differently. This movie explores the life of four addicts who push the boundaries of their own lives leaving the viewer to wonder, how far will they go to use drugs? The focus of this paper is on what addiction looks like for the character, Harry Goldfarb.
The best part of a long, hard-working day is when you finally get to lay in your bed, close your eyes and let your imagination run free. As you sleep your mind takes you to another place far away from the real world. You begin to dream. Over the night, you may have several dreams. In the morning, you may wake up and wonder what your dreams were suppose to mean for you and your life. By analyzing your dream, it "gives a true picture of the 'subjective state'-how we really feel about ourselves-which the conscious mind cannot or will not give" (Wietz 289). In order to find the meaning of a dream, you have to pick out the most important symbols and define them. But you may be wondering what exactly is a symbol?
To many people, dreams are the thoughts that occur while sleeping, having almost mystic qualities. For millennia the significance of dreams has escaped even the brightest of philosophers and intellectuals. Many people have speculated about why people dream and what meanings the dreams have but in recent times two theories have gained credibility in answering those questions. The first theory is Sigmund Freuds and the other is known as the cognitive theory of dreams also known as biological determinism.
Everyone has dreams, but not all are remembered. However, some stay with us for a lifetime. Many people, like Joseph and Pharaoh, from have vivid dreams they cannot shake from their thoughts upon waking from a deep slumber. They are left filled with confusion and apprehension. These lucid thoughts lead, not only them but also us to wonder the meaning behind dreams and their purpose in our lives.
In The Man Awakened from Dreams, Henrietta Harrison describes the life of Liu Dapeng through his diary entries. Highlighting one man’s story allowed the author “to focus on the details of everyday life” in order to “see how social structures and ideologies interacted in practice” (7). Liu lived from 1857 to 1942 and began his diary in 1891, so information about Liu’s childhood and education is dependent on his memories from that time. Harrison depicts Liu as a conservative scholar and argues that his education and Confucian beliefs provided him opportunities even among the modernization changes of China. Harrison also explores the negative impact of modernization on rural areas by recounting the economic and
What Dreams May Come is a movie about life, loss, death, afterlife and rebirth. The film explores the emotions evoked by a variety of characters when they are faced with coping with tragedy and death. It also delves into the manifestations of heaven and the variety of forms heaven takes in the minds of different people.
No other film was as controlled in its production as The Big Sleep. Every aspect of the film is so precise, that the filmmakers left nothing to chance. Every set was built inside, with the exception of a few exterior shots. The Big Sleep is a very visually interesting film that uses quick and precise cutting, harsh lighting, and wonderfully framed shots.
There are many types of dreams and many interpretations of those dreams. Dreams of power... of glory... of the past and the present... but none are as vivid as those that are found in Ralph Ellison's novel, Invisible Man.
Thesis Statement: Dreams are successions of images, emotions, and sensations that occur subconsciously during sleep.
Dreams come in all shapes and forms. Every dream experience falls into one of the following categories: Prophetic Dreams, Release Dreams, Wish Dreams, Informative and Problem solving dreams, and Astral Visits. So many people take dreams for granted or think they do not mean anything, but they do. Dreams are incredible when you learn what they are, mean and why we dream at all.
In The Big Sleep, Chandler portrays Marlowe as the knight in shining armor. This establishes a motif of the stained glass window in General Stern wood’s home in the first chapter of the novel and is an appropriate motif in dictating Marlowe’s knightly role in the novel. The stained glass that is reflected in the novel places Marlowe in the position of the knight as it shows a knight who strives to reach a woman to set her free. The fact that he stares at the glass makes him develop the need to offer assistance. This motif is suitable because it sets the stage for what is to take place in the aftermath when Marlowe rescues Carmen. Secondly, Chandler tries to connect Marlowe with the knightly personality from the beginning of the novel that he intended to name his detective the modern knight and a brave man fighting for General Sternwood. He takes the role of the servant to Sternwood’s lord and therefore, in the knightly terms, it is sufficient to say that Marlowe is striving to find justice. Moreover, he is dedicated to rendering his services in the line of duty with much loyalty and honor despite the sexual and financial temptations that come his way. Like the ancient knights, Marlowe has deeply invested in his personal code of chivalry that contain among others, the need to overcome the sexual temptation of whatever magnitude that comes his way. Lastly, as a representation of the modern-day knight, Marlowe comes out in the novel as a tough detective and a brave individual
This beginning of the Students dream initiates with (student played by Will Anstee) head falling, and him entering a sleeping state which is accompanied by the sound of the nerd jumping down from his chair. Simultaneously, Ultraviolet lights and music are turned. The lights ads a mystical and hallucination type feel which is further exaggerated by the slow tempo music which creates an environment of fantasy and delirium. The Chairs are then taken off and put too the sides of the stage, Sam and Nick then do cartwheels from either sides of the stagehand roll to the back of the stage. They then form a gate using hand stands which symbolises the entrance into his dream. Whilst all this was happening