The best scene that I believe it was effective was when Chuck and Wilson were in the middle of the sea. When Chuck is sleeping Wilson is taken by the sea and Chuck does not notice until Wilson is getting far. Then Chuck just into the middle of the sea and tries so hard to go get back Wilson and not lose his companiet that he has been for 4 years. When the waves start pulling Wilson farther and farther Chuck kept swing to try and get him back but he couldn’t. When Chuck finally notice he was not going to get Wilson back he started crying hopelessly and apologized to Wilson for not getting him. After that Chuck felt lonely and solitary, and he never saw Wilson again. Time passed and Chuck get rescue without his buddy Wilson.
It had a heartwarming as the movie goes on there are other what are my favorite scenes in this particular movie was with Brooklyn Dodgers vs Cincinnati reds it was June 21st 1947. The Brooklyn Dodgers were coming out from the dugout and Jackie Robinson was coming out with them. All of white fins or booing at him in this particular scene that cannot cultivate to the issues are we have in our society to this day. The same scene issues a father with the kid which is excited to see one of his favorite baseball players on the field and ask his father if you think he will make a homerun. there will arm placers on Doubt place for this is not any reds it was hoping that he will make a whole run that there is I definitely he will make over on this and that it then all of a sudden with Jackie Robinson was coming out the father in the rest of the fans were booing at Jackie saying the N word in needs to go back to his City in Brooklyn.
Castaway was an astonishing film about survival, love, and loss, three things we take advantage of every single day. Tom Hanks undoubtedly gave one of the best performances of his career. Throughout the movie you see his character, Chuck, change from a busy, time-obsessed man, to someone who is at the brink of death multiple times. The emotions displayed when Chuck was on the island told the story of how he coped with being away from his one true love and society in general. Slowly, you see his sanity starting to escape. When he started talking to a volleyball he named Wilson, you realize how much being alone affects a person. Not only was the acting excellent, the storyline was one to remember. Castaway stood out from other survival films
38: The Chucky Mullins Effect When one meets someone, his or her life will not be the same again, whether it be good or bad. When people met Chucky Mullins, their lives were changed for the better. Jody Hill, a teammate of Chucky’s on the 1989 Ole Miss football team, writes a book about the impact of Chucky named 38: The Chucky Mullins Effect. The book tells the stories about the people who were affected by Chucky.
The scenes where the woman is looking in the mirror and the guy is sleeping while she is worrying, were particularly powerful
In conclusion, I think is very effective because it grabbed my attention because of the tension and hysteria used as it made me eager to know what was happening. Miller uses language and setting effectively convey the tension
This movie had effective scenes that went along the storyline. The scenes were successful at showing the importance of every scene by making it powerful. It made it powerful by giving the scenes different types of emotion that went along at what it was supposed to give. If it was a joyous scene then they would make the music cheerful and the light would give an gleeful type of feeling. Even when George was staring out of the box cart, you saw different types of emotion that affected the scene of the storyline in a valuable
--While on the island, Chuck feels very alone, but his is able to deal with this isolation by creating his friend, Wilson, through a volleyball. This allows Chuck to have a reason to live because he wants to stay alive for his friend.
Movies are meant to evoke emotion in a person and attach them to the story being told on the big screen. Writer, William Broyles, Jr., in his movie, Cast Away, shares the story of a desperate man, Chuck Noland, trying to survive after being stranded on an island. Broyles’s purpose is to make the audience feel for Chuck and share the same feeling that he is going through. He adopts a sad and serious tone in order to do this that allows the mature audience to show emotion towards Chuck. The ways he makes the audience feel for him include: repetition, personification, and camera angle/ sad music. With all of these combined, Broyles is able to manipulate the audience into feeling for Chuck.
The dialog provided was strong but also impactful allowing me to familiarize with how the character was feeling in the moment.
All of the characters presented in the movie have a distinct personality, making the viewer engage deeply in the heart pumping action and drama.
Chuck ends up developing this type of character development when he is reunited with Kelly. He expects everything to go back to normal after he will be with Kelly. His relationship with Kelly changes after he finds out that she had moved on with her life, has children and is married. Chuck understands that, just like time, you must move forward. On the island Chuck has a volleyball companion named Wilson. He becomes emotionally attached to this object to keep himself less alone on the island. After Chuck loses Wilson in the ocean, Chuck feels
I specifically think of the passengers calling their loved ones, finding their fellow passengers alive after the landing and thanking Sully as moments that made me choke up a little. Another highlight is the simple reaction shots that Eastwood shows us of businesspeople in the skyscrapers as they see a plane hurtling toward the city. That was as a simple and understated way to underscore the heroism of Sully’s action by making us visualize the alternative.
After losing Wilson one night, Chuck regrets the loss and begins to go ahead with Wilson’s original idea
Mostly all the scenes were intense, you just couldn’t wait to know what would happen next. In my opinion they were no pathetic scenes, they were all good to me.
His determination and faith serve to evoke optimism within the responder and it gives them hope that Chuck will continue to survive until he gets off the island.