Scene analysis

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    Scene Analysis on Song at Midnight: the First Meet of Song Danping and Sun Xiao’ou The first meeting of Song Danping and Sun Xiao’ou in the film Song at midnight is not only the first exposure of the phantom in the theater after ten years, but also a turning point of Sun’s life. So the scene that Sun goes upstairs to meet the phantom Song is both an end of the ten-year nightmare of Song, and a starting of a new story of revenge and revolution. However, the changeover cannot be accomplished at one

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    Our group proposed, presented, and directing the stage performance for the Twelfth Night. In the beginning of the semester I had no clue of what to expect from this course, and reading the syllabus made Shakespeare’s Plays seem complex. I am somewhat familiar with William Shakespeare’s plays stemming from a Shakespeare course that I had taken at Harold Washington (City College of Chicago). My professor (Hader) informed the class that if we were looking to go on to a four-year university as an English

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    Joseph Metcalf Professor Karen Davis World Cinema 2 October 2016 Jeffrey Lebowski and The Dude: An Analysis of Two Scenes in The Big Lebowski Film noir is a fascinating genre with the familiar aspects of the anti-hero, the femme fatale, and the detective of whose plotlines are to end where they started… but what if this genre had a film made near the turn of the century? Spoiler alert: that film is The Big Lebowski, the title of the paper ruined that surprise, sorry. The Big Lebowski was released

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    GE3401 – TB2 Exploring English Cinema Scene Analysis “Scattering Donny’s Ashes” Scene in The Big Lebowski (Joel and Ethan Coen, 1998) Student Name: Fan Ho Nga, Gloria Student ID: 52948216 “Scattering Donny’s Ashes” Scene in The Big Lebowski (Joel and Ethan Coen, 1998) The Big Lebowski (1998) by the Coen Brothers is no doubt a comedy film about friendships between three bowling buddies with differing personalities who met and stuck together as friends by choice in Los Angeles

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    The scene that I have chosen to apply my learning in this term to, as well as specifically analyze, is the 2012 Universal and Working Title Films production of the movie-musical Les Misérables, directed by Tom Hooper. This musical focuses on the lives of several characters in France during the early 1800’s; Jean Valjean is an ex-convict who breaks parole to start a new life, Javert is the chief of police dedicated to upholding the law, Fantine is a single mother who turns to prostitution as a way

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    Analysis of Scenes: Reactions to Dissonance Scene 1: Discussion at the Bar During our group discussion of the scene, the main reaction of dissonance we noticed was the fight-flight reaction. Although these responses will not be evident until the latter half of the scene, it seemed to us the most prominent action demonstrated, mainly by the character O’Callahan. Fight is characterized by a perceived competition within the group. It occurs when two or more people contest each other’s ideas, aiming

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    Macbeth Scene Analysis In the Polanski version of “Macbeth” the director, Roman Polanski, goes in depth and precisely portrays the emotions the characters feel. He uses camera angles and facial expressions to “put the viewer in the character’s shoes.” In Act V Polanski does a fantastic job of describing the emotions of Lady Macbeth while Lady Macbeth is sleepwalking. In Act V Scene I Lady Macbeth is shown sitting in front of a candle while she scaredly rubs her hands to get Duncan’s blood (murder)

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    1. Explain what a crime scene is and what is meant by establishing the “corpus delicti.” A crime scene is the place where a crime scene has been committed, a crime scene can also be in multiple locations depending on the crime and the crime scene or scenes must be investigated in order to prove who did it, who did not do it, how, where, and why the crime was committed (p. 2). Establishing the “corpus delicti” or body of crime refers to the process when deciding if whether a crime has been committed

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    cells which include a nucleus or “nucleated cells”(“preservation and collection of biological evidence”). Within a crime scene detectives and officers can use common materials such as tissues, pillows, a bottle, and more. When a detective finds cases in which DNA is present, they can take the samples back to lab to extract and quantify the DNA to see if they can do further analysis on

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    observing and analyzing certain evidence (also known as the procession of forensic analysis) in an attempt to find out what occurred and who’s the main aggressor. This particular show is effective in the sense that it vividly incorporates different forensic techniques from either doing a helicopter light scan to critically analyzing a blood sample. Nonetheless, in the episode, “Crate and Burial” two different crime scenes were utilized as a mode of trying to incorporate the scientific process from observation

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