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3538 Balancing Comedy and Social Commentary In Film: "Nine to Five". One of the most striking aspects of "Nine to Five" is how perfectly it captures the feeling of quiet desperation that characterizes many office workers' daily lives. This recreation of the experiences of office workers - and particularly the women who comprise the majority of the population in this sector of the work force - is not simply an incidental setting for the comedy but is, in a sense, a primary focus of the film. 2 pgs. 3 f/c. 1b.
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3548 Darkness to Light. This paper discusses the journey from darkness to light of characters in the film, Dave, in terms of how their journeys were similar or different, and in what sense they were in the symbolic cave of Plato's analogy. The content also includes consideration of whether there is any point in a character's development when he or she rejects or adopts Machiavellian tactics, and how that decision affects the character's development. 5 pgs. 4 f/c. 5b.
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3563 The Convergence of Love and Class in the Choice of "Kitty Foyle". The film "Kitty Foyle" (RKO Radio Pictures, 1941) may be dismissed by some as a "women's picture" or a "tear-jerker". However, such a dismissal would ignore the complexities with which the film depicted women's lives and American society at the end of the Great Depression and on the eve of the Second World War. In this context, it may be argued that the most interesting aspect of the film is how it represents the choice that Kitty Foyle must make, between the two men in her life, as a conflict of romance and class. 2 pgs. 3 f/c. 3b.
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11873 The Cinematic Techniques between the movies "Gattaca" and "Contact". This paper is on " The Cinematic Techniques between the movies "Gattaca" and "Contact". It includes the discussion lighting, framing, camera angles, colors, transitions, music, and or sound effects of the movies. 3 pgs, bibliography lists 4 sources.
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3090 A Textual Analysis Of "The Bicycle Thief". De Sica is probably best remembered for 1948 film, "The Bicycle Thief". It is a compelling cinematic commentary about post-war, post-Mussolini Italy. One of the striking features about it is the way in which de Sica downplays the emotions of the lead character in order to allow the setting, Rome, take precedence. 5 pgs. 9 f/c. 5b.
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3091 Alfred Hitchcock's "Shadow of a Doubt" Forcing Perspective on the Viewer. Shadow of a Doubt" was a box office success and remains an outstanding example of Alfred Hitchcock's ability to craft a mystery film into a something which was more than mere cinema; it was also a serious psychological study. In order to achieve this, Hitchcock had to alter the way in which the viewer expected to see films. 6 pgs. 2 f/c. 3b.
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3092 Analysis of The Movie "New Jack City". 6 pgs. 4 f/c. 3b.
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