In what ways do Leonardo and Bazarov act as catalysts inchanging family structure in the texts Blood Wedding and Fathers and Sons respectively?

Question: In what ways do Leonardo and Bazarov act as catalysts in changing family structure in the texts Blood Wedding and Fathers and Sons respectively? Name: Imran Meghji School: Aga Khan Academy Index Number: 1169 - 023 Session: May 2004 Word Count: 1486 In this essay, I will be focussing on the characters of Leonardo and Bazarov, in their respective texts, and how they act as catalysts in changing family structure, so that by the end of the text, the family unit is different from what it was in the beginning. I will also analyse their characters and examine their impact on the plots of the two texts, and their role in plot development. In particular, I will analyse the character's words, and the tone of voice in which they speak; this will help in analysing their specific character traits. This analysis will help me in understanding their impact on character and plot development, which leads to them acting as catalysts in changing their respective family structures. It should be noted that while the text Fathers and Sons features many families that are important to the plot, I will be specifically looking at Bazarov's impact on Arcady's family; as well as the impact on his own family. In the text Blood Wedding, I will be looking at Leonardo's impact on his family and on the Bridegroom's family. In the text Fathers and Sons, when Nicholas is waiting for Arcady,

  • Word count: 1647
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Media Studies
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A Detailed Comparison Between Tabloid and Broadsheet Newspapers.

A Detailed Comparison Between Tabloid and Broadsheet Newspapers The Sun and Telegraph, both support the conservative party but are very different. These papers have been chosen because they are representatives of stereotypical broadsheets and tabloids and are both best sellers, but both have similarities and differences. Rupert Murdoch owns the Sun, and Hollinger International owns The Telegraph. A tabloid paper is two A4 sheets wide and the name tabloid comes from the French word tablet, reflecting the size of the paper. A broadsheet paper is an A2 sheet folded in half, with the word broadsheet meaning as it says, a large sheet. Tabloid and broadsheets do not really compete against each other as they are targeted at different audiences, and are both designed in different ways to compete in different categories. Many people believe that the broadsheet is aimed at middle to upper class people with higher intellect, whereas the tabloid is aimed at the working class people. Each paper gives the desired audience what is believed what they want; this is why they are the best sellers. Also both papers claim to be superlative. The tabloid newspaper aims to give the working class people what they love to read. Tabloids, like The Sun, contain more gossip stories based around celebrities. There are many photographs of women in minimal clothing, and the news is written in a simple

  • Word count: 1130
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Media Studies
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clue review

Clue Review The time: 1954. The place: a country mansion in New England. The butler, Wadsworth (Tim Curry), arrives after dark and checks that everything is prepared for the guests who will also soon be arriving. First to show up is Colonel Mustard (Martin Mull), as he will be known, one of six people who have been summoned to the mansion by a mysterious letter. The others, Mrs White (Madeline Kahn), Mrs Peacock (Eileen Brennan), Mr Green (Michael McKean), and Professor Plum (Christopher Lloyd) and Miss Scarlet (Lesley Ann Warren) who arrive together after a car breakdown, turn up soon enough, but don't appear to know one another. Wadsworth invites them into the dining room, where they settle down for dinner, and the secrets begin to come out - they're all connected in some ways, and one of those ways just happens to be blackmail... Written by the director Jonathan Lynn from a story by him and John Landis, Clue was obviously based on the board game Cluedo, known more basically as Clue in America. The list of films based on board games is a short one, there was a musical of Chess, I suppose, but so far there's no sign of Monopoly: The Movie or Scrabble: The Motion Picture, although I hold out a little hope for an adaptation of Kerplunk. Is that technically a board game? Anyway, true to the game, Clue presents a large mansion with various rooms, the Library, Dining Room,

  • Word count: 764
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Media Studies
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Bias in the Media

Lisa Gray 10L Bias in the Media In this investigation I am trying to find out what bias there is in the media and how it is communicated to the reader. The first part of the investigation involved studying the difference between fact and opinion. As a class, we used textbooks that had two articles in them. We read the articles and checked for any opinions that appeared to be facts. An example of an opinion that appears to be a fact was in an article about V05 hair dyes and colours. "It's the first semi-permanent range to include vibrant fashion shades!" This is written with great authority and therefore appears to be a fact, but this is obviously not a fact because it is the view that the writer of the article has. This person thinks that the shades are "vibrant fashion shades". However this may not be the opinion of another person. Another person's opinion could be that there are already vibrant fashion shades in the market. Another example of an opinion 'dressed up' as a fact is in the Vosene advert. "It's not going to put a stain on your wallet either" This is definitely an opinion because some people may think that this is not true and that the product is expensive. A fact is something that can be proven that it is true. An opinion is what someone believes. Therefore there are many examples of opinions that appear to be facts in everything we read. Though

  • Word count: 889
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Media Studies
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The Influence of Ganster Films such as New Jack City and Menace to Society

Nathaniel Hodge Mr. Brown English 1101 September 21, 2012 The Gangster as Tragic Hero Warshow began the essay saying “America is committed to a cheerful view of life”. Warshow is referring particularly to the movies but also to comic books and pulp fiction .Those that perpetuate the notion of what constitutes the gangster himself but also his environment, motivation and modus operandi. The intolerable dilemma is that failure is a kind of death and success is evil and dangerous, are ultimately impossible. The effect of the gangster film is to embody this dilemma in the person of the gangster and resolve it by “his death, not ours, we are safe for the moment and can acquiesce in our failure, we can choose to fail.” This essay makes me think that most gangster movies can help and also hurt the viewer. It all depends on the state of mind of the individual. Watching movie such as “New Jack City” and “Menace to Society” made people in my community act out, not in a fearful way but in a more gangster way. More crimes took place after young viewers watched these types of films; maybe in the suburbs people felt safe but not in our neighborhood. Movies such as these were made to show people the rise and fall of a gangster. However it depends on the individual that watches these types of films and what they gather from it. Take for instance, if a person

  • Word count: 828
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Media Studies
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Analysis of the film "We Need To Talk About Kevin"

We Need To Talk About Kevin. “We Need to Talk About Kevin” is a movie adaptation of Lionel Shriver’s novel with the same title. The story revolves around a family of four, but the main focus is on the relationship between the mother (Eva, played by Tilda Swinton) and the son (Kevin, played by Rock River, Jasper Newell and Ezra Miller). The movie goes back and forth in time to show different points in Eva’s life. The use of flashbacks and the clever combination of the ‘past’ and ‘present’ scenes illustrates the contrast of what her life was like with her family and without, certain details in both let us know what Eva was thinking and feeling. There is a great significance to details in this film. For example the use of the colour red, this could represent fear, blood and the tense relationships Eva had not only with Kevin but also Franklin, her husband. At the beginning of the movie we see people in a pool of red, this makes us think of violence, a massacre, but really it’s just a tomato festival filmed from a distance. This scene seems strange and out of place, but it sets a certain mood and is also a way of introducing Eva’s occupation. Eva is a well-paid travel guide author, she is absoloutly in love with her job and gets to travel around the world. Her husband and her are passionatly inlove with one another, however Franklin prefers her at home.

  • Word count: 958
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Media Studies
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In this movie Wall-E people have become so dependent on technology that its almost an addiction

Wall-E In this movie Wall-E people have become so dependent on technology that it’s almost an addiction for us. People have become too dependent on it to live. It might be good for certain things but eventually it made our society for the worse. I can’t even imagine living a day without my cell phone and laptop, which I am quite sad to admit. It’s almost unimaginable for me and for you isn’t it? This is because technology is isolating people from the rest of the world. In Wall-E, humans have destroyed the planet due to their lack of care for the environment. They then forced themselves into living in space on a ship called the Axiom because the Earth is inhabitable. The theme how dependent humans are revealed through settings of this movie. All the people in Axiom are consumed by technology. It tells you what to do and when to do and even how to do. People are waited on by the robots, sitting on their chairs, so that they don’t even have to walk or get up from their chairs at all. They are on their screen for 24 hours a day 7 days a week. Their screen block themselves from the outside world and recognizing what is going on in Axiom. They are exposed to their technology too much that they barely had any contacts with the people in their real life. When John and Mary, who are passengers on the Axiom, they first meet each other by accident which was like a magical

  • Word count: 613
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Media Studies
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Pleasantville is a fantasy comedy-drama film written, produced and directed by Gary Ross

Shannon O’BrienAuchmuty High School “Pleasantville” is a fantasy comedy-drama film written, produced and directed by Gary Ross. Two teenagers find themselves in a 1950’s programme where their influence begins to change that complacent world. The key elements of the plot are the turning point and climax. The turning point is when the fire occurs, this occurs when Betty learns about sex. This affects Pleasantville as they have never seen anything like that before. Also the fireman because they did not know what fire was and did not know what to do when it came to putting it out. The climax of the film is when everyone changes to colour towards the end. This happens when David and Mr Johnston are not given lawyers to keep the court ‘pleasant.’ That way the mayor gets the decision he wants. The courtroom is segregated and the grey scaled people are separated from those in colour. This stops those in colour influencing or infecting others. The Mayor changes colour because he is angry that David suggests the women could work and the men stay at home and do housework. This changed the colour of him as this made him express his emotion and expressing emotion is the key thing that changes the people of Pleasantville from black and white to colour. Colour is introduced to Pleasantville in many different ways. As the changes start to unfold Jennifer introduces the first

  • Word count: 871
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Media Studies
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The Italian Job

A team of high-class thieves avenge their mentor's death -- with the help of his own daughter -- in this big-budget remake of the 1969 British caper classic. The Italian Job stars Mark Wahlberg as Charlie, the mastermind of a daring Venice heist overseen by John (Donald Sutherland), a lifelong criminal who plans to retire from the fold with the earnings from his most recent take. Basking in the glow of a job well done at a secluded retreat in the Alps, the thieves -- including the aptly-named Handsome Rob (Jason Statham), tech-geek Lyle (Seth Green), and hearing-impaired quipster Left Ear (Mos Def) -- are ruthlessly double-crossed by one of their own, the taciturn, calculating Steve Frezelli (Edward Norton). Time passes and each member of the group finds himself pursuing other opportunities in the States, until Charlie rallies them together for a revenge-motivated scheme designed to bilk Steve of all his misbegotten earnings. In order to cinch the deal, he even enlists John's reluctant safecracking-prodigy daughter, Stella (Charlize Theron), for an elaborate, incognito Los Angeles heist. But the paranoid Steve proves himself to be one step ahead of them at just about every turn, and Charlie finds that he'll have to make some daring last-minute changes to their plan if the team is to succeed. The Italian Job marked director F. Gary Gray's second 2003 release after the Vin

  • Word count: 792
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Media Studies
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The Camera Never Lies

Media Studies Essay: "The Camera Never Lies" It is usually thought that photographs are a little slice of the real world. Traditionally, they have played the rule of adding realism to written text. The text becomes a commentary of the frozen shot of real life encapsulated in the photograph. However it could be argued that this is not the case. There are several aspects of the photographic image, which make it less than real. These aspects all have different ways of showing that camera's aren't always correctly right. Even simple pictures can represent a number of qualities. It is possible to understand a number of different meanings from one picture, this is called decoding. For instance visual images can be false by editing and cropping detail out of the photographs/pictures. This process changes the frame and can sometimes exclude main or minor parts of the picture. These missing images occasionally can back up the authors article and help the audience understand the meaning. Cropping occurs in the media to suit the audience and to express the opinions of the writer. We can also argue photograph's can distort the truth by the selection of the picture. The illustration always is chosen for a particular event or story, but the final image is selected from a wide range of material. This allows the author flexibility, in choosing the correct image for his motive

  • Word count: 1767
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Media Studies
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