Far and Away Analysis Any sane person would question the intrigue of a movie where potatoes play a huge part; however, director Ron Howard does an exceptional job at making Far and Away, a movie set in the late 1800s Irish potato famine, captivating. Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman played convincing roles as Joseph and Shannon, Irish immigrants to the United States. I thought this film was very well done. It was interesting and, aside from some minor inaccuracies, faithful to the history of its setting. The film begins with Joseph, an Irish farmer, being removed from his land because he cannot pay rent. While mourning the death of his father he seeks revenge on the landlord who took his family’s land. This is where he runs into Shannon, a privileged
girl who wishes to escape the confines of her parents old-fashioned views. The pair leave Ireland for the United States where upon arrival they find the conditions to be rough. They live together for some time before being separated in the city, after which both travel to the Oklahoma territory unbeknownst to the other. Here they are miraculously reunited and profess their love, staking a claim on land for them to farm together. I thought it was a good movie. The end was a bit cliché, but it did not take away from the quality of the movie as a whole.
The main protagonist of the film, Scotty Smalls, is introduced as a straight-A, friendless young boy who has just moved into a new neighborhood in new state. While
The film begins in 1972 in Uganda. It centers around an Indian family that is being forced out of their home by General Idi Amin, the new regime. This happens because Jay (the father of the main character, Mina) gives an interview with BBC in which he badmouths the General. Amin does not take to this too lightly and expedites the removal of all “Asians” from Uganda. Jay and his family, along with others are exiled to London. Eighteen years pass by and the film refocuses on Jay, his family and their lives in Greenwood, Mississippi. Mina is now twenty-four years old and works at a motel to help support her family. Her mother, Kinnu, owns a liquor store and her father, Jay, spends a majority of his time time writing to the Ugandan government about suing them in order to regain his lost property.
This is an immigration movie geared towards kids to show and teach them about immigration to America. It shows them the reasons they (the Mousekewitz) left their homeland Russia to come to America. In their case it was to escape the Czarist rule of the cats, parallel to most immigrants who escaped their land due to religious and political persecution. Once aboard the ship to America, it showed the long and unpleasant trip to New York Harbor, where in this movie, Fievel gets separated from his family to inclimate weather. Once they arrive in New York Harbor, it shows children the happiness immigrants got when they saw the statue of liberty and the process through Ellis Island to become a citizen of America. The rest of the movie takes place in America where it shows “political machines”, such as Warren T. Rat, who really is a cat but takes advantage of new immigrants by dressing as a mouse and receiving the mice’s trust. With trust came their money and broken promises, just as “political machines” really did back then. The movie shows the immigrants hardships and poor living conditions in America with tenement housing and unsanitary conditions.
The movie starts with a slow shot of a gas station. A car drives up, and the cashier working there is shoved in the store as three gunshots ring out. It then goes to a shot of Rico and Joe in a diner talking about a successful gangster named Pete Montana. They decide to move to the city. There, Rico wants to be like Pete, and Joe wants find a girl he loves and be a dancer after his time with the gang. Rico doesn’t like this idea of Joe’s and dismisses it saying tit wasn’t important.
"First Confession" is the story of how Jackie, a seven year old boy, makes his first confession before his first communion. The story takes place in Ireland at the beginning of the 20th century and is based on O'Connor's own childhood. It is interesting to see how two opposite characters, Mrs. Ryan and the priest, can influence so much the kid's thoughts: Mrs. Ryan instills him fear while the priest helps him to overcome this fear.
On one side, there is Kathy Nicolo and Sheriff Lester Burdon who want the house from which Kathy was evicted. It previously belonged to Kathy’s father and she is reluctant to relinquish possession of it. Then there is the Behranis, a Persian family who was forced to flee to America in fear of their lives. They want the house because it symbolizes their rise from poverty (they had to leave everything behind and were quite poor when they arrived in the United States) back to affluence which, to this family, will help to restore their family’s dignity, lost when thrust into poverty. The story centers on gaining possession of the house. Unknowingly, all of these characters are doomed to tragedy by their inability to understand each other, hurtling down an explosive collision course.
Plot: Ignatius waited for Mrs. Reilly outside the department store. A policeman attempted to apprehend Ignatius; a mob ensued with the result of an old man being arrested for calling the policeman a communist. Mrs. Reilly and Ignatius escape to a local bar in which the bartender treats them with a lack of respect as well as eavesdrops on their conversation about Ignatius’ trip to Baton Rouge.
The film reflects the class difference from beginning through the end, especially between Annie and Helen. Annie is a single woman in her late 30s without saving or boyfriend. She had a terrible failure in her bakery shop, which leads her to work as a sale clerk in a jewelry store. When Annie arrived Lillian’s engagement party,
The movie revolves around a 1632 French missionary, Father LaForgue (Lothaire Bluteau) or Black Robe as the Indians referred to him. He traveled to North America to attempt to “save the savages on the new land”. His mission leads him to a Canadian settlement and an Algonquin tribe. There he is first introduced into the Indian religion, culture, and practices. This is also where his first major shock occurs, when he encounters a Frenchman, Daniel (Aden Young), having sex with the Algonquin chief's daughter, Annuka(Sandrine Holt). Shortly after, Father LaForgue decides to accompany a small group of Algonquin Indians on a...
The movie starts with the story of Rubin Carter and his fight for the middleweight championship. He lost the match in a rigged bout to a weaker opponent. Although, Rubin dominated the ring, he lost the title. The fight foreshadows the racial discrimination that will be played throughout the movie. Later in the movie in the Lafayette Grill two African-American males of middle build murdered three people at the all white establishment. Rubin Carter and John Artis were accused of being those two men. Carter and Artis went to prison for three life sentences. The future looks slim for Carter, however, a pivotal change comes when Lezra Martin discovers Carter's book.
It is about love, and it is about dreams. The main theme of the movie is the boxing career of Maggie Fitzgerald (played by Hilary Swank) - a 30-year old waitress who lives alone and barely gets by. However, she is strongly determined to become a professional boxer and this is why she seeks the help of Frankie Dunn (played by Clint Eastwood), a boxing trainer and an owner of a gym. Initially, Frankie is unwilling to train her because she is female and too old to have any chance of achieving significant accomplishments in professional boxing. However, Frankie’s friend and associate Eddie Dupris (played by Morgan Freeman), really believes in Maggie and lets her train in a corner of the gym.
The film centers on Lester Burnham, who lives a middle class life with his wife and daughter, and he begins experiencing a sort of breaking point in his life where he then decides to give up his normal suburban husband lifestyle and responsibilities he would typically adhere to. He quits his job and reinvents himself to be seen as more care-free and basically acts as a teenager would, which ends up disrupting
The struggle takes place in the north Dublin street where an unnamed boy lives. He thinks about the people who died in his house before they moved in. He falls in love with the mangan’s sister. Most of the time he always stays in front of the house just to see her leaving ,the house and then he starts to walk behind her. “At last she spoke to me. When she addressed the first words to me, I was so confused that I did not know what to answer” (Joyce 28). At last they start to take a Little, but at the same time she was in his thinking every moment. The story teller distraction is so keen that he fears that he will never get to talk to her and express that he likes her he did not know what to answer if she asks him to talk her to the event. One day Mangan’s sister asked the unnamed boy if he is planning to go to Araby since she find out that she cannot attend, so he promises him that he will buy her a gift so she can go. “My uncle said he was very sorry he had forgotten. He said he believed in the old saying: ‘All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.” (Joyce 31). On the day of the event, the narrator tells his uncle that he is going out, so that means he needs money too. The story teller waited for his drunk uncle all day
The setting of the story plays a very important role. The story takes place in the winter, traditionally considered to be a time of darkness and nature’s slumber. The location is Dublin, under English rule at the time the story takes place. In his opening sentence, Joyce offers a view of North Richmond Street, described as a “blind” street. The symbolism of the “dead-end” street seems purposeful, and is quite effective, particularly as the story progresses. The description of the house the protagonist lives in provides the reader with the information that the family’s finances are lower-middle-class. This element plays an important part, as conflicts are introduced.
Focusing primarily on two different families; that of a cleaner who works for the landlord cleaning up after the alarming amount of tenants commiting suicide and his physically handicap sister that he cares for and two brothers who watch over the tenants under the instructions of their grandmother, who also orchestrates a spiritual cult that is used to get more money from the tenants. The lives of these two families begin to intertwine due to growing resentment because of the cleaners work and lack of play and an odd romance between one of the brothers and the