Dark City Essays

  • Characters of Dark City

    781 Words  | 2 Pages

    Characters of Dark City I did my book report on Dark City by Frank Lauria.  The main characters in the book were John Murdoch, Mr. Hand, and Mr. Book.  Since Murdoch woke up in the icy bathtub in a strange room, he has been suspicious of everything. He is wanted for a series of brutal murders which he can’t remember committing.  He later finds out that he posses a power called tuning, which allows you to stop time and alter peoples perceptions.  Sort of like brain manipulation.  He soon finds

  • A Tale Of Two Cities and The Dark Knight Rises

    572 Words  | 2 Pages

    of times.”(book). In the book A Tale Of Two Cities innocents were killed, abused and imprisoned. This book had a hero and a bad guy. The hero was Sydney Carton and the bad people were probably the revolutionaries, Madame Defarge and Monsieur Defarge. In the movie The Dark Knight Rises innocents, were also killed but in several different ways. In this movie, the bad guy was Bane and his accomplices, and the hero was Batman. In the book A Tale Of Two Cities the ways that they would kill people were

  • Dark City Dreams

    2205 Words  | 5 Pages

    Dark City is a neo-noir science fiction film with a profound and philosophical narrative behind it. “Embodying as it does questions of memory, perception, ambiguous reality and the existence of boundaries, ‘Dark City’ comes into the category of an art film. However, with its references to horror films and its use of high tech visual spectacle, the film is embedded in a diverse cinematic culture.” (“Dark, Section II). The similarities with Plato’s allegory to the cave are vast. Philosophical topics

  • What is the "real" reality

    1376 Words  | 3 Pages

    and ourselves. Works including Dark City (1998) and The Matrix (1999) have both pushed their audiences to think what is reality? Who am I and what does it mean to be human? While none of these works nor myself are so bold as to claim to have all the answers, the discussion is still worth delving into. Through an analysis of each film's theme of reality maybe we can learn something about what is real or something about ourselves and our humanity. Alex Proyas' Dark City dives headlong into these inquiries

  • Special Effects in Dark City

    954 Words  | 2 Pages

    Dark City, directed by Alex Proya, is a sci-fi thriller full of visually extravagant and atmospheric special effects. The film illustrates a metropolis where its human inhabitants are always engulfed in the nightlife darkness because the sun does not exist. The city is controlled by extraterrestrials known as the Strangers, who disguise themselves as humans and are devoted to researching the human race via manipulation and experimentation. Dark City has a shadowy tone and comic book feel, which is

  • Skepticism in the Movie, Dark City

    2134 Words  | 5 Pages

    Skepticism Skepticism is one of the major themes in the movie Dark City. Among the skeptical thoughts observed, four of them are especially significant. They include Allegory of the Cave, Descartes’ evil genius argument, omphalos hypothesis and simulation hypothesis. 1. Allegory of the Cave Dark City is a perfect illustration of the Allegory of the Cave, which is presented by Plato in the form of dialogues between Socrates and Glaucon. By comparing humans to prisoners in a cave, Plato argues that

  • Comparing The Allegory In The Matrix, Dark City

    1179 Words  | 3 Pages

    front of a fire behind them, the sounds of the people talking echo off the shadowed wall, pensioners falsely believe these sounds come from the shadows and mistake appearance for reality. This allegory have inspired lots of film such as The Matrix, Dark City. Putting the aspect of philosophy aside, peoples found that there are such striking similarities between what happened in the allegory and the features of film. The image projected

  • Light and Dark in Heart of Darkness

    1182 Words  | 3 Pages

    Light and Dark in Heart of Darkness The brightest of lights can obscure vision while darkness can contain truths: one must not be distracted by the sheen of light, which conceals the deeper reality present in darkness. Joseph Conrad's novel Heart of Darkness illustrates this idea with the use of several symbols. White Europeans are used as symbols of self-deception, and objects with an alabaster quality are symbols of barriers to inner truth. Black is the foil of white; it represents the

  • Men Will Rise From The Dark Depth Of Prejudice To The Majestic Heights

    541 Words  | 2 Pages

    Men Will Rise From The Dark Depth Of Prejudice To The Majestic Heights Of Brotherhood Men will rise from the dark depths of prejudice... What is prejudice? The Websters dictionary defines it as “a biased opinion based on emotion rather than reason.” This is most certainly the case. Through out history groups of people of the same race, religion, color, etc. have had unspeakable acts committed against them by others who think with their “...emotions[s] rather than reason.” Because one is a different

  • Measure for Measure: The Dark Comedy

    837 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Dark Comedy of Measure for Measure Measure for Measure, the last of Shakespeare's great comedies, is also the darkest of his comedies, and represents his transition to tragic plays. This play differs from Shakespeare's other comedies, and is in many ways more akin to tragedy than to comedy. In setting, plot, and character development Measure for Measure has a tragic tone, however, because none of the main characters actually loses his life, this play is considered a comedy. Almost all of

  • Cinematic Techniques in Nabokov's Laughter in the Dark

    2221 Words  | 5 Pages

    In his novel Laughter in the Dark, Vladimir Nabokov employs cinematic techniques to tell the story of director Albinus and starlet Margot. Nabokov's use of imagery and techniques from the cinema is evident throughout the novel. However, his style is not that of a screenplay, as his polished prose is always infused with his trademark irony. Gavriel Moses notes that Nabokov is aware of the overwhelming presence and claim to truth of film images, but he also recognizes that formulaic films tend to displace

  • Light and Dark in Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness

    731 Words  | 2 Pages

    Light and Dark in Heart of Darkness Every story has a plot, but not every story has a deeper meaning. When viewed superficially, Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness is a tragic tale of the white man's journey into the African jungle. When we peel away the layers, however, a different journey is revealed - we venture into the soul of man, complete with the warts as well as the wonderful. Conrad uses this theme of light and darkness to contrast the civilized European world with the savage African

  • Comparing the Use of Light and Dark by Melville, Poe, and Hawthorne

    3134 Words  | 7 Pages

    Use of Darkness and Light by Melville, Poe, and Hawthorne Melville, Poe, and Hawthorne all tend to focus on the darker side of humanity in their writings. In order to allow their readers to better understand their opinions, they often resort to using symbolism. Many times, those symbols take the form of darkness and light appearing throughout the story at appropriate times. A reader might wonder how light functions in the stories, and what it urges the reader to consider. If we look carefully

  • Dark Overtones And Their Contrasts In My Antonia

    1304 Words  | 3 Pages

    Dark Overtones, and Their Contrasts in My Antonia In My Antonia by Willa Cather, there are many dark overtones that pervade the novel. It is through the use of symbolism and contrast these overtones are made real. The prairie is the predominant setting of the novel. It may be shaped, and it conforms to the desires of those working it. The prairie¹s loneliness, shown by the wide open spaces, is a brilliant way of revealing internal conflict by using a setting. Also, it brings out the characters true

  • Lisa Bright & Dark

    774 Words  | 2 Pages

    John Neufeld is the author of “Lisa Bright & Dark”. He lives and works in New York City these days. He was educated at Yale. His style of writing are usually touching stories. Finding information about John Neufeld is quite difficult since the Internet nor the book has provided any help whatsoever. Lisa Shilling is the main character of this book. She is just sixteen as she slowly loses her mind. Lisa is quite an example of teenager with problems which is why she’d be classified as a very real character

  • Clash of identity

    1059 Words  | 3 Pages

    childhood was largely influenced by his family, especially his mother, “Dark skin was for my mother the most important symbol of a life of oppressive labor and poverty.”(Rodriguez. 451), people who worked in fields and construction sites spent most of their time under the sun, causing their “complexion” to darken, so it was assumed that a person with dark skin was a menial laborer. Rodriguez’s mother would commonly point out his dark complexion by comparison with the poor and the black, at one time she

  • A Day In The Dark

    554 Words  | 2 Pages

    This passage was written by Elizabeth Bowen and is titled ‘A Day in the Dark’. It is a story told by a girl named Barbie. She tells a tale of when she was fifteen and visited the house of Miss Branderry to return a copy of Blackwood’s and to request to borrow, for her father, a thistle cutter. She also takes some roses to apologise for glass stain and thumbmarks on the cover of the magazine. The passage mainly focuses on Barbie and her view on the events. But the passage also looks into the relationships

  • Dark count or Dark Current is one of the most important CCD specifications,

    697 Words  | 2 Pages

    Dark count or Dark Current is one of the most important CCD specifications, along with resolution, quantum efficiency and noise figure. Dark count or Dark Current is one of the most important CCD specifications, along with resolution, quantum efficiency and noise figure. Dark current causes an output to occur without the previous introduction of an input. This is caused by the thermal generation and then diffusion of charge. This Dark Current is generated at different locations in the CCD

  • The Dark Side of Humanity Exposed in Robert Frost's Poetry

    993 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Dark Side of Humanity Exposed in Robert Frost's Poetry Robert Frost is often referred to as a poet of nature. Words and phrases such as fire and ice, flowers in bloom, apple orchards and rolling hills, are all important elements of Frost's work. These ‘benign' objects provide an alternative way to look at the world and are often used as metaphors to describe a darker view of nature and humans. In Frost's poetry, the depth is as important as the surface. The darker aspects of Frost's poetry

  • William Stafford's Traveling Through the Dark

    1187 Words  | 3 Pages

    Profound Meaning in William Stafford's Traveling Through the Dark The power of the poet is not only to convey an everyday scene into a literary portrait of words, but also to interweave this scene into an underlying theme. The only tool the poet has to wield is the word. Through a careful placement and selection of words, the poet can hopefully make his point clear, but not blatantly obvious. Common themes of poems are life, death, or the conflicting forces thereto. This theme could never possibly