High Plains Drifter Essays

  • My Favorite Western Movie

    769 Words  | 2 Pages

    The High Plains Drifter by Clint Eastwood is my favorite western. The movie is very interesting. It has a lot of twist and turns that the viewers don’t see coming. I thought this was a great movie. It kept me on my seat and very interested. Clint Eastwood is an amazing director and actor. The way the scenes were shot and the sound effects for that time were great. Throughout the movie I noticed that there were a lot of messages. This was a movie that made me think all the way through. During movies

  • Wild West

    1297 Words  | 3 Pages

    land on the plains from the Rail Company. The rail road company had been granted great tracks of land by the United States government on both sides of the railroad and was later sold to settlers. The Native Americans suffered from this flow of people from the east and this would change their lives forever. There were many struggles and the quest to just stay alive is why today we call it the “Wild West”. Especially when a good number of them were dishonest scoundrels or just drifters and adventurers

  • Film Noir: A Style Spanning Genres

    1014 Words  | 3 Pages

    The classification and cataloging of items seem to fulfill a basic need in human beings, whether it is vegetable, mineral or animal. It seems that this basic need to analyze and categorize items applies also to objets d’art, including film – and the recognition or dismissal of film noir as a genre has been argued since the term was coined. While the term itself is valid, film noir as a genre is a misnomer. More properly, film noir should be considered a style unto itself, but definitively not

  • Authenticity in Northanger Abbey

    1529 Words  | 4 Pages

    Northanger Abbey:  Authenticity In what is for Jane Austen an uncharacteristically direct intervention, the narrator of Northanger Abbey remarks near the end: "The anxiety, which in the state of their attachment must be the portion of Henry and Catherine, and of all who loved either, as to its final event, can hardly extend, I fear, to the bosom of my readers, who will see in the tell-tale compression of the pages before them, that we are all hastening together to perfect felicity." As far

  • Corn: Its Vital Role in the World

    1385 Words  | 3 Pages

    of the corn produced is exported and corn grown for grain accounts for almost one quarter of the harvested crop acres in this country (National Corn Grower's Associatio... ... middle of paper ... ...ther. The Native Americans held corn up to a high standard – higher than any country does today. To the Natives, corn was a gift of life in essence. They learned ways to grow the corn the best way possible while not harming the environment around them as they were one with nature. In conclusion, corn

  • Western Movies Since 1960

    2808 Words  | 6 Pages

    A NOT-SO-ACCURATE prophet once wrote, "As recently as 1972, there were a tremendous number of quality Westerns being made . . . and since there seems to be a ten-year cycle in Western movie making, I'd say we'll see more in about 1982." 1 In 1982 only two Westerns were released, and neither was exactly a major success. Barbarosa, starring Willie Nelson, drew some respectable reviews–and some very damaging ones–but nobody went to see the film. The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez appeared first on PBS television

  • The Power of Horace McCoy’s They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?

    2676 Words  | 6 Pages

    filmic Noir, the very texts that spawned this filmic (r)evolution have been largely dismissed as predictable ‘junk’ for the plebian masses, unspectacular in their normalcy as standard Modernist works. So I wonder: what is it that makes these texts so plain and ordinary, and so Modernist that they require no further attention? Furthermore, in aligning these texts with one particular school (‘Modernism’), are we not limiting their potential to convey a marked unique or progressive ideology? These questions

  • Sexual Abuse In the Catholic Church

    3983 Words  | 8 Pages

    The Catholic Church is right now struggling with a very serious and grave scandal, Sexual Abuse of catholic priests and Paedophilia. Within the last year the Catholic Church has had to dispense over 100 million dollars in sexual abuse settlements*** (find source). However, the crisis became mainstream when two Catholic priests in Boston were accused of abusing over 100 boys and young men. The church worldwide has felt repercussions from this scandal. In fact, it even resulted in the call of all American

  • Comparing Life Of Pi And Hamlet

    4990 Words  | 10 Pages

    Introduction: General statements: The level of consciousness of humanity can best be divided into two components, the enlightened and the unenlightened, those who are enlightened understand how to cease suffering and therefore end it to find bliss. The unenlightened do not comprehend how to can escape misery and are therefore doomed to frustration. The clarification on a new age of awareness is apparent in Shakespeare’s heart-rending Hamlet and similarly with Yann Martel courageous narrative