BAFTA Award for Best Film Essays

  • A Mysterious Girl Appears

    854 Words  | 2 Pages

    The girl with an innocent heart traverses through an alley of darkness, of doors, and of chaos leading to the unknown. There, guided by the lost, provided the path to where the girl deemed she need to be. The girl entered the door, into a world once was promised for her to visit. Though, the girl was not happy, since she was all by herself; even less now that the time she will spend there remains in uncertainty.

  • Examples Of Escapism In The Purple Rose Of Cairo

    892 Words  | 2 Pages

    A Rose, A Rouse, A Republic Philosophy, like the film The Purple Rose of Cairo, is eludes the confines of black and white; there are rarely clear answers to the simple questions that man has been asking himself since the times of Plato, the ancient Greek philosopher. In The Purple Rose of Cairo, the fictitious black and white Tom Baxter jumps off the big screen and into the real world of color, carrying with him endless connections to the philosophy of Plato as he is affronted with criticism from

  • Visual Imagery in The English Patient, by Michael Ondaatje

    604 Words  | 2 Pages

    Every writer uses a different set of methods, known as the narrative mode, to portray the plot to the audience for individual reasons. In the first section of “The English Patient”, Michael Ondaatje uses his narrative mode in order to more effectively convey his message in an appealing way. One way he does this is by presenting the reader with visual images and vivid description that trigger their imagination. His use of visual imagery, description, and pronouns to present the settings, and to

  • The Elephant Song Themes

    591 Words  | 2 Pages

    is slowly poisoning our world, a reminder to the reader to remain strong and determined to battle this. The novel begins in Zimbabwe, a small country in Africa. Daniel Armstrong, a famous television naturalist has travelled to the Chiwewe Camp to film a cruel but necessary process, the culling of the beautiful Elephants. Armstrong quickly becomes tangled in a web of lies and deception as he soon realises that the ivory warehouse at the camp has been robbed and his long time friend, Johnny Nzou and

  • Madness and Insanity in Shakespeare's Hamlet - Insanity and Hamlet

    583 Words  | 2 Pages

    Hamlet and Insanity The following five paragraphs will cover the point of: What is insainity? How does Hamlet tie in with insainity? What or who is the cause of insainity? While I try to overcome these questions to tackle the true answers, you will be thinking and deciding for yourself if Hamlet is "insane" or not. What does insainity? The Webster's New World Dictionary--Third College Edition defines it as "mentally ill or deranged; demented; mad; senseless." My defintion is not as cruel

  • Essay On The Four Tenets Of The Warrior Ethos

    714 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Four Tenets of the Warrior Ethos is a set of code by which every person whether they are civilian or serving this country should live by. In the other hand, the Warrior Ethos is a way of life that applies to the professional and personal lives as well. They show who we are and who we aspire to become. The Army has worked to instill the Warrior Ethos in all Soldiers by the way they train, live, and fight. Every Soldier that has entered Basic Training has been taught that the Warrior Ethos, ingrained

  • Meursault Investigation

    1017 Words  | 3 Pages

    anything. In fact, Meursault made a statement about the death of his mother saying that, “at one time or another, all normal people have wished their loved ones were dead" (65). At this point in the story, I think that Meursault may not have had the best family dynamic. He does not speak of anyone else but Maman, and mentions a father that he does not know. So, he may not feel like he belongs or does not know how to. He also explains that, “it was one of Maman’s ideas, and she often repeated it, that

  • Analysis Of Slice Of Life

    956 Words  | 2 Pages

    spite of his age and ill health. The film won the Golden Lion at Venice and has a 98% critics rating on rottentomatoes.com. Rourke receive a BAFTA and a Golden Globe as well as Academy nomination for Best

  • Gladiator, by Ridley Scott

    1114 Words  | 3 Pages

    for his taste of sweet, sweet revenge? When breaking films into this type of category, one film that stands out among the rest has to be Gladiator. Gladiator can be argued as one of the greatest action movies of all time, and for good reasons. The soundtrack, dialogue, and characters have no equal in the revenge action category of film, and can be considered tops of pure action films. Gladiator is a perfectly well rounded movie that adds the best of all worlds to create the masterpiece seen today.

  • Martin Scorsese's Film, Taxi Driver

    2210 Words  | 5 Pages

    taxi-driver at night; many of his customers represent the people from the lowest class of society: prostitutes, adulterous husbands and wenchers. Since Travis has promised the cab company that he will drive anywhere, at anytime, his likelihood of seeing the best of human nature is fairly slim. So, he tries to create an extra-occupational life for himself. He befriends Betsy, a beautiful girl working at a Senator's campaign office. Unluckily, with on possession of the slightest amount of social skills, Travis

  • Examples Of Existentialism In Blade Runner

    1163 Words  | 3 Pages

    To Be Or Not to Be... 5 Existentialist Films Existentialism is a philosophy concerned with finding oneself and the meaning of life through free will, choice and personal responsibility. The belief is that individuals want to know who they are, why do they exist, the reality and / or illusion of life and death, the presence (or absence) of God, etc. And that we make choices based on notions, mindsets and experiences. These choices are thus based on perceived truths that need not be objectively true

  • Jesse Coen Brothers Film Analysis

    821 Words  | 2 Pages

    Joel David Coen and Ethan Jesse Coen, known informally as the Coen Brothers, are American film directors, screenwriters, producers, and editors. They have directed over 15 films together that are often characterized as being "genre-bending", having covered many genres, including comedy, crime, the Western, horror, thriller, gangster, drama, romance, adventure and features of neo-noir. Their films include Blood Simple, Raising Arizona, Miller's Crossing, Barton Fink, Fargo, The Big Lebowski, O Brother

  • Star Wars: The Force Awakens

    1337 Words  | 3 Pages

    created by John Williams would be a difficult task indeed. The film music of Star Wars has enchanted both young and old viewers for decades and the majestic orchestral compositions are crucial elements of the franchise’s vast popularity. The score of the first movie, Star Wars: A New Hope (1977), not only won an Academy Award for Original Score, but also a Golden Globe for Best Original Score, and a BAFTA for Best Film Music, among other awards. More than thirty years later, Star Wars: The Force Awakens

  • What Is The Difference Between The Crucible Play And Movie

    600 Words  | 2 Pages

    out of the four awards “The Crucible” was given. She has won a Critics Choice Award and a SEFCA Award for “Best Supporting Actress” (IMDb 1). She was also given an Empire award in 1998 for “Best Actress” (IMDb 1). Paul Scofield has won an award for “Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role” from BAFTA Film Awards in 1997. All of

  • The Bridge on the River Kwai

    541 Words  | 2 Pages

    The film I have chosen for my 1950’s film analysis is The Bridge on the River Kwai. Directed by David Lean, The Bridge on the River Kwai follows a battalion of British soldiers who find themselves trapped in a Japanese POW camp during WWII in 1943. The British soldieries are led by Colonel Nicholson (Alec Guinness) who is ordered by the commandant of the POW camp, Colonel Saito (Sessue Hayakawa), to build a railroad bridge over the Burmese river Kwai. Colonel Nicholson refuses to help build the bridge

  • Ray Review

    875 Words  | 2 Pages

    the greatest African-American artists of all time. He left a legacy of hits and Grammy awards, but the musicians he influenced were very diverse in genre as the music he wrote, arranged, performed, and recorded. Ray Charles died at the age of 73 on June 10, 2004 from acute liver disease. Months after his death on October 29, 2004 the movie Ray was released to the U.S on a budget of forty million dollars. The film went on to become a box-office hit, earning over $100 million dollars with an additional

  • Catherine Hepburn Research Paper

    603 Words  | 2 Pages

    “RKO’s Bill of Divorcement in (1932), the first of a string of hits, including Morning Glory (1933), for which she won an Oscar for Best Actress, and Little Women (1933).” (Peterson 2013) Hepburn has received four Academy Awards for Best Actress (1982, 1969, 1968, 1934), Kennedy Center Honors (1990), Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award (1979), BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role (1983) (Wikipedia). It took Hepburn 34 years to win another Academy

  • Differences And Similarities Between The Great Gatsby 1974 And 2013

    1173 Words  | 3 Pages

    What makes these movies so different? The Great Gatsby 1974 version and The Great Gatsby 2013 version show the love Gatsby has for Daisy, but both movies show it in different ways which is seen through the scene selection, cinematography, music and awards. This essay will discuss in detail how these differences make the movies distinguishable. Some scenes from 1974 are not included in the 2013 one such as the hotel scene where Gatsby tells Tom about his affair with Daisy. Daisy runs out of the room

  • How To Write A Roman Holiday Essay

    636 Words  | 2 Pages

    a journalist, lasting only for a day. This one film you watch umpteen times, but you will never get enough of it. I bet you will fall in love with this Princess Anne (Audrey Hepburn). Love has many shades but with her, it is a sublime one. This was Audrey's first film, and how she sparkled. Petite, captivating, pensive, polite, gracious, charming, delightful, genial, courteous - one runs out of adjectives to describe Audrey Hepburn in this film. She is alternately majestic and naïve. Her sad

  • Sidney Poiter

    933 Words  | 2 Pages

    Sidney Poitier wasn’t the first great African-American actor, nor was he the first black actor to be nominated for an Academy Award. What he did do was break the color barrier and gain widespread acceptance by audiences of all races because of his acting abilities and on screen presence. Sidney Poitier was born in Miami in 1927 to Bahamian parents but was raised on Cat Island in the Bahamas. As a newborn, he weighed only three pounds. His father had a shoebox waiting to bury him in. he, of course