Bruce Willis Essays

  • Bruce Willis

    1696 Words  | 4 Pages

    Bruce Willis Date of Birth: 19th March, 1955. Born at: Idar-Oberstein, West Germany. Height: 6’ Claim to fame: Pulp Fiction, Die Hard, and The Sixth Sense. Walter Bruce Willis better known as Bruce Willis is no doubt is one of the best-loved leading men actor of our times. Though mainly known as an action hero Bruce has got an amazing body of work. His biggest blockbuster was Die Hard (1988) which catapulted him straight in to the big leagues. He started his career from television working

  • Speech on Restricting Hollywood's Influence

    615 Words  | 2 Pages

    need to do is go to a movie theatre and sit in front of a big screen with a coke and popcorn. You’ll find characters such as Bruce Willis defusing a bomb with a cigarette hanging out of his mouth, or Arnold Schwarzenegger playing the role of a president’s fitness expert, posing on the cover magazines with a big cigar in his mouth. Is that cigarette going to help Bruce Willis in any way defuse the bomb? Is a cigar a symbol of success and fame in our society? Ladies and gentlemen this is obviously

  • There is no clean getaway

    561 Words  | 2 Pages

    the police at a bank called the Alamo. Which appeared to have gone very wrong, and then going back in time via a homemade interview made at the home of the host of Criminals at Large( An Americas Most Wanted type show). We first get to know Joe (Bruce Willis) and Terry (Billy Bob Thornton) breaking out of an Oregon State Prison with the aid of a borrowed cement truck crashing through the prison gates all on a whim. That leads to an impromptu bank robbery started with a highlighter. Then two unsuspecting

  • Surrogates

    1235 Words  | 3 Pages

    racism and crime throughout society. The many benefits of surrogate technology have led to its widespread use and acceptance, but some believe these benefits have come at the cost of our humanity. Surrogates (2009) follows FBI agent Tom Greer (Bruce Willis) as he investigates a murder; the first one in years. A young couple is attacked by a man who destroys their surrogates using a strange weapon. Greer and his partner, Peters (Radha Mitchell), seek out the victims' operators and are shocked to find

  • The Cult of Contemporary Celebrity

    1378 Words  | 3 Pages

    Celebrity: (noun) 1. A well known person. 2. Fame, being famous. No doubt every simian tribe of hunter-gatherers had their local celebrities: the woman who gave birth to quintuplets, the boy who swallowed a porcupine and survived, the man who wrestled with a tyrannosaurus and... well, he probably would have died, but celebrity status would have been applied posthumously. If, however, the man wrestling with a Tyrannosaurus was a modern Hollywood celebrity, not only would he have lived, he would

  • End User License Agreements: Bruce Willis

    846 Words  | 2 Pages

    1. In the Bruce Willis article, the main conflict arises because we typically think of physical assets under the “First Sale Doctrine” whereby we retain the right to “sell, display, or otherwise dispose of that particular copy.” Digital Content, on the other hand, is subject to “End User License Agreements” (EULAs) which specify that only the first purchaser may enjoy access to the copy and rights are not transferable. Using at least one ethical theory, do you think it is morally defensible that

  • Bruce Willis Directing Techniques In Death Becomes Her

    1003 Words  | 3 Pages

    is their actions that mean it all. Zemeckis' directing techniques stand out in this film by allowing the reader to make a joke of a universal issue. The acting in this film is extraordinary. Bruce Willis plays a character that normally he would never play, which is what makes this film so unique. Willis' wonderful acting can be seen

  • The Sixth Sense

    590 Words  | 2 Pages

    helpless mother and distrustful of his peers in school, Cole soon encounters child psychologist Dr. Malcolm Crow (Bruce Willis), who is led by obsessive ambitions, although weakened by the thought of his neglected wife. Still, Malcolm represents the only hope for dissolving the horror and restoring sanity. The main character would have to be Dr. Malcolm Crow played by Bruce Willis. Early on in the story is attacked by a former patient. The experience leaves him traumatized, and lost. Something

  • sin city

    631 Words  | 2 Pages

    Hartnett). But Hartnett plays only a small role in the film. The main three tales are outlandishly awesome. After Hartnett’s piece, the movie goes into the story of a policeman (Bruce Willis) who saves a little girl from a child molester, only to have it ruin the rest of his life. He is shot many times and left for dead. Willis’ story is cut off, leaving you hungry to know how it ends. Then the most savage character I have ever seen in a movie is introduced. His name is simply Marv (Mickey Rourke). He

  • Armageddon

    4497 Words  | 9 Pages

    Armageddon In 1998, Touchstone Pictures released Armaggedon, the most recent in a premillenial barrage of films focused on the end of the world. The film included a trendy Hollywood cast, headlined by Bruce Willis, Billy Bob Thornton, and Ben Affleck, and was directed by Michael Bay, whose previous film credits included the 1996 top ten hit, The Rock. Although Armageddon received nods from the Academy of Motion Pictures for Best Effects (Sound Effects Editing and Visual Effects), Best Music

  • Pulp Fiction

    1383 Words  | 3 Pages

    his beautiful wife Mia (Uma Thurman). After a surprisingly pleasant evening of dinner and dancing, Vincent must revive Mia after her abusive episode with heroin. The second adventure involves Wallace and a washed-up boxer, Butch, portrayed by Bruce Willis. Wallace gives Butch a substantial amount of money to throw a fight. After receiving the cash Butch decides to double-cross a double-crosser. The final episode revolves around Vincent's accidental murder of a young black in the back seat of

  • Business Law

    2682 Words  | 6 Pages

    Case study: David Jones Ltd v Willis (1934) 52 CLR pages 110 till 133. This case has created controversy among the Courts and such justices as Rich, Starke and Dixon. They all have different but similar decisions, relating to The Sales of Goods Act 1923(C¡¦th). Summary This case deals with the defendant David Jones Ltd versus Willis the plaintiff, on the appeal from the supreme court of New South Wales. The case is related to The Sales of Goods Act 1923(C¡¦th). In the case the plaintiff purchased

  • An Analysis of the Television Sitcom, Different Strokes

    504 Words  | 2 Pages

    Sitcom, Different Strokes Different Strokes a comedy sitcom, first aired in 1978, and lasted until 1986. This sitcom consisted of a widowed Manhattan millionaire, Phillip Drummond , who adopted two orphaned brothers. Arnold who was 8 years old and Willis who was 12. The boys' mother was Drummonds housekeeper who became very ill, so Drummond made a promise to her that he would take care of her two sons after she passed away. Drummond treated the two boys like his own. He also lived with his daughter

  • The Runaway Brain by Christopher Willis

    1001 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Runaway Brain by Christopher Willis Christopher Wills has written a fascinating chronicle of human evolution in a style that will keep the reader glued to the book to find out what happened next. The Runaway Brain is organized into four sections. First Wills addresses The Dilemmas, the many problems that students of evolution encounter mainly from public perception of the subject and from the many prejudices of those involved with the work. The question of where our species first appeared

  • Why Must We Dream in Metaphors?

    1742 Words  | 4 Pages

    Why Must We Dream in Metaphors? The poet Willis Barnstone begins a poem with this line: "Why must I always see the death in things?" My poem would begin, "Why must I always see the metaphor in things?" If I have any intellectual strength it is in seeing connections between unlikely ideas, theories, and concepts. I sit in classes, in front of the television, in front of books and my brain constantly tries to see how what I donít understand relates to, is like, compares to things I already know

  • Coming of Age in Mississippi

    642 Words  | 2 Pages

    Chicago, whistled at a white girl, and then a group of white men murdered him. This bothered Ann, and she didn’t work or sleep for days. When Samuel O’Quinn, a black empowerment activist and NAACP member tried to organize a meeting, the Principle Willis, who is an Uncle Tom, tattled on him. Samuel was shot by a mob of white men. The first experience of a civil rights movement was when she was attending Natchez College in Mississippi. The lunch lady served food with maggots in it. The cook, Miss Harris

  • Lavender

    633 Words  | 2 Pages

    is not explained in Lavender, I’m guessing it is in an earlier tale). I wonder if he still would have helped EttaMae find Willis if he hadn’t felt obligated to because of his part in her husband’s (Mouse) death, and because of his discovery of Bonnie’s alleged infidelity. My guess is probably not since Easy seems to be rather self absorbed (but to be fair, who isn’t?) Willis is an amusing character in that I can relate to him easily. I too love playing music, and I’ve fallen for the wrong kind of

  • Abortion: A Pro-life Argument

    1537 Words  | 4 Pages

    denied through childbearing. The first minor claim made by Willis in support of abortion is that abortion is an issue of feminism, not of human life. She wants people to think women are forgotten in the debate about abortion. She states that “women and their bodies are merely the stage on which the drama of fetal life and death takes place” (Willis, 2005, p. 514). A woman and her unborn child are both considered more worthy than Willis is making them sound, which is the reason abortion is an issue

  • Definitions of Self in Community in Morrison's Sula and Song of Solomon

    6947 Words  | 14 Pages

    novels the as tension to define both individual and community surfaces. From the opening lines of Sula which foreshadows me ultimate deem of me community, Morrison calls attention to me sense of community in the Bottom. In "Eruptions of Funk. Susan Willis says, "The opening line from Sula might as well have been me novel's conclusion, so complete is the destructioni it describes. This is the community Morrison is writing to reclaim" (315)... ... middle of paper ... ... Pessoni, Michele. “‘She

  • History Of The Willis Tower

    1686 Words  | 4 Pages

    I. Introduction The Willis Tower (originally known as the Sears Tower) was for years the tallest buildi ng in the world. The original planning and design did not envision this record as a goal to be achieved or as a parameter to guide design. Fazlur Khan’s design for Sears Roebuck not only met the client’s goal of consolidating its Chicago-area employees into one central location while allowing for anticipated company growth, but did so with an innovative and cost-saving bundled-tube structural