Hollywood, Los Angeles, California Essays

  • Personal Narrative: Hollywood-Los Angeles, California

    1681 Words  | 4 Pages

    Hollywood- Los Angeles, California Sometimes some places leave everlasting impressions on your mind, and you never forget the experienced that you have enjoyed there. I had that kind of experience. I visited Hollywood that has become a landmark of American culture. Hollywood is a range situated toward the west and northwest of downtown Los Angeles, California. All through history, Hollywood has been the home of film stars and motion picture studios. When you think about the focal point of the American

  • American Film and Television Industry

    887 Words  | 2 Pages

    Hollywood, a metonym for the American film and television industry is located in the West-northeast of Los Angeles Downtown. Due to its fame and cultural identity as the historical center of movie studios and stars, the word “Hollywood” stands an influential venue internationally. Many historic Hollywood theaters are used as venues to premiere major theatrical releases, and host the famous Academy Awards. It is a popular destination for nightlife and tourism, and home to the Walk of Fame. Except

  • Lavishing Escapade in Los Angeles

    768 Words  | 2 Pages

    Los Angeles Overview The home of Hollywood and star city of California, Tinsel Town Los Angeles need no introduction to the travellers that fond of movies. The bustling metropolis of North America offers a variety of attractions and delight of travelling to Europeans with its dazzling lifestyle, fabulous hip-hop culture, gentry that has been a trend-setter for youngsters from decades and a plethora of attractions giving the glimpse of shining and ravishing culture the city follows. Bump into the

  • Hollywood Film Analysis

    1918 Words  | 4 Pages

    of revenue) film industries. Hollywood is the main location of the United States film industry. However, four of the six largest film studios in the U.S. are owned by the companies that are located on the East Coast. Only The Walt Disney Company - which owns six other film-making companies (Walt Disney Pictures, Lucasfilm Limited, the Pixar Animation Studios, Hollywood Pictures, Touchstone Pictures and Marvel Studios) is located and fully based in Hollywood, California. Sony Pictures Entertainment

  • The Evolution and Cultural Influence of American Cinema

    2509 Words  | 6 Pages

    1, 2013, from http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/tokenism Tonn, T. (2008). Disney's Influence on Females Perception of Gender and Love (Doctoral dissertation, University of Wisconsin). Viruega, I. M. B. Re-presenting Asian Stereotypes in Hollywood Cinema: an Analysis of Race and Gender Representations in Memoirs of a Geisha. Weintrraub, R. Media Influence on Gender Inequality “Whoever controls the media, controls the mind”. (n.d.). Goodreads. Retrieved December 3, 2013, from http://www.goodreads

  • Grandfather's American Dream

    1174 Words  | 3 Pages

    the Hollywood Film industry, the Great Depression, The Theatre and the Acting career, all these historical experiences, mainly in the 1920’s and 1930’s had an impact on my grandfather’s life. This paper discusses his road to success and perseverance as he journeyed to live his American Dream. There are many cultural products that uphold the American way of life but the most famous of all being the American Dream. In the pursuit for the American Dream especially in the film industry, Hollywood known

  • Movie Industry: Cecil B. Demille

    2052 Words  | 5 Pages

    middle of paper ... ... 2004. Print. “Bullfight Scene from Carmen will be Unique.” Los Angeles Times. 9 July 1915: III4. Print. Higashi, Sumiko. Cecil B. DeMille and American Culture: The Silent Era. Berkeley: University Of California Press, 1994. Print. Marchetti, Gina. “‘They Worship Money and Prejudice’: The Inevitabilities of Class and the Uncertainties of Race in Son of the Gods.” Classic Hollywood, Classic Whiteness. Ed. Daniel Bernardi. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2001

  • Hollywood Movies Compared to Other Countries' Movies

    1284 Words  | 3 Pages

    Hollywood Movies Compared to Other Countries' Movies Despite the fact that Hollywood films are popular all over the world, many believe that foreign films are better. Critics’ dislike of Hollywood films’ is due to the straight-line plots of the films in which nothing is left unclear, unsettling or unexplained and every shot is justified by a link to strictest cause and effect. Hollywood films are often viewed as dulling the mind. In this country people generally view films for mere entertainment

  • Movie diary: Thelma and Louise

    1358 Words  | 3 Pages

    this story. Many of the first film elements that can be found in this movie work as an introduction to the two main characters of the story. These elements are meant to force the spectator- even one who had never heard speak of, or seen the two Hollywood stars shown on screen- to focus their attention on them. In the very first shot, the camera starts following and keeping the focus on a specific waitress as she is working in a busy restaurant. The spectator can hear music playing and the noise of

  • The "New Woman" in Cecil B. DeMille's "The Cheat"

    1565 Words  | 4 Pages

    Cecil B. DeMille is regarded by many to be the founder of Hollywood, given that his 1914 film, The Squaw Man, was the first important full-length motion picture made in Hollywood. As Joel W. Finler considers, the film "accelerated the trend toward establishing California as the new home of movie-making" . However, it is in his depiction of the `new woman' that the director is both celebrated and derided. In many of his films, DeMille illustrates the rise of consumer culture that had begun in the

  • The Representation of Minorities in American Cinema

    2438 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Representation of Minorities in American Cinema As the semester progressed and we continued learning how Latinos have been misrepresented through American cinema during the twentieth century, I began to wonder about my own heritage and how Jews were portrayed in films of the same era. I grew up learning about the various stereotypes that have been associated with Jews throughout history, but never have I explored the portrayals of Jews through film history in the United States. My curiosity

  • Hollywood: Promoting Stereotypes to Make Easy Money

    1841 Words  | 4 Pages

    Every week numerous Hollywood movies and rereleases open in theaters, video stores, and online movie distributors nationwide: heartwarming films such as The Blind Side; laughter inducing and children captivating classics like Aladdin; movies about overcoming struggles such as, Gattaca. All these new movies and classics alike hold a particular place in our hearts and in our lives. Maybe because of a similarity to our own lives or the main character embraces characteristics we hold dear. Whatever

  • The Evolvement of Chinese Stereotypes Representative in Hollywood Movies

    1806 Words  | 4 Pages

    traditional and beloved media, has been influential on people's life. We spend time in the cinema to be entertained, touched, scared and experience romantic love story and exotic places. As one of the most famous film industry base in the world, Hollywood, produces and sell their movie products all over the world. During the process of globalization, countries are about to understand others’ culture as well as to realize how one’s culture compares and contrasts with other. Media globalization stands

  • A Review of the Opening Sequence of Pretty Woman

    1419 Words  | 3 Pages

    My fair lady. The film was produced in 1990 and directed by Garry Marshall. It is set in the Hollywood hills and the rough Hollywood Boulevard. Richard Gere and Julia Roberts play the two main characters, Vivien Ward and Edward Lewis. Edward is a wealthy man who is respected and admired by others. Whereas Vivien is a lot poorer. Her only way of earning money is by her job as a prostitute in Hollywood Boulevard. In the film the music is very important. At the beginning it is set at a party

  • The Film Girl, Interrupted: Portrayal of Truth in Hollywood Films

    1679 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Film Girl, Interrupted: Portrayal of Truth in Hollywood Films Most people are likely to relate Hollywood with money. If a person lives in the Hollywood area, people assume she or he is probably rich. If she or he is a Hollywood movie star, the person probably makes a lot of money. Therefore, to follow that line of thought, when Hollywood producers make a movie, they make it just for money. And some filmmakers do seem to make films only for the money the movies will earn. The action movie

  • The Saddest Music in the World: A Surreal Melodrama

    2152 Words  | 5 Pages

    addresses his filmmaking saying that he takes aspects from different film styles and appropriates them into his own work. In The Saddest Music in the World (2003), Maddin uses a combination of French Surrealist filmmaking and classical American Hollywood cinema, specifically melodrama, to create his own style. In an article by William Beard, Steven Shaviro talks about Maddin’s filmmaking, and he links Surrealism and melodrama together saying, “Maddin’s films are driven by a tension between romantic

  • European Cinema

    2801 Words  | 6 Pages

    cinemas have positioned themselves in opposition to Hollywood, at least since the end of the First World War, and increasingly after the Second World War... In the set of binary oppositions that usually constitute the field of academic film studies, the American cinema is invariably the significant (Bad) Other, around which both the national and “art/auteur” cinemas are defined... -Thomas Elsaesser, European Cinema: Face to Face with Hollywood, pp. 16-17. At first look Elsaesser’s quote seems

  • American Film and Movies from the 1950’s to Present

    2416 Words  | 5 Pages

    Paradox of Protest", in Movie Censorship and American Culture. Couvares, Francis, ed. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1996. Ross, Steven T., ed. Movies and American Society. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 2002. Wasser, Frederick. "Is Hollywood America?", in Movies and American Society. Ross, Steven T., ed. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 2002. Slocum, J. David, ed. Violence and American Cinema. New York: Routledge, 2001. Rotham, William. "Violence and Film", in Violence and American

  • Hollywood & History

    511 Words  | 2 Pages

    and change or rewrite history. However, the truth of the matter is that we simply cannot. Everything happens for a reason, and we should learn to accept it. Accept it for what it is, rather than what we would like it to be. However, to often in Hollywood the city of glamour and glitz, fortune and fame, movie producers have a tendency and even feel at liberty to rewrite American history. In my opinion this is all done out of greed. The movie industry, is all about money, therefore producers are obligated

  • British Cinema Vs Hollywood Cinema

    1111 Words  | 3 Pages

    British Cinema Vs Hollywood Cinema As far as statistics show Hollywood films make twice as much money in the box office than British films. If we look at films in this manner than it is plainly obvious that more people watch Hollywood films than British films and if we believe that the best films are the ones that more people see than we can conclude that Hollywood films are better than British ones. But it's not as simple as this although the box office does have an impact on the end result