John Ford Essays

  • John Ford

    2837 Words  | 6 Pages

    John Ford John Ford was an American motion-picture director. Winner of four Academy Awards, and is known as one of America’s great film directors. He began his career in the film industry around 1913. According to Ellis, Ford’s style is evident in both the themes he is drawn toward and the visual treatment of those themes, in his direction of the camera and in what’s in front of it. Although he began his career in the silent film area and continued to work fruitfully for decades after the thirties

  • A Review of The Quiet Man, Directed by John Ford

    1307 Words  | 3 Pages

    The movie The Quiet Man directed by John Ford is a far cry from the Westerns his most noted for directing however for John The Quiet Man “was the most personal film he ever made (it was also one of his favorites” (Berardinelli). In The Quiet Man John Ford brings together one of his most favorite Western actors, John Wayne, who is undeniably the central character, and the ever stunning Maureen O’Hara to brings to life a warmhearted, down-to-earth romantic comedy. He created a movie that is primarily

  • John Ford Bias

    596 Words  | 2 Pages

    These two films by John Ford can be described as biased. Biased itself means to be unfairly prejudiced for or against someone or something. We see exceedingly clear examples of this in both films. They portray the Native American in way that denies them of any agency. To anyone without a keen idea to the reality of who Native Americans actually are, they would most likely be terrified of them. They are displayed as being primitive, animalistic savages that only seek to cause violence. We see this

  • The Film Analysis Of Ford's Romantic Action Western Film

    959 Words  | 2 Pages

    Alfred Newman and music score by Cyril Mockridge and (uncredited) David Buttolph blends well into each scene. Ford “worked in many genres over a long career and he won six Oscars - including two that he won for his World War II documentary work - but he is best

  • Genre Films' Predictability and Formulaicity

    1595 Words  | 4 Pages

    Genre Films' Predictability and Formulaicity This essay shall discuss whether 'Genre films are predictable and formulaic', looking at the Western genre, and using the example films of, 'The Searchers' and 'Unforgiven'. Genre is a fundamental means by which we communicate especially in storytelling. If looking at genre in terms of Thomas Shatz, he puts forward the theory of similarity and overlap. He adopts a thematic and ideological approach, which identifies only two genres; the genre of

  • Community and the Individual in John Ford's The Quiet Man

    2963 Words  | 6 Pages

    Community and the Individual in John Ford's The Quiet Man John Ford's The Quiet Man is a romantic comedy that demonstrates Ford's world-view by way of symbolic visual devices as well as in the basic plot: the outsider being indoctrinated into a community through the gradual understanding of rituals and rites of passage, as well as the little nuances of everyday life. John Ford, a filmmaker with a strong Irish ancestry and pride in his roots, directed this film about the return of a retired boxer

  • Schapelle Corby is Guilty

    590 Words  | 2 Pages

    “Your Honor I will commence my case today by stating the facts that will ascertain Schapelle Corby’s guilt. I have five compelling reasons why Schapelle Corby should be convicted.” “First. Shapelle’s prime witness, John ford. All evidence created by the witness was hearsay, unfounded information. He did not witness any of the facts behind his allegations. Just said what he had heard from other people. There was no actual proof that the drugs were planted in Shapelle Corby’s bag.” “Second.

  • Film Analysis: Citizen Kane

    525 Words  | 2 Pages

    The most important is a film that is consistent , that is like a spiral that lead the viewer to the unique and specific center that is related. Citizen Kane is one of the best films achieved in the history of cinema. But not only that characterizes this masterpiece, as it is also the riskiest film is conceived within a film , the film that broke with the classical language and inaugurated modernity in film communication. Today you can see still shots that mimic those made by the great Filmmaker Orson

  • John Ford, The Searchers, And The Grapes Of Wrath

    1021 Words  | 3 Pages

    director’s in my personal opinion would be John Ford. Mainly active during the 1920’s up until early 1970’s, John continued to direct countless films that significantly help categorize him in his own way of directing. John was mainly known for his classic westerns such as, Stagecoach, The Searchers, and The Grapes of Wrath, which I’ll be covering in this paper. Mainly all of his films fell into the western category and shaped the category itself in the early ages. John liked to use a “Stock Company” of stars

  • The Western Revisited in Martin Scorsese's Taxi Driver

    1767 Words  | 4 Pages

    to underpin Taxi Driver (1976), he demonstrates his virtuosic mastery of the genre. To be sure, Scorsese's film not only resuscitates this particular kind of narrative, but it goes so far as to mimic one of the most celebrated Westerns of all time, John Ford's The Searchers (1956). As Robert Warshow contends, "the popular genre film makes connections both with its filmic past and within the temperaments of its contemporary viewers" (Mast, 430). Though they were made some twenty years apart, each

  • Research Paper On Hitch

    647 Words  | 2 Pages

    I chose to do my project on the movie, Hitch. Hitch has always been one of my favorite movies & I was super excited when I saw it was on the list of movie options. The movie is named after the main character, Alex “Hitch” Hitchens, who is played by Will Smith. Hitch is a very successful dating coach. The movie focuses on one particular client, Albert Brennaman, who is played by Kevin James. Albert is a dorky, chubby, financial advisor who has a big crush on the glamorous Allegra Cole, who is played

  • Crazy Little Thing Called Ireland: Crazy Little Thing Called Ireland

    882 Words  | 2 Pages

    in Ford’s movie The Quiet Man. Roman Catholic churches have a neo-gothic style with colorful stained glass windows and the inside is full of long, wooden pews on either side of an aisle with an alter at the front of the church, just as the church in John Ford’s movie. ¬ Walsh’s, Ford’s and Toibin’s works help influence the way Ireland is perceived nowadays. Despite what some people may think, Ireland and it’s people lives do not revolve around Pubs and alcohol. The country relies heavily on their culture

  • Tis Pity She's A Whore by John Ford

    2352 Words  | 5 Pages

    "Tis Pity She's A Whore" by John Ford In this play it would be impossible to accurately assess this idea commenting on Annabella and Giovanni as a single entity. They are extremely different characters with their only common ground being the love they have for each other, and even this is expressed in distinctly different ways with subsequently different consequences. These consequences build up to the conclusion referred to in the question, and so it would also prove hard to answer it directly

  • Four Conditions for Knowledge

    2463 Words  | 5 Pages

    the man who will get the job has ten coins in his pocket. However, this shouldn’t count as knowledge. In the second Gettier counterexample, Smith is justified in believing Jones owns a Ford. Therefore, he’s justified in believing Jones owns a Ford or Brown is in Barcelona. Turns out, Jones doesn’t own a Ford but Brown is in fact in Barcelona. Once again, we have an example of a justified true belief that shouldn’t count as knowledge. ... ... middle of paper ... ...eliefs: (a) I’m

  • Ford Motor Company - Supply Chain Strategy

    3198 Words  | 7 Pages

    FLOW OF GOODS Ford has a large supplier base for material procurement in a complex network of business relationships. Ø The supply base consists of several tiers of suppliers. Ford directly deals with tier one suppliers and these deal with the next tiers. If feasible the lower tier suppliers ship materials directly to Fords’ manufacturing unit. Ø Long-term contracts with suppliers have been negotiated to ensure uninterrupted supply and minimum inventory levels. Ø Ford has provided its

  • John Ford's The Searchers

    1918 Words  | 4 Pages

    John Ford's The Searchers A critical theory by Robin Wood posits that the filmic genres popularized by the Hollywood system are not "discrete", but represent "different strategies for dealing with the same ideological tensions." (478) Wood claims that conventional theories fail to address this ideological phenomenon, and proposes a search for the myths and contradictions, produced by American capitalism, which fuel disparate filmic genres. Wood's attempt to discuss this ideology lists the "components"

  • The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance

    811 Words  | 2 Pages

    John Ford directed many well-known western films that brought back the vibrancy of that era. One of which is, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance. Back in 1962, when the film was made, many dismissed it as a petty, disappointing work. 
Much of the criticism leveled against The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance focused on its look. The majority of films were done in color that gave it a bright, upbeat tone that the public loved. The “look” present in Liberty Valance was black and white, which went against

  • Genre Theory and John Ford's Stagecoach

    1972 Words  | 4 Pages

    Genre Theory and John Ford's Stagecoach The analytic theory posited by Robert Warshow in his essay "The Westerner", itemizes the elements necessary for a film to belong to the genre of the "western". Most contentiously, he mandates that the narrative focus upon the individual hero's plight to assert his identity, and diminishes the importance of secondary characters and issues, or any tendency toward "social drama." (431) He states that it is subtle variations that make successive instances

  • John Wayne

    769 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Duke takes his place in history. John Wayne, one of America’s greatest actors and directors of all time. His fame and superstardom led to many problems in his career. His image as an icon of American individualism and the frontier spirit has overshadowed his career to such an extent that it is almost impossible for the fans and writers to separate Wayne the legend from Wayne the actor and Wayne the man. Before the start of his movie career he played football at USC under his birth name

  • Comparing Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway And The Good Soldier

    1308 Words  | 3 Pages

    perspectives and understandings of the situations ought to be the same between the author and the audience. This rhetorical art is shown through the works of Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf and The Good Soldier by Ford Madox Ford. While Woolf focuses on many different perspectives throughout her novel, Ford solely focuses his audience on the perspective of his narrator. While both works persuade the audience to share the perspectives