Leonard Whiting Essays

  • Comparing the Opening Scenes of the Zeffirelli and Luhrmann Versions of Romeo and Juliet

    1159 Words  | 3 Pages

    Luhrmann Versions of Romeo and Juliet This essay will focus on how Franco Zeffirelli and Baz Luhrmann portray the opening scenes of Romeo and Juliet. The traditional version of Romeo and Juliet was directed by Franco Zeffirelli in which Leonard Whiting played Romeo and Olivia Hussey played Juliet. This version was made in 1968 and aimed at the older audience. It was made in a way that was more accessible to the way Shakespeare wrote it. The modern version of Romeo and Juliet was directed

  • The Taming of the Shrew and Romeo and Juliet

    1037 Words  | 3 Pages

    While The Taming of The Shrew played in theaters in the spring of 1967, the Summer of Love was about to explode in San Francisco and London, signifying the height of the hippie, counter-culture movement. This was a young generation that rebelled against the war in Vietnam and demanded relevance in higher education (Tatspaugh 140). In addition to anti-war protests, sexual exploration was another hallmark of this young generation, to which Romeo and Juliet was the perfect metaphor. This is confirmed

  • Comparing the Opening Scene of the Franco Zeffirelli and Baz Luhrmann Film Versions of Romeo and Juliet

    1422 Words  | 3 Pages

    Comparing the Opening Scene of the Franco Zeffirelli and Baz Luhrmann Film Versions of Romeo and Juliet Both directors present their interpretation of the epic tale of love, reflecting their attitudes towards play and playwright. Luhrmann tackled the task of bringing the play up to date in 1997 and getting young people interested. Zeffirelli’s love for Shakespeare’s works shines through and so he has done little tampering. In fact Zeffirelli gives the film an air of nobility – like the youths’

  • Comparison of Two Film Versions of Romeo and Juliet

    737 Words  | 2 Pages

    Comparison of Two Film Versions of Romeo and Juliet Shakespeare’s play ‘Romeo and Juliet’ was made into a film by two different directors. Baz Luhrmann’s to Franco Zeffirelli’s interpretation of Romeo and Juliet were very distinct and they both appeal to different age group audiences. Franco Zeffirelli’s version was the first film of Romeo and Juliet. It was produced in 1968 and it was quiet typical, exactly what the audience would have expected the film of ‘Romeo and Juliet’ to be. Unlike

  • Interpretation of the Balcony Scene by Baz Luhrmann and Franco Zeffirelli of William Shakespreare's Romeo and Juliet

    1047 Words  | 3 Pages

    Interpretation of the Balcony Scene by Baz Luhrmann and Franco Zeffirelli of William Shakespreare's Romeo and Juliet “Romeo and Juliet” is a famous love story written by William Shakespeare. Two interpretations were made of this text into a film by the two directors, Baz Luhrmann (1996) and Franco Zeffirelli (1968). The films use different types of media to portray the characters and the overall context of Shakespeare’s play. I will be focusing on Act two Scene ii (the balcony scene) where

  • Memento as a War Movie

    1392 Words  | 3 Pages

    memories is used in war movies, it can also be seen by Leonard Shelby in Memento. Through this idea, I will prove that Memento is a type of war movie. Jonathan Romney clearly summarizes Memento as an “at-heart film noir in classic 1940s vein -- the story of a man investigating his wife's death. True to form, there is a mysterious femme fatale and a sly, ambivalent character who could be friend or foe. The first twist is that the hero and narrator, Leonard, suffers from short-term amnesia and forgets things

  • Outsiders in The Flying Machine, The Pedestrian, and I See You Never

    527 Words  | 2 Pages

    Pedestrian, in this the outsider is Mr Leonard Mead he is classed as an outsider because he walks the street on a night, which is seen to be outside the norm of society. I See You Never, in this the outside is Mr Ramirez he is an outsider because he is an immigrant and his visa ran out long ago. (Outside the Law). The theme of these stories seems to be the society against the individual and these individuals as lonely people especially Mr Leonard Mead in the Pedestrian as he is seen in

  • Analysis of Hannibal: Enemy of Rome by Leonard Cottrell

    778 Words  | 2 Pages

    Analysis of Hannibal: Enemy of Rome by Leonard Cottrell The author of Hannibal: Enemy of Rome, Mr. Leonard Cottrell, inspired by the book, The Histories of Polybius, translated by W. R. Paton. Mr. Cottrell, endeavored to recreate the journeys of Hannibal by traveling by car nearly the same route in 1959. Mr. Cottrell traveled by car the journey of Hannibal through northern Spain, the modern day Swiss Alps, and down into the Italian peninsula while constantly referring to Polybuis' writings. Mr

  • Leonard?s Tattoos in Memento

    777 Words  | 2 Pages

    Nolan, where Leonard Shelby, an overly confused man wants revenge after his wife's murder. Leonard suffers brain damage rendering him incapable of making new memories; her death is the last thing branded in his mind. Though his affliction keeps him from being able to form new memories, Leonard seeks revenge; to wreak this revenge he must keep notes on even his own life, tattooing himself with important clues. Told in segments that move backwards in time, the audience follow Leonard back through

  • Lockie Leonard And Lex And Rory

    1328 Words  | 3 Pages

    Lockie Leonard and Lex and Rory English Lockie Leonard and the film Lex and Rory promote the same issues as each other, especially concerning male/female relationships. The issues are showed differently. The woman is the one who is pressured into having a sexual relationship. In this case it is the male who is pressured into having a sexual relationship. As this happens different views, feelings and emotions are shown by the way they deal with the choices they make. Both Lex and Rory are presented

  • Memento

    856 Words  | 2 Pages

    Memento Memento is a movie directed by Chris Nolan. It was released in 2000. The leading actor is Guy Pearce. Carrie Anne Moss and Joe Pantoliano are also in this movie. Memento is a perplexed thriller. Leonard, the main character, is excellently played by Guy Pierce. He is constantly confused, yet still acts in a nonchalant way. Teddy (Pantoliano) and Natalie (Carrie Anne Moss) play puzzling characters, throughout the whole movie the viewer questions, whether they may or may not be Leonard’s friends

  • The Cold Embrace

    6514 Words  | 14 Pages

    window that Leonard Jefferson Bennings now looked out were saturated from the July rainstorm and shone with a glimmer he remembered seeing from his bedroom window in Massachusetts many years ago. He wondered if he would ever get to see his childhood home again, and, if he did, would the world of his youth still exist even there? Like the final beams of sunlight of the day, his hope was growing faint as he looked out on what had once been the metropolitan heart of his country. Leonard turned away

  • Internet - Virtual Education is the Future of Learning

    1068 Words  | 3 Pages

    board, posing questions via chat/e-mail, and viewing related materials during class time to facilitate learning." (Leonard, 1997) It can also "support homework submission, immediate web based testing of students knowledge of facts, concepts, applications, and quick links to chat rooms from after class student discussion on every aspect of the professor's points each day. (Leonard, 1997) Students can also save up to 80% in college costs. Costs are becoming outlandishly expensive now -a- days

  • Unrelated Incidents’ by Tom Leonard and Search for my Tongue by Sujata Bhatt

    1257 Words  | 3 Pages

    speaks tell us about the person? ‘Unrelated Incidents’ by Tom Leonard and ‘Search for my Tongue’ by Sujata Bhatt are two poems that give people an incite into how a person is perceived by others, by the way that they speak. ‘Unrelated Incidents’ is about how the BBC newsreaders all talking in Standard English and will not have a Scottish person reading the news because the viewers will not understand there accent, Tom Leonard views this as discrimination and shows his dislike to this attitude

  • Leonard Peltier Should be Released from Prison

    2489 Words  | 5 Pages

    Leonard Peltier is currently serving time in the Leavenworth federal penitentiary for the shooting deaths of two Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) agents. According to FBI documents, at around 11:50 A.M. on June 26th, 1975, agents Jack Color and Ron Williams were supposedly searching for Jimmy Eagle, a thief wanted for stealing a pair of cowboy boots. The agents encroached on the Jumping Bull Compound in Oglala, South Dakota of the Pine Ridge reservation, in two separate vehicles that no one

  • Equality 7-2521 In Ayn Rand's Anthem

    1200 Words  | 3 Pages

    Anthem, Ayn Rand Dystopian novel Written in 1937 but published in 1938 The protagonist would be equality 7-2521 because he had to fight through whatever the government has set for him,like he found a tunnel and did stuff is wasn't supposed to as a street sweeper The antagonist would be the world scholars because they are the only one holding the protagonist progress to becoming who he truly his The story give a focus on one man life, in the nearest future in which they have made everything and

  • Compare And Contrast The Moth And The Battle Of The Ants

    1207 Words  | 3 Pages

    Comparison and Contrast of Thoreau and Woolf Both of Henry David Thoreau’s “The Battle of the Ants” and Virginia Woolf’s “The Death of the Moth” are about life and death, but with different perspectives. Thoreau writes about an exciting battle of ants and uses personification to relate it to the excitement of real human battles, while Woolf takes a different perspective and writes about a moth who has death creep up on it and describes how little the moth is in comparison to the rest of life, but

  • Rule In Ayn Rand's Anthem

    604 Words  | 2 Pages

    Anthem A rule is a set of detailed regulations required to be followed in an activity or sphere. In the book Anthem, there is a variety of rules which needs to be followed. Towards the end of the book, Equality 7-2521 imagines a new world. He would not want the councils of scholars rules to be followed in his own world because he now knows the sacred word and what it means. Equality 7-2521, in his new world, would not follow the rules the council enforced in his last society to rid them of diversity

  • How To Obey The Rules In Ayn Rand's Anthem

    530 Words  | 2 Pages

    Ayn Rand’s Anthem is the story of a man by the name of Equality 7-2521’s personal growth and quest for freedom from the rules and regulations in society, which he lived. Long ago something called the Great Rebirth happened and later all of mankind started to think of it as one “great WE”. Members of this society were expected to obey the rules; these rules are set in place to help this society function as a unit. During their entire adult lives they got told when to eat, when to work, etc. By

  • Equality 7-2521 In Ayn Rand's Anthem

    778 Words  | 2 Pages

    Ayn Rand’s “Anthem” is a dystopian fiction novella that takes place at an unspecific future date where mankind has entered a dark age. Equality 7-2521 is the main character we are first introduced to as he illegally writes his thoughts on paper in a secret tunnel by the light of a candle he stole. The book begins with the exposition where we learn that Anthem is a communist society in which Equality lives. No person in the society has any freedom, the right to their own opinion, their own individuality