Suspense Essays

  • Suspense In Short Stories

    1033 Words  | 3 Pages

    clock flashes 3:06 the closet door shrieks….. - ( Lia Shimon)Short anecdotes, long stories and poems like the one you just read, which create suspense and may frighten many readers who enjoy stories. A good author will produce suspenseful stories that will terrify and shock the reader by providing foreshadowing, reversal and last but not least the suspense that will give the reader the chills down their spine by reflecting people's deepest fear, however, they will continue reading it, no matter how

  • The Creator of Suspense

    2121 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Creator of Suspense Alfred Hitchcock is one of the most well known directors of all time bringing murder and mystery to a new light. His films, starting in 1925 with "The Pleasure Garden" and ending in 1976 with the film "Family Plot", set a precedent for all other directors in the film industry. Many story lines and techniques within the cinematography of Hitchcock are common standards for films of today. However, Hitchcock did not start out as a brilliant director, but instead started

  • Mystery and Suspense in Heart of Darkness

    549 Words  | 2 Pages

    Mystery and Suspense in Heart of Darkness It seems like everywhere there is something in life that seems to be left behind.  In the books I read about mystery or suspense, this always seems to be the case in such.  The Heart of Darkness draws me into such depths of suspense and unknown that seem to associate with my life. This whole book is full of mysteries.  Marlow has a heart that is full of mystery when he is stuck in Africa, and looking for a man named Kurtz.  Marlow is waiting

  • A Critique on the Suspense in the Story of, The Cask of Amontillado

    663 Words  | 2 Pages

    Suspense is one of the main reasons readers read. If there was nothing urging us to read on, then what would be the point? Something has to set off the sparks to keep us interested and hold our attention. It gets our hearts racing, putting us in wonder if we should stop reading, or continue to see the characters fate and what is in store for them. Suspense can be used in many different ways. It can be used in more of an intensity scene, or more of a calm eerie type. No matter which way it is used

  • The Use of Suspense in Julius Caesar

    677 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Use of Suspense in Julius Caesar Suspense can be defined as the uncertainties the reader feels about what will happen next in a story, or in this case, a play.  William Shakespeare incorporated in Julius Caesar three very suspenseful events on which the whole play depends. The first suspenseful event of this play occurs when the conspirators join and discuss their reasons for assassination.  Cassius feels that he is equal to Caesar, if not even better that him.  Shakespeare builds

  • Suspense in Steven Spielberg's Movie Jaws

    2836 Words  | 6 Pages

    Suspense in Steven Spielberg's Movie Jaws Steven Spielberg, the creator of Jaws, uses many different techniques to draw in the suspense of viewers and to capture their imagination. These techniques include special effects – to create tension, different camera angles – to show facial expressions and group shots. The classic Jaws music, known by millions of people, also helps build up tension, to let us know when the shark is approaching. He uses colours, so that we can associate signs and symbols

  • Mystery and Suspense in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Literature

    4162 Words  | 9 Pages

    Mystery and Suspense in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Literature In this essay, I will compare and analyse how Sir Arthur Conan Doyle creates mystery and suspense in three short stories. In retrospect, mystery and suspense go together. If one of the two is present in a story, so is another. Both of these elements are evident in the three short stories by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. I intend to go into the intriguing world of this master of mystery and explore the methods used by the writer. I aim to analyze

  • How does homer use suspense to make the story of the ‘Odyssey’ more

    696 Words  | 2 Pages

    How does homer use suspense to make the story of the ‘Odyssey’ more exciting in books 13 to 21? To create suspense and tension in the story, Homer uses the aspect of disguise. When Odysseus lands upon the Ireland of Ithika, Athene gives him a disguise so that he will not be recognise by the suitors and killed. The first person he sees when he is on the island is a ‘herdsman of sheep.’ Who is really Athene she is in disguise, Odysseus, thinking she is a herdsman lies to her about whom he

  • How does the writer create tension and suspense in The Red Room?

    660 Words  | 2 Pages

    writer create tension and suspense in The Red Room? The writer is able to create tension and suspense through various ways in the short story ‘The Red Room’. The opening sentence in the story immediately mentions the supernatural, which immediately tells us that this is a gothic story. The first sentence is dialogue, but we do not know who is speaking. This creates tension as it is withholding information. This is the main technique used to create both tension and suspense through out this story

  • North By Northwest Film Analysis

    775 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the film, “North by Northwest” we see a series of shots that creates suspense and danger. The point of the film is very vague and it ends without a resolution to the main conflict. The incredible camera work and techniques that Alfred Hitchcock did created a feeling of danger and suspense, making the audience want to see more. Also, Hitchcock's film main character Roger O. Thornhill creates suspense with his mistaken identity and fight for his escape. The film uses a handful of shots, for example

  • The Meaning Of Voyeurism In Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window

    651 Words  | 2 Pages

    fascinating cinematic elements to carry the story and also convey the meaning of voyeurism. Throughout the film we are in one room, yet that does not limit the story. This causes the viewer to feel trapped, similar to the main character, while also adding suspense to the detective story. The opening scene itself, draws the viewer in. In just five minutes and 27 shots, the viewer is given an introduction to the main character, his lifestyle, his condition, and his neighborhood. The lighting, the costumes, and

  • Paper Towns

    717 Words  | 2 Pages

    disappeared to reveal her true soul to everyone, but Q is torn as the girl he loves tugs at the strings in his heart, whether they're next door or a thousand miles apart. The intriguing plot will have you turning the pages and grabbing tissues for more suspense, mysteries, twists and turns. In the upshot of it all, John Green's Paper Towns is a great and touching novel about the relatable life story with captivating characters, meaningful texts, and a wild, suspenseful plot that gracefully displays our

  • ?The Wreck of the Hesperus? and The Perfect Storm

    801 Words  | 2 Pages

    relate to and understand. As shown from the word choice in The Perfect Storm, the poem is easily seen to evoke more powerful imagery. One quality a story needs to possess in order to keep the reader eager and captivated to read is suspense. Both stories have elements of suspense, but utilize it in different ways. “The Wreck of the Hesperus” does an excellent job of foreshadowing, so one can predict the sequence of events that will happen.

  • Suspense Suspense

    1949 Words  | 4 Pages

    Suspense is when you feel uncertain about what is going to happen. Most people enjoy suspense because the thrill and the guessing is very entertaining. Almost always, the intro to a film or a story is what mainly grabs an audience's attention initially. What keeps the audience attached to the film or story, is the textual evidence and detail throughout the film or story. In stories or films, the most suspenseful part is almost always the rising action. The rising action carries the suspense up until

  • Suspense In The Lottery

    934 Words  | 2 Pages

    Suspense is a common element in popular media which is used to keep TV shows or plots of books or movies from being too predictable and boring. A key example of suspense in a movie is a scene from JAWS in which the shark is slowly approaching the boat and in the background a piano plays an ominous two key tone to send chills down the audience’s spines.In Shirley Jackson’s short stories, ¨The Possibility of Evil¨ and ¨The Lottery,¨ Jackson uses multiple literary devices to upgrade her stories and

  • Suspense In Trifles

    795 Words  | 2 Pages

    “Trifles” is a one act play written by Susan Glaspell about a woman named Minnie Foster, who is accused of murdering her husband John Wright. Glaspell uses conflict between the characters, symbolism, and suspense to provide the reader with how different the men and women see the crime scene. Throughout this play, the men tend to assert their patriarchal dominance by leaving the women in the kitchen while they go upstairs to investigate the crime scene. As the play unfolds, the women begin to discover

  • The Importance Of Suspense

    1154 Words  | 3 Pages

    Without suspense, there is no catch to the thriller novels or film, and based on those two, there are different ways suspense is portrayed to the audience. In a novel, suspense is mainly portrayed by the way the narration is being led along with the specific details to give the audience imagery of what is happening as they read. Every wording and sentencing is important to creating suspense because in novels, there are no audio, sound effects, lighting, and etc that will help create suspense. Unlike

  • Suspense In Macbeth

    842 Words  | 2 Pages

    William Shakespeare’s play Macbeth is truly a masterpiece of writing, and a great example of this is Shakespeare’s use of the writing technique Elision to create a feeling of suspense, as well as provoking imagery and emotion throughout the play. This writing technique is used by making key events take place of stage. These such events were the killing of king Duncan, the death of Lady Macbeth and the beheading of Macbeth. The killing of Duncan was where the play truly began, this killing sent

  • Suspense In Hamlet

    915 Words  | 2 Pages

    In life things happen which affect our mental state for that entire day. For each day these experiences can produce us with feelings of excitement, a rush of intensity, and also a feeling of suspense. Within William Shakespeare’s Hamlet, is a play which has excitement, suspense, and Intensity within internal events which deliver such feelings like external events. Thankfully, this book has many characters to relate our lives to. For is this such a man? For he sleeps and eats with beast

  • Suspense An assessment of the suspense of ‘The Cask of Amontillado’

    548 Words  | 2 Pages

    Why do people love horror movies? Is it the feeling of your nerves on edge, or is it the thought that there Might be something else out there? People just seem to enjoy the horror and suspenseful movies that are produced in this day and age. But its not only the movies that have caught people's attention, but the horror story. Now they are preserved in books and are all over the internet. And yet, movies seem to be the best at displaying horror and catching the observer's attention. However, there