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Nicole Chung - Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse

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Catwoman (2004)-Tsong Chang

Catwoman is a film loosely based on DC comics the antiheroine Catwoman. The film presents the origin story of the Catwoman Patience Phillips (Halle Berry) in its unique worldview.  After discovering the magically age-defying face moisturizer her company produces causes serious health problems, Patience Phillips is killed and then gains her superpower of Catwoman from Egyptian cats after being reincarnated. She then goes on to investigate the company and is drawn into even deeper and more complex conspiracies. The film has an exceptional focus on the protagonist’s body image, and it especially draws attention to the contrast before and after Patience’s transformation into Catwoman. As the story of Patience/Catwoman unfolds, the film leads the audience into the discussion of sexism in the work environment, ageism, and females’ desire in general, and the eventual discussion of justice and evil.   Catwoman's dramatic entrance before she is about to rob some jewelry from the jewelry rob

His House -- Tristan Farmer

  Film Summary:  His House follows a refugee couple from South Sudan after they have been placed in government housing in England. Soon after moving in, it becomes apparent that the house is haunted, with both characters having individual spiritual encounters or hallucinations of the daughter they lost in their journey to England. The film follows both characters as they react to the haunting differently, with the husband, Bol, believing everything they brought from South Sudan is cursed and needs to be destroyed so they can create a new life in England; while the wife, Rial, believes they need to return to their homeland and atone for their sins.  Film Significance:  This film’s main purpose is to explore the mindset and experiences of refugees. The conflict between Bol and Rial’s reaction to their haunted house is a metaphor for how two immigrants or refugees might grapple with the question of assimilation and the struggle of culture shock. In this case, Bol represents the pure desi

Everything, Everything - Ellie Marmoll

       The film Everything, Everything , based on the novel by Nicola Yoon , follows the life of newly eighteen-year-old Madeline living with a rare autoimmune dis ease that prevents her from leaving the protection of her sealed home in which she is iso lated from the outside world. Maddy is extremely imaginative, especially when Olly moves in next door and her curiosity for life outside of her home grows, causing her to push the boundaries that formerly kept her safe. With the bond that they had formed with their limited contact, the pair fall deeper in love, and over time Olly helps Maddy realize what she has been doing is not really living.   Trailer     The particular scene in this screenshot is the main turning point of the movie where things drastically begin to change. In this scene, Maddy takes a dramatic leap and decides to leave her house to go to Hawaii with Olly. She packed a bag an d purchased the tickets and accommodations, so all he needed to do was say yes. He

Precious Presentation Iris SW

Precious  In Precious , adapted from Sapphire’s Rush , we witness a cyclically brutal life reimagined through the genius, emotional power of the protagonist, Claireece "Precious" Jones. After being transferred to an alternative school following her second pregnancy by her father, Precious learns not just to read, but to express herself internally and externally despite the daily beatings and abuse by her mother. Her resiliency in the toughest of circumstances represents a greater sense of hope for those who have been forgotten and neglected by their community. Image 1: Precious speaks in class for the first time, one of the many firsts she will experience within her new classroom.   Image 2: Precious' mother, Mary, recounts to their social worker the history of sexual abuse Precious suffered at the hands of her father. Significance: Precious uses extremely graphic and difficult situations to force the audience to face the real and present consequences of systematic racism

James Ratliff - The Human Stain

  The Human Stain is a mystery-drama film from 2003 based on Philip Roth's novel of the same name. Set in New England during the late nineties, the film follows the narration of Nathan Zuckerman, a down-and-out writer telling the story of his friend, the recently disgraced professor Coleman Silk, after he and his lover, Athena College janitor Faunia Farley, are killed under suspicious circumstances in a car crash. The film tackles a variety of contemporary social and moral issues surrounding the late nineties including academic politics, race relations, trauma, and abuse through the lens of Zuckerman's reflections, Silk's budding romance, and flashbacks to Silk's youth. Silk and Farley in their last moments before their car crashes. Young Silk first sees Steena Paulsson at the library. So what? The Human Stain  received mixed reviews with critics not lambasting the movie but calling it mediocre and passable. Most people seemed confused by the choice of casting especial

The Secret Life of Bees - Emery O

Synopsis:   Set in the summer of 1964, right after the passing of the Civil Rights Act, The Secret Life of Bees follows Lily Owens as she runs away from her abusive father in hopes of finding out something about her late mother's life, leading her down a long road of self realization and discovery of the world. Through her journey she is forced to expand her point of view, address the issues of racism in her time and the importance of understanding lives other than your own. Lily spends time growing, bonding and healing with the Boatwright sisters, later finding out that her mother had also lived there many years in the past. Trailer:   Screenshot #1: The pink house where Lily goes to seek out information about her late mother's life, and where she meets the Boatwright sisters. The house is revealed to be pink as part of a lesson to Lily. August tells her that she thought it was the "tackiest" color she had ever seen, but "if it'll lift May's heart, then