Javascript is disabled. Please enable it for better working experience.

Showing results for : The Femme Fatale

About 10 results ( 0,25 seconds)

Theme Of Love
http://www.researchomatic.com/Theme-Of-Love-8351.html

of the most widely recognized poems called: “La Belle Dame sans Merci”, writtten by John Keats and Robert Browning’s My Last Duchess. La Belle Dame sans Merci” by John Keats Beginning with stanza 4 and continuing to the end, the knight tel...

Noir Movies
http://www.researchomatic.com/Noir-Movies-82732.html

noir” period, producing riveting films based on hard-boiled fiction. These films were set in secret locations and shot in a black & impeccable aesthetic that fit like a glove. Hardened men wore fedoras and forever smoked cigarettes. Women p...

Portrayal Of Women In Film Noir
http://www.researchomatic.com/Portrayal-Of-Women-In-Film-Noir-110492.html

film produced in the 1940s and '50s that was literally and figuratively "dark" (noir). Literally, the lighting of the noir film was dark; most of the action occurred at night, with an emphasis on the play of shadows and light. Figuratively...

Movie Analysis
http://www.researchomatic.com/Movie-Analysis-6157.html

movie retains the same modest preference for acting and mood that distinguished his masterful indie thriller One False Move. This amounts to a triumph in the post-Tarantino age, when the brilliance of crime-film auteurs is measured by their...

Story Telling And Adaptation
http://www.researchomatic.com/Story-Telling-And-Adaptation-18059.html

storyline while markedly altering the dramatic structure and build-up of the play -- but the film is silent. (Mary Ann Doane, 1990, 65-78) To compensate for the loss of language, Pabst utilizes a cinematic technique relying on contrastive a...

Cleopatra
http://www.researchomatic.com/Cleopatra-36070.html

round as the colleague of Julius Caesar and after the wife of Mark Antony. She became very dark upon the death of her dad, Ptolemy XII, in 51 and directed constantly with her dual brothers Ptolemy XIII (51–47) and Ptolemy XIV (47–44) and he...

Play Review: John Buchan’s The 39 Steps Adapted By Patrick Barlow
http://www.researchomatic.com/Play-Review-John-Buchans-The-39-Steps-Adapted-By-Patrick-Barlow-106379.html

play at the Criterion Theatre in Londo, England. The intriguing mystery of John Buchan and the classic 1935 movie of Hitchcock was adapted by Patrick Barlow in a hilariously, humorous way. This adaption shows the similar characters but, acc...