In Star Wars IV New Hope you see several things that are like our world. Like how people negotiate business deals with each other. In the video, Han Soto reminds me of a used car salesman. Trying to convince you that this vehicle is a life changer with stories about how great it is. It sounds all good until he tells you the ridiculous price. Luke Skywalker and Obi-Wan offer them a new deal and Han Soto wanted the money up front first. Once the deal got done between both parties you learn why Han Soto wanted so much money. He had a debt with someone and was trying to avoid paying it until Greedo (the debt collector) came. Another thing I notice was the killing of Greedo. A lot of People witness the killing and everyone pretty much ignored it or don 't want to be involved in that solution. Typical human behavioral in my opinion. My last similar event I say had to be the stormtroopers behaviors towards the group. They reminded me of the police and how they carry myself in society.
Things in Star Wars, of course, aren 't real and straight up fantasies. Like Chewbacca a big foot monkey-like creature talking and everyone in the movies can understand him but we can 't. Cars are foreign in this movie. It 's replaced by spaceships which are pretty cool. Another awesome thing is the blasters. We use guns that
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I just started getting into to Star Trek. Everyone I knows compares it to Star Wars but to me, Star Wars is just better than it. I don 't know what the second clip is because it 's not viewable on YouTube. In the short clip of Star Trek, you see most many different emotions. One that is the big one is love for a friend. Spock and Kirk friendship into the every end. I 'm pretty sure that no one wants to die a violent. For me watching it, Kirk wished he was in that closed off location helping Spock survive because it hard to found dependent and trustworthy friends these days. The Vulcan salute was a very popular when I was in school. It means "Live long and
The Last Hurrah, a film directed by John Ford in 1958, illustrates the story of Frank Skeffington, an iron-fisted Irish American who rose from poverty, as the mayor of an unnamed New England city during the Golden Age of political machines and bossism. He represents the last generation of grassroots politicians that are replaced by younger candidates with the rise of media in politics. The film directly addresses and dissects urban machine politics in terms of representation and governance in political machines as well as other political institutions before and after the rise of televised campaigning. The film sheds light on many different aspects of local and urban politics while illustrating how the transformation and rising forces of new
The connection that I can make to Lusus Naturae a connection with the book/ film franchise Star Wars. The comparison that I can make between these two stories is in the similarities between the townspeople/ the protagonists family and the xenophobic Galactic Empire that is present in the Star Wars series. The first comparison I can make is in the similarities of the “reasonable” actions that both factions commit in order to protect themselves. In Lusus Naturae, to avoid the shame of having a diseased daughter, and all the nuisances that came with it, the protagonist’s family decided it would be easier to “kill her off” in order to avoid the ongoing shame that she apparently caused them.
` In May of 1977, Star Wars: A New Hope was released with overwhelmingly positive reviews and marking a new era in cinema. The writer and director of the film, George Lucas, decided to expand upon the Star Wars universe in 1999 by making Star Wars: The Phantom Menace, with a story that took place before the original film’s story. This movie was made with advanced equipment and cutting-edge CGI (for 1999), nonetheless, the movie was panned by critics and enraged an entire generation of moviegoers. The answer to why this happened lies in the differences between the two films: use of special effects, construction of characters, and complexity of plot. “A special effect is a tool, a means of telling a story.
I do not believe that "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" was the best movie because the battle scenes seemed less important to the survival of the majority of the characters, and the villains seemed non threatening. The battle scenes between Luke and Darth Vader in the original six movies appeared to be very important. Because Luke played such an important role in the Rebel Alliance and the Jedi Order, every battle he fought in, it was crucial that he lived. The villains in Star Wars: The Force Awakens seemed very non threatening. The leader of the First Order, General Hux was “all bark, no bite”.
In the first part of Ready Player One, while Wade is chilling in his small area of the house, He starts to get controlled. The way he is controlled is that whille he is play games on his computer and watching classic TV shows, his aut comes in and takes his laptop to pawn it. Instead of trying to go out and find a way to earn money or even pawn something of hers, she took Wade’s computer Another way that the kids and people in the world were most likely controlled, is through the OASIS. The OASIS is a virtual world where everyone is hooked up to a mainframe source.
Star Wars the Summarizing Awakens A long time ago in a Galaxy far far away, two Jedi's name Qui-Gon-Jinn and Obi-Wan Kenobi end up finding a boy on tattooing while trying to end and intergalactic war between the Republic and the soon to be empire. The kid was Anakin Skywalker and was said to be the chosen one and to one day destroy the Sith. The young boy helped Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan to get to the planet Croissant to strengthen and go back to the Naboo to fight the war. The Gungans, a species native to Naboo, help in defeating the droid army while the two Jedi fight a Sith Lord with a, really out of the ordinary, two bladed sword.
The writer describes the casual confrontations between the south Vietnamese civilians and the American soldiers. Kubrick presents the reality that several soldiers would spend time in cities with the Vietnamese, not just in the base camps. A picture taken in 1969 shows a large group of U.S. Soldiers dancing with Vietnamese women as a band plays. Kubrick wanted to show the soldiers'
The world is full of people from different walks of life; and all of them deserve to be shown respect. People crave acceptance and respect from their families, friends, colleagues, lovers and society as a whole; the way people feel perceived is at the very core of who we believe we are in life. Respect and acceptance from others is what helps people for their identities. Lee Abbott's story, "One of Star Wars, One of Doom", takes place in a high school setting where a shooting is being planned out and about to take place. Abbott illustrates to us through 4 characters: Mr. Frank DeWine, Ms. Leanne Petty and a duo nicknamed "Tango and Whisky" what happens when people feel conflicted with who they are inside and their desire to control others.
Hey guys! This is Yuri from a school in the USA. We are about to have a big event and a show with some music and acts.
The release of the seventh Star Wars film, Star Wars: The Force Awakens, was met with much anticipation and of course multiple fan-made theories. Is Kylo Ren a double agent? Did Rey have training in the force, but her memory was wiped? Was it Kylo Ren that saved Rey and sent her to Jakku? The theories are thought-provoking and contain viable evidence.
The stylish episode VIII of the Star Wars franchise, the second of a trilogy that began in 2015 with “Star Wars: The Force Awakens”, was given the title of “The Last Jedi” and keeps dividing audiences worldwide. While its visual impact is undeniable, old and new characters work together to infuse zest and grittiness in an impetuous inspiration by Rian Johnson (“Brick”, “Looper”), who penned and directed with equal doses of passion and fascination. The director actually captured the tonal spirit of the precedent episodes and elevated it through bold and fresh ideas. However, this spacial opus could have run shorter than the two hours and a half without major loss.
Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope (1977), written by George Lucas, follows Luke Skywalker (played by Mark Hamill) as he stumbles upon a R2D2 droid that contains information including blueprints of the Death Star for Obi-Wan Kenobi (played by Alec Guinness). After Luke’s aunt and uncle are killed by the storm troopers looking for the stolen plans, Luke joins Obi-Wan with the help of Han Solo (played by Harrison Ford) and they rescue Princes Leia (played by Carrie Fisher) then destroy the Galactic Empire’s super-weapon, the Death Star. George Lucas talks about his belief in good versus evil and a god or force that is on the side of good.
“Live long and prosper,” is one of the most iconic catchphrases of any character in cinematic history. My catchphrase, however, is more… nonexistent. On a more serious note, Spock and I do happen to have at least one thing in common: we are often dehumanized. Disregarding the fact that Spock is a Vulcan, and technically not human, Spock is dehumanized by being seen as merely a brain: a religiously logical resource. Like Spock, the only people who truly see me rather than just my brain, are my close friends.
Ready Player One by Ernest Cline is a story where the people live in a dystopian world and they use the Oasis, “a massive multiplayer online game that had gradually evolved into the globally networked virtual reality” (Cline 1), as an escape. In Ready Player One, a group in the Oasis called gunters exist and they live in the video games code. Gunters are the people who “devoted every free moment of their lives to searching for Halliday’s egg” (Cline 8). Gunters value honor, individuality, prestigious, competition, the hunt, and Halliday. A reason for this, is how much they devote their time in learning everything they can about Halliday.
The "Star Wars" franchise is one of the most-awaited film of all time. The seventh film of the series, "Star Wars: Episode VII: The Force Awakens," will hit the theaters in less than two weeks. Kathleen Kennedy, the president of Lucasfilm, said that iconic director George Lucas has already seen the final product as per Movie Pilot. She confessed that Lucas said, "liked it” and she also mentioned that the filmmaker will attend the movie premieres of "Star Wars 7: The Force Awakens" in Los Angeles and London.