Amazon Video Rated The Pursuit Of Happyness A Pe
The American Dream: Ideologies in Life and Pop-Culture: A Film Review
For this “essay” block, you will examine ideologies, ethics, morals, values, and experiences as they pertain to the American Dream as you interpret it, and as they are represented within film, music, poetry, fiction, and/or creative nonfiction.
For the “essay” you will write an analysis/review of a film that you will select and watch.
Selected Film: The Pursuit of Happyness (availablefor rent on Amazon Video)–Rated PG-13
As you view the film, consider how the cuts, camera angles, shots and movement work to create particular meanings. Think about how they establish space, privilege certain characters, suggest relationships, emphasize themes, or forward the narrative. In addition to camera angles, editing, and camera movement, note details of the narrative, setting, characters, lighting, props, costume, tone, and sound.
However, with that in mind, the main purpose of this analysis is to compare and contrast the film with our discussions on the American Dream. Think about the characters and the setting, the tone and overall mood, the themes and motifs, and the narrative of the story.
How does it compare to the American Dream narratives?
To begin your review/analysis (your intro paragraph), offer your overall impression of the film while mentioning the movie’s title, director, and key actors, then as you move into your body paragraphs, ask yourself the following questions:
What “happens” in the plot of the film that is similar to “real life?” What is the basic argument of the film’s plot?
What themes (an abstraction or generalization about life, humanity, and human/non-human interactions) underlie the plot?
What does the film show about the people and their values?
How does this differ from the values and ideologies we have explored, if at all?
Are these reactions similar to those we see in our real lives?
and/or settings, and what are their functions?
image? How does it shape our interpretation of the image?
Once you have answered these questions, you may add to the review any other thoughts or feelings you have in regards to the film. Remember to “read the film,” don’t just watch it.
This essay/review must be 5-7 pages—but think quality over quantity
MLA format: double spaced, 12pt font, with a works cited page if you cite any sources.
No plagiarism