Our Every Day Language Forever Changed By Action Movies

posted by admin @ 5:38 AM
February 20, 2010

Many of the best lines that we use in every day life come from action movies. Some writer somewhere chose to write these great lines and then they make their way into the every day uses of people to get repeated over and over again. As we say them we fall into character of the person who coined them on the big screen.

How many times have you said Ill be back? Well most likely more times than Arnold Schwarzenegger did in the movie Terminator. We all try to do our best Arnold while we say it as well. And it is also mimicked on other television shows, the radio and even music.

Many other every day saying comes from the action movies of all time. The Godfather has many with the go the mattresses theme. And who can forget the line are you talking to me, that DeNiro made famous in Taxi Driver. And who cannot handle the truth? Apparently Tom Cruise cannot in the movie A Few Good Men.

Our sayings we pick up from action movies can be a way for us to express a comedic flair or it can also be a way of showing our tough side in a gentle manner. These saying incorporate themselves into our daily lives before we even realize it. Yippee Kayey mother was in Die Hard but now you hear it all over the place.

An action movie also gives us a chance for the bad guy to be blown away. Sure we would not do this in real life but it is nice to know that someone is getting what they deserve somewhere and our action heroes do it for us. It gives us a sense that righteousness is being done in the world even though it is make believe.

So keep on coining those phrases as the older ones live on. Many younger people do not know where the sayings come from but they know how to say them. So if they doubt that you can tell them, are you feeling lucky punk?

Advancing The Mind With Sci-Fi Movies

posted by admin @ 9:32 AM
February 12, 2010

What makes the thrill of sci-fi movies so thrilling? What makes it possible for us to watch where no man has gone before with fascination? Maybe because the idea that the world is a bigger place than we can ever imagine, and things exist beyond our natural reality that is not in our everyday lives, is a concept that we really want to consider.

This is what makes these types of movies so popular. To imagine extra terrestrial life forms that either want to be our friends or such out all of our life force is fascinating. Watching them on the big screen is also a lot safer than fighting alien forces in real life. After all, we have enough worries just getting to work on time on most days let alone fighting off and alien predator.

It is also cool to think that no matter how far advance other species are our human nature kicks in and our love factor often wins in these movies. It can be our will to survive or to protect the ones we love that prevails and keeps our species going. It is the human struggle that is interesting and not just watching people get slaughtered.

This explains the popularity of District 9. The story is based on one man and learning that by becoming one of the creatures he so desperately tries to control becomes his life and seeing how the creatures live on the other side while his life is forever changed. This is the ultimate putting yourself in someone elses shoes theory and what drives us to watch it.

The technology in a sci-fi movie is also fascinating to us. What we only can dream of with a script can become reality with the right production company. It is amazing that a little tricorder can read every internal organ in our body. Or that people can read others minds just by looking at them.

As our imaginations work faster than our technology the sci-fi movie will remain popular. We can continue to look forward to the ingenious way that someone will concoct another world. But like in the every popular Avatar, no matter what world you are in it is about the heart and the human condition.

Tsotsi Movie: Expression Of Survival And Deliverance

posted by admin @ 5:26 AM
January 30, 2010

Tsotsi movie was released last 2006 and accurately describes the differences between life in Johannesburg, South Africa and the surrounding ghettos. And honest portrayal of survival and redemption, all the features of human nature are shown in a thought-stirring way. This movie is approximately 94 minutes long and is very violent and quite disturbing, especially in the first half.

Hood’s fictional film imitates a case study as it carefully tracks Tsotsi’s everyday life. Viewers are first shown the evil side of the character — he has a gory fistfight with a friend and an evenly aggressive and ruthless job as a full-time robber.

Recurrent use of flashbacks allows the viewer to have ideas and thoughts about Tsotsi’s childhood. Instead, the audience views his mother on her bed dying, her hand reaching out for her son. This heart-warming moment is ruin by gunfire as Tsotsi’s father shoots the family dog to stop it from barking.

The film concentrates on Tsotsi’s life, so its effectiveness depends on main character’s acting — fortunately, he acted so well. With frequent close-ups, the audience sees every mixed emotion and astonished facial expression on some scenes which involves the baby.

Because the actors’ facial expressions show a collective language, there’s slight dialogue in the film. Suspense scenes are created gently but successfully. When a homeless man in a wheelchair furies Tsotsi, he quietly follows the handicapped man from the subway station to an isolated area under a faintly lit highway. The audience is required to wait patiently for Tsotsi’s expected attack.

In spite the flashbacks and deserted scenes of suspense, the film flows well. Even the purist of the film’s strikes of social comments have a recurring sense of cinematography.

Since Tsotsi struggles to be reasonable, the movie is often identified as a bloody and violent. Compared to U. S. Films, the violence in this movie appears fast and detached. Hood’s documentary-style description of aggression shows an unconscious acceptance of it. When Tsotsi fires at the baby’s mother, the camera focuses less on the gun and more on the woman’s reaction.

But the blood does not overpower the movie’s great acting or deteriorates its difficult situations. Instead, the difference between right and wrong shapes until the viewer completely recognizes with the main character.

The Tsotsi movie gives an accurate depiction of life in extremely poor and rich parts of South Africa and what people do to survive in ghettos. Because of the in-depth plot, perfect depiction of life in South Africa, a total drama involved in the movie, is rated 4 out of 5. Best film one can ever see.