Life Is Beautiful (Italian: La vita è bella, Italian pronunciation: [la ˈviːta ˈɛ ˈbɛlla]) is a 1997 Italian comedy-drama film directed by and starring Roberto Benigni, who co-wrote the film with Vincenzo Cerami . The film “Life Is Beautiful” date released on 20th of December 1997. Bravery is a pervasive theme all over Life is […]
Year: 2020
Film Analysis Series: Pan’s Labyrinth — Urban Planning Journal
Today I would like to share my first movie analysis, ” Pan’s Labyrinth”. I really enjoyed analyzing the Mise-en-scene. Cinematography is a really rich area which bring opportunity to integrate different senses. Pan’s Labyrinth is a mainstream movie, a spanish-mexican dark fantasy directed by Guillermo del Toro. We analyzed the narrative structure in the context […]
via Film Analysis Series: Pan’s Labyrinth — Urban Planning Journal
Video – Chaplin’s Silent Films – Part 1: The Kid (1921) — A World of Film
An analysis of Charlie Chaplin’s beautiful first feature film, The Kid (1921). Narrated and written by Darrell Tuffs.
via Video – Chaplin’s Silent Films – Part 1: The Kid (1921) — A World of Film
Parasite : A Film Analysis — Talks With Wallflower
A short film analysis of the Korean hit film, “Parasite”.
Film analysis: Man With A Movie Camera (1929) and The Birth of A Nation (1915) — FLORENCE ROSINI | WRITER | PRODUCER |
I noticed that Russian filmmaker Dziga Vertov, in his 1929 movie called Man with a Movie Camera (MWAMC), borrowed several concepts from D.W. Griffith. First, the use of close-ups. Vertov would shoot establishing shots of the place or of his subjects, then sometimes, he shifts closer to the subject by doing a medium/extreme close-up. Both […]
Film Analysis: People Will Talk (1951) | Mankiewicz’s Critique of Groupthink & McCarthyism — ATMA & Funomena
While People Will Talk, starring Cary Grant and Jeanne Crain, was billed under the romantic comedy genre with tinges of domestic drama surrounding pregnancy out of wedlock, director Joseph L. Mankiewicz’s production was evidently driven by such dense additional narrative circumstances that at times it would seem decidedly unfitting. While the two central plot threads […]
Film Analysis: Groundhog Day — Crossing the Themes
Groundhog Day has been one of my absolute favourite films since the first time I watched it over twenty-five years ago. By 1993, I already worshipped at the altars of Harold Ramis and Bill Murray thanks to the Ghostbusters films, Stripes, SCTV, SNL, and other films and TV shows too numerous to mention, so when […]
The Joker (film) Analysis — Zora’s blog – a little bit of art, a little bit of culture & a little bit of Psychology
The Joker came out a while ago, but I feel that it is such a profound film that it is never too late to talk about it. In this post, I want to discuss what the film reveals about isolation and mental illness… There is quite a bit of controversy surrounding the 2019 ‘The Joker’ […]
Charlize Theron and Tom Hardy Will Never Get Over the Horrible Feud They Had During ‘Mad Max: Fury Road’ – Showbiz Cheat Sheet — News
First Scene Screenplay Festival
When the fourth installment of the Mad Max films debuted in 2015, it was met with rave reviews. Mad Max: Fury Road followed warrior Imperator Furiosa (Charlize Theron) who leads the five wives of the tyrannical Immortan Joe on a quest for freedom. Along the way, she is forced to form an alliance with former…
Film Review: Babyteeth — Effed by the Wind
First Scene Screenplay Festival
The plot of Shannon Murphy’s debut dramatic feature, Babyteeth is familiar: A spirited teen is diagnosed with terminal cancer and then falls in love with an eccentric boy who renews her lust for life or whatever, while her dysfunctional parents look on disapprovingly. But Murphy’s film, based on the hit play by Rita Kalnejais, is […]









