Ludacris Appears Confused As Nelly Suggests They Tour Together & Fans Can’t Stop Laughing — Newslanes

It was the 2000s all over again! Ludacris and Nelly’s throwback themed ‘Verzuz’ battle was everything fans wanted, including several new song drops! Ludacris, 42, and Nelly, 45, know how to deliver on nostalgia! The hitmakers were the latest duo to jump in on Timbaland‘s “Verzuz” rap battles, and despite technical difficulties, slayed for a […]

via Ludacris Appears Confused As Nelly Suggests They Tour Together & Fans Can’t Stop Laughing — Newslanes

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood: how true is the story? — Auralcrave

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, Quentin Tarantino’s ninth film released in the summer of 2019, had passed on everyone’s lips in the months prior to the release not only for the amazing cast put together, but above all because it seemed to be a film based on the murders that Charles Manson’s “family” carried […]

via Once Upon a Time in Hollywood: how true is the story? — Auralcrave

Film Analysis: Life is Beautiful — news

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 […]

via Film Analysis: Life is Beautiful — news

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

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 […]

via Film analysis: Man With A Movie Camera (1929) and The Birth of A Nation (1915) — FLORENCE ROSINI | WRITER | PRODUCER |