Hello all,
Thanks for coming out and watching the 2009 Academy Award Best Picture, the Hurt Locker. Some things that you might want to comment on in your paragraph:
A. Chris Hedges who wrote the book, War is a Force That Gives Us Meaning, has a quote at the beginning of the movie that talks about war being a drug. What is your belief about this idea of Hedges?
B. What examples demonstrate how frustrating the Iraq war is on the average soldier?
C. How did this film make you feel? Did this film create any empathy for the young men and women that are fighting in Iraq?
Anything else that you think is relevant bring up in your post!
Yosh
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
Thursday, June 3, 2010
Letters from Iwo Jima
Hello all,
Thanks for attending the after school showing of Letters from Iwo Jima. I hope that it gave you a sense of the mindset/psyche of the Japanese during World War II especially since you had the background to this mindset beforehand. The ideas of State Shinto, Bushido, Kokutai, etc. all were demonstrated beautifully in this film.
Some ideas that you could reflect on might be:
A. We generalized in class about the "Japanese" as a collective unit. Not as individuals. What did you see when the soldiers in Saigo's unit were told to commit suicide in the cave after Suribachi had fallen? Did all the individuals embrace death? Was it "light as a feather"?
B. What parallels did you observe between this film and Freedom Writers and Joyeux Noel? Were there similar messages in all three films?
C. What did you observe regarding specific examples of ultra-nationalism?
D. Was the idea or way of life regarding honor embedded thoughout this film?
This is just some help in starting your reflection. Feel free to write beyond my small list of ideas.
Yosh
Thanks for attending the after school showing of Letters from Iwo Jima. I hope that it gave you a sense of the mindset/psyche of the Japanese during World War II especially since you had the background to this mindset beforehand. The ideas of State Shinto, Bushido, Kokutai, etc. all were demonstrated beautifully in this film.
Some ideas that you could reflect on might be:
A. We generalized in class about the "Japanese" as a collective unit. Not as individuals. What did you see when the soldiers in Saigo's unit were told to commit suicide in the cave after Suribachi had fallen? Did all the individuals embrace death? Was it "light as a feather"?
B. What parallels did you observe between this film and Freedom Writers and Joyeux Noel? Were there similar messages in all three films?
C. What did you observe regarding specific examples of ultra-nationalism?
D. Was the idea or way of life regarding honor embedded thoughout this film?
This is just some help in starting your reflection. Feel free to write beyond my small list of ideas.
Yosh
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)