Essay sample library > A Sense of Belonging in ‘Strictly Ballroom’ by Luhrmann, ‘Nineteen Minutes’ by Picoult and ‘Lament of Hsi-Chun’ by Waley

A Sense of Belonging in ‘Strictly Ballroom’ by Luhrmann, ‘Nineteen Minutes’ by Picoult and ‘Lament of Hsi-Chun’ by Waley

2023-04-14 20:28:59

Person's sense of belonging to an entity is combined with various elements that determine its identity. "19 Minutes" by Director Baz Luhrmann, "19 Minutes" by Jodi Picoult and "La La La" translated by Arthur Waley all investigated the attribution of personality adaptation and attribution to experience (LIST THEM) Something is bad influence of sensation. Several groups of communities are isolated for their opinion. "Strictly Ballroom" created by Baz Luhrmann in 1992 is an Australian romantic comedy movie made in the form of a pseudo documentary.

Baz Luhrmann's Director Strictly Ballroom (1993) and W. H Auden's 1939 poem "Refugees Bruce" all convey different concepts about the subject rather than attribution. Both texts emphasize the adverse effects of individuals' positive forces and belonging to isolation and alienation. Strictly Ballroom is a mixed fairy tale romantic style focused on post-modern imitation, gorgeous and fantasy world of ballroom dancing and fixed characters living in it. Using various film techniques, I drew a family realism for the artificial world of the Australian dance federation, and created scenes to develop interpersonal relationships and surrealism. This movie expresses the extreme value of what belongs to than belonging, based on the alternative of opposite opinion and contrasting personality.

Based on a consistent proposal of communication dance, the Australian movie Strictly Ballroom, supervised by Baz Luhrmann in 1992, clearly stated that it belongs to rather than through the influence of several roles. The main character of the movie, Scott Hastings, seeks to express his personality in the ballroom community. As he was anxious to become Pan Pacific champion, he was forced to jump out of his style in the opening scene considered arrogant by the dance hall community, so he was not accepted as his way. Instead, he refuses to go their way, so he is isolated from everyone.