If you are a Hollywood filmmaker and are rebuilding this video for the audience of the 21st century, what kind of celebrities do you play and where do you set the scene? Compare or contrast your choice with at least one given version of the course
I am a Hollywood filmmaker and I will rework this Shakespeare video for the 21st century audience, I will use the famous actor Johnny Depp as a speaker. Established in Denver, Colorado. This scene. Man, "I think Johnny Depp is a good speaker, I have connected him to" Seven Men "of William Shakespeare After walking to school, the lover walks and writes soldiers It leads to the battlefield, then shows justice to the courtroom and then slows down. The old man walks with a cane.
This event will celebrate the end of the Holywood Golden Age and the beginning of the roar of the 1920s. "Suicide, rape, murder is not an ominous plot of a movie before the holiday, written by writer Michel Vogel In the book" Hollywood Babylon "published in 1975, writer Kenneth Anger till today is Hollywood's I took the death of Olive Thomas as the first scandal to define the dark side, so in the Hollywood studios the contract contains "moral conditions".
Between 1929 and 1934, a state-of-the-art Hollywood movie was produced. The roar of the 1920s changed the screen and reinforced and synthesized a pleasant experimental attitude towards sex and sex in real life. Stereotypes of family values, purity, religion, and gender are not so - there are women who are refreshing and without gender. However, like the join twins, cultural changes are strongly opposed to their conservatives. In "Design for Life" (1933), the heroine has two lovers and has chosen to hold both. Torch singer (1933) featured a married mother and Caucasian (1934) involved illegal abortion. In Queen Christina (1933), Gretta Garbo played a bisexual prince wearing gender. Film critic Mike LaSalle said about the movie as follows. "This is one of the best exams of gender identity and one of the most humane movies in the history of Hollywood." In Vanities (1934) In a murder case, the heroine whispers the ode to marijuana