It’s sheer beauty. Genius. Redemptive. It’s everything a gothic story full of dark Romanticism should be. Some may find the romance here too tragic, but there is love in tragedy. For me, there was hope and light to the romantic ending that is just everything. I won’t say why ot...
Hollywood A First Look at Rust: Years After the On-Set Tragedy, the Western Is Finally Finished By Anthony Breznican30. Amélie (2001) It’s not a movie that many would traditionally classify as a romantic comedy, but Amélie defies most easy classification (unless you consider “French whimsy...
“Lyrical Drama and the ‘Turbid Mountebanks': Styles of Dialogue in Romantic and Renaissance Tragedy”. Computers and the Humanities , 28 (1994), 63–86.Burrows, J.F., Craig, D.H. (1994) Lyrical Drama and the ‘Turbid Mountebanks': Styles of Dialogue in Romantic and Renaissance Tragedy...
‘The Last Good Thing We Ever Had? Revising the Hollywood Renaissance’ in Contemporary American Cinema, edited by Linda Ruth Williams and Michael Hammond, 96–97. London; Maidenhead: McGraw-Hill, 2005. Box office returns that Neale presents for these two films reflect that the audience enjoyed...
inepicpoetry, turned to tragedy; poets of a lower type, who had set forth the doings of the ignoble in invectives, turned to comedy. The distinction is basic to theAristoteliandifferentiation between tragedy and comedy: tragedy imitates men who are better than the average and comedy men who ...
the elegant formality and artificiality of prevailing Classical forms of literature, such as the French Neoclassicaltragedyor the Englishheroic coupletin poetry. This new interest in relatively unsophisticated but overtly emotional literary expressions of the past was to be a dominant note in Romanticism...
the elegant formality and artificiality of prevailing Classical forms of literature, such as the French Neoclassicaltragedyor the Englishheroic coupletin poetry. This new interest in relatively unsophisticated but overtly emotional literary expressions of the past was to be a dominant note in Romanticism...