Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Spellbound" ¶ 15
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Spellbound and ),
In films such as The Wizard of Oz ( 1939 ), Spellbound ( 1945 ), The Manchurian Candidate ( 1962 ) and Inception ( 2010 ), the protagonists must extract vital clues from surreal dreams.
He followed that with the Hitchcock films Spellbound ( 1945 ) and The Paradine Case ( 1947 ), as well as Portrait of Jennie ( 1948 ), a vehicle for Jennifer Jones.
Among his other films were Spellbound ( 1945 ), The Paradine Case ( 1947 ), The Gunfighter ( 1950 ), Moby Dick ( 1956 ), On the Beach ( 1959 ), which brought to life the terrors of global nuclear war, The Guns of Navarone ( 1961 ), and Roman Holiday ( 1953 ), with Audrey Hepburn in her Oscar-winning role.
Carroll is perhaps best known for his roles in six Alfred Hitchcock films: Rebecca ( 1940 ), Suspicion ( 1941 ), Spellbound ( 1945 ), The Paradine Case ( 1947 ), Strangers on a Train ( 1951 ), and North by Northwest ( 1959 ).
With Spellbound ( 1945 ), director Alfred Hitchcock created perhaps the first psychological mystery thriller.
His notable Hollywood career earned him considerable fame, including Academy Awards for Spellbound ( 1945 ), A Double Life ( 1947 ), and Ben-Hur ( 1959 ), while his concert works were championed by such major artists as Jascha Heifetz, Gregor Piatigorsky, and János Starker.
Although Miklós Rózsa wrote most of the music for Spellbound ( 1945 ), some of Franz Waxman's music was also used, especially the scene where Gregory Peck and Ingrid Bergman are skiing.
* Spellbound ( 1916 film ), with Lois Meredith
* Spellbound ( 1941 film ), directed by John Harlow
* Spellbound ( 1945 film ), directed by Alfred Hitchcock and starring Ingrid Bergman and Gregory Peck

Spellbound and written
* Spellbound, a 1988 young adult novel written by Christopher Pike

Spellbound and by
Spellbound is a psychological mystery thriller film directed by Alfred Hitchcock in 1945.
* Spellbound Criterion Collection essay by Leonard Leff
* Spellbound Criterion Collection essay by Lesley Brill
* Spellbound Concerto by Miklós Rózsa Music to the film arranged by Rózsa
*" Spellbound by the Eternal Riddle ," The New York Times, Science Times, November 11, 2003
Perhaps what started Hitchcock's mind rolling was " The Song of the Dragon ", a short story by John Taintor Foote which had appeared as a two-part serial in the Saturday Evening Post in November 1921 ; Selznick, who owned the rights to it, had passed it on to Hitchcock from his unproduced story file during the filming of Spellbound.
Garnering financial support, he developed a live theatrical show, Spellbound, directed by Ivan Reitman, with music by Howard Shore and co-starring actress Jennifer Dale, a musical that combined a dramatic story and Henning's magic tricks.
This film's plot device of a wrongly accused man was one that Hitchcock used throughout his career, in such films as The Thirty-Nine Steps, Saboteur, To Catch a Thief, North by Northwest, Frenzy, The Wrong Man, Dial M for Murder ( wrongly accused woman ) and Spellbound.
* Spellbound ( 1999 film ), a Japanese film directed by Masato Harada
* Spellbound ( The Legend of the Ice People novel ), a 2008 novel by Margit Sandemo
* Spellbound ( 2008 novel ), a children's fantasy / magic novel by Anna Dale
* Spellbound ( 2003 novel ), a chick lit novel by Jane Green
* Spellbound ( Ten album ), a 1999 album by the hard rock group Ten
* " Spellbound " ( Ira Losco song ), a 2001 song by Ira Losco
* " Spellbound ", a 1975 song by the Split Enz on their album Mental Notes
* " Spellbound ", a 1976 song by the Bar-Kays from their album Too Hot to Stop
* " Spellbound ", a 1982 song by AC / DC from their album For Those About to Rock We Salute You

Spellbound and Emily
* " Spellbound ", the debut solo single of Australian singer Emily Williams, released in 2010

poem and ),
Winning the 1951 Best Picture Oscar and numerous other awards, the film was directed by Vincente Minnelli, featured many tunes of Gershwin, and concluded with an extensive, elaborate dance sequence built around the An American in Paris symphonic poem ( arranged for the film by Johnny Green ), costing $ 500, 000.
* Argument ( literature ), a brief summary, often in prose, of a poem or section of a poem or other work
Working with only eight letters ( or pro ... tr ... ntes ), Bowra conjured up a phrase that brilliantly develops the meaning and the euphony of the poem ( or proton ' ontrechontes ), describing luminescence " running along the forestays ".
Gale Owen-Crocker ( Professor of Anglo-Saxon, University of Manchester ) in The Four Funerals in Beowulf ( 2000 ) argues that a passage in the poem, commonly known as “ The Lay of the Last Survivor ” ( lines 2247 – 66 ), is an additional funeral.
The first section of the poem, ( the first fitt ), helps the poet illustrate the settings of the poem by introducing Hrothgar ’ s lineage.
Kevin Kiernan, professor of English at the University of Kentucky, is foremost in the computer digitalisation and preservation of the manuscript ( the Electronic Beowulf Project ), using fibre-optic backlighting to further reveal lost letters of the poem.
The poem appears in what is today called the Beowulf manuscript or Nowell Codex ( British Library MS Cotton Vitellius A. xv ), along with other works.
On the other hand, one might posit a poem which is composed by a literate scribe, who acquired literacy by way of learning Latin ( and absorbing Latinate culture and ways of thinking ), probably a monk and therefore profoundly Christian in outlook.
The battle of Högni and Heðinn is recorded in several medieval sources, including the skaldic poem Ragnarsdrápa, Skáldskaparmál ( section 49 ), and Gesta Danorum: king Högni's daughter, Hildr, is kidnapped by king Heðinn.
The main themes of the book are introduced in the opening poem ( the " Song of Hannah "): ( 1 ), the sovereignty of Yahweh, God of Israel ; ( 2 ), the reversal of human fortunes ; and ( 3 ), kingship.
They are of two kinds: the " parallel texts ", which are parallel developments of the corresponding passages in the base text, and the speeches of Elihu ( Chapters 32-37 ), which consist of a polemic against the ideas expressed elsewhere in the poem, and so are claimed to be interpretive interpolations.
* Manifesto Antropófago, ( Cannibal Manifesto in English ), a Brazilian poem
* invectives: often rude and sometimes downright obscene poems targeted at friends-turned-traitors ( e. g., poem 30 ), other lovers of Lesbia, well-known poets, politicians ( e. g., Julius Caesar ) and rhetors, including Cicero.
:::" One inning more to play " in standard baseball jargon means that the home team has one set of at-bats remaining: the poem is set just before the start of Mudville's final turn ( of a regulation game ), in the bottom of the ninth inning ( Mudville was the home team and the home team bats last in an inning ).
* In the film What Women Want ( 2000 ), Mel Gibson's character tries to block out his daughter's thoughts by muttering the poem under his breath.
* William Schuman composed an opera, The Mighty Casey ( 1953 ), based on the poem.
According to Lycophron's Alexandra ( 808 ) and John Tzetzes ' scholia on the poem ( 795-808 ), however, Circe used magical herbs to bring Odysseus back to life after he had been killed by Telegonus.
His most successful poem, The True-Born Englishman ( 1701 ), defended the king against the perceived xenophobia of his enemies, satirising the English claim to racial purity.
In the Epic poetry | epic poem Nibelungenlied ( Song of the Nibelungs ), Siegfried is famously stabbed in the back by Hagen ( legend ) | Hagen.
During his final school years he began writing his poetry in notebooks, the first poem dated 27 April ( 1930 ), is entitled " Osiris, come to Isis ".

0.720 seconds.