Tuesday, May 14, 2019

Unit 5: movie review

Hye ...we meet again i want share my favourit movie hahaahah and waht i like and what dislike okay first i want show you the background filem


                               MOVIE REVIEW


MOVIE TITLE         : The Karate Kid

GENRE                   : Action

DURATION             : The Karate Kid -133 minutes  
   
YOUR RATING       : 9/10

DIRECTED BY        : Harald Zwart

ACTORS                 : Jackie chan, Jaden Smith,                 Wenwen Han, Rongguang Yu,  
               Zhenwei Wang, Yi Zhoa, Zhensu Wu, Ji Wang

SETTING TIME       : 16 October 2009 , 11 June 2010

PLACE                   : Beijing , China



1.SUMMARY OF THE MOVIE
When his mother's career results in a move to China, 12-year-old Dre Parker (Jaden Smith) finds that he is a stranger in a strange land. Though he knows a little karate, his fighting skills are no match for Cheng, the school bully. Dre finds a friend in Mr. Han (Jackie Chan), a maintenance man who is also a martial-arts master. Mr. Han teaches Dre all about kung fu in the hope that Dre will be able to face down Cheng and perhaps win the heart of a pretty classmate named Mei Ying.

2.CHARATES IN THE MOVIE
Jackie chan as Mr. Han
Jaden Smith as Dre Parker
Wenwen Han
Rongguang Yu
Zhenwei Wang
Ji Wang




















>






      what i liked             this movie
-I like because  he try what she loves and be strong for lover,mother,teachers       and people around and do not give up on her dreams

          WHAT I DISLKED THIS                          MOVIE
--        I disliked because have a group of bully at the school and bully student the weak like Dre Parker
  
   MY FAVOURITE PART
-
Despite Han's insistence that he has earned respect for his performance in the tournament, Dre convinces Han to use his fire cupping technique to mend his leg, in order to see the tournament to the end. Dre returns to the arena, where he confronts Cheng. Dre delivers impressive blows, but Cheng counters with a debilitating strike to Dre's already injured leg. Dre struggles to get up, and adopts the one-legged form he first learned from the woman on the mountain, attempting to use the reflection technique to manipulate Cheng's movements. Cheng charges Dre, but Dre flips, and catches Cheng with a kick to his head, winning the tournament, along with the respect of Cheng and his classmates, both for himself and Mr. Han.


i like recommend to someone love fighter and kung fu


NAME 1 MOVIE SIMILIAR THEME WITH THIS MOVIE


The Next Karate Kid (also known as The Karate Kid Part IV) is a 1994 American martial art drama starring Pat Morita and Hilary Swank. It is the fourth installment in The Karate Kid film series. It was directed by Christopher Cain, written by Mark W. Lee, and produced by Jerry Weintraub, with music by Bill Conti. It is the first film in the series not to feature Ralph Macchio in the lead role as Daniel LaRusso.


MORAL  OR LESSON FROM THIS MOVIE

The antagonist in a movie always seem to get the "upper" hand over the protagonist at the onset; and Cheng and his bully friends do that to Dre. But it is not long before they get knocked down a peg or two when Mr. Han appears on the scene. Their disrespect of Dre and Mei Ying also creates some embarrassment (knocked down) in front of Master Li. It is not until they admit that Dre has learned a great deal and thus respects some of the things in their culture that they hold valuable (Kung Fu),that they bow to Dre and Mr. Han. Ironically, their physical "low bow" is psychologically "getting back up." As I mentioned earlier, and explain extensively in the book, a well-rounded protagonist has multiple goals that test the moral premise's truth in different ways. Each goal has its own story thread, and its own major turning points. To illustrate that let's examine Dre's . Kung Fu thread and his opposing . Romantic story thread. Notice how the threads are combined and organized with respect to each other. The chart at the end of this blog shows how the romantic thread moves earlier in the overall story to get all its beats in, leaving the majority of Act 3 for the more visual and visceral Kung Fu thread. 


                   

No comments:

Post a Comment