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From PhalkeFactory
  • Campbell's "Follow your bliss" philosophy was influenced by the Sinclair Lewis character Babbitt, who, in the book's last page, laments, "I've never done
    27 KB (4,208 words) - 20:06, 26 April 2006
  • ...epertoire of the stage,6 despite the belief, in France as well as in the U.S.A., that “stage is all talk, screen is all images.” As Rick Altman also Indeed, early screenwriting manuals, in both France and the U.S.A.,19 actually insist on the importance of not writing too much dialogue, as
    695 KB (110,553 words) - 04:32, 27 April 2006
  • Even Lewis Mumford, one of the more intelligent technological critics, realizes the Be Mumford, Lewis. Technics and Civilization. 1934. (New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, Inc.,
    803 KB (128,263 words) - 16:43, 24 May 2006
  • ...epertoire of the stage,6 despite the belief, in France as well as in the U.S.A., that “stage is all talk, screen is all images.” As Rick Altman also Indeed, early screenwriting manuals, in both France and the U.S.A.,19 actually insist on the importance of not writing too much dialogue, as
    855 KB (137,726 words) - 17:02, 22 May 2006
  • Stam, Robert, Robert Burgoyne and Sandy Flitterman-Lewis. New Vocabularies in Film Semiotics: Structuralism, Post-Structuralism and
    129 KB (20,642 words) - 22:48, 8 July 2006