Reference no: EM133329300
Question: How difficult would this article be for the average college student? How difficult would this article be for the average high school senior? What does the author focus on in the article? According to the author, what does the soundtrack to Crash tell us to do? What does the author claim the soundtrack signals? According to the author, what does Crush strive to show? What does the author then claim about Asians? According to the author, how is the moment when the Asian is run over treated in the film? By Contrast, whose death does the author say the film more seriously? What does the author claim we are witnessing when this character dies? According to the author, what role do the other Asians provide in the film? Answer:
1. For an average college student it will be less difficult, about 20% difficult.
2. For an average high school senior it will less difficult, around 45% difficult.
3. The author in the article focus on the score, "Mark lsham's music has really given it the feel that I didn't get from just seeing the visuals."
4. According to the author, the Crash's soundtrack tells us when to laugh and when to cry.
5. The author claims that the soundtrack signals the viewers of the film the moment a character is redeemed.
6. Crash strives to show thatjust as culpability belongs equally to all racial groups, so, too, is redemption equally available.
7. The author claims that the promissory note goes unpaid when it comes to Asians.
8. According to the author, the Chinaman's near-demise is treated in a markedly different manner than is the later death of Peter, which also, initially, takes place to country music.
9. The death of Peter was the person the author say the film is more seriously.
10. The author claims, we know we have just witnessed is the death of "the son" in a film chockablock with Christian imagery, and everything, of course, looks up from there as almost all the characters one by one mend their ways by the film's end.