The suspense Spielberg shows in differs from other shark films. Viewers never see the shark until about two-thirds into the movie. However, the fear of the shark’s existence is conveyed through the predator’s point of view, the leitmotif of the shark, and spatial irony.
When viewers are shown the story through a character’s point of view in the film, we tend to identify with that character’s thoughts and emotions. When the characters are placed at a disadvantage, the audience empathizes with their frustration and joins them in their anger when they face injustice. However, in Jaws, the viewers cannot empathize with the shark’s thoughts or emotions. Whenever the shark’s POV is shown, and it sees the surface of the water, we are terrified that it might attack the person depicted. This is because we put ourselves in the shoes of the potential prey – humans. The viewers are only left with the fear of the shark’s uncontrollable instinct.
John Williams’ two-note theme turns sound into fear itself. The same music that appears before the shark’s appearance signals to the audience that the shark is coming. Hearing the sound becomes more terrifying than seeing the shark. The sound is made by only two notes (E-F, F-F#), but this is the fastest way for the audience to notice the shark’s presence. This non-diegetic sound is John Williams’ way of communicating with the viewers and hinting at the next scene.
Most horror movies heighten tension in dark, small spaces where you can’t escape. On the other hand, this film sets its terror in the vast openness of the ocean. Under the bright sun, the vast ocean looks endless, yet it becomes an open space where there’s no place to hide. Audiences feel exposed, left between viewing the safety of the surface and the unknown depths below. Spielberg uses the contrast between the surface and the underwater to amplify this suspense. The viewers always hear the laughter above the water, which provides warmth; however, when the camera shows underwater, the silence and shadow immediately heighten the tension. While the camera lets us gaze at the unreachable surface, the viewers remain trapped in this fear.
Jaws reminds the audience that fear doesn’t need to be seen, heard, or even real to hold us captive – it only needs to be imagined.
Upon rewatching Kubrick’s Full Metal Jacket, I thought back to our discussion about ideology, particularly during one famous scene. A Colonel asks the main character, Private Joker, “You write ‘Born to Kill’ on your helmet and you wear a peace button. What’s that supposed to be, some kind of sick joke?” A few lines later, Joker responds, “I think I was trying to suggest something about the duality of man, sir.” This particular scene has stuck with me ever since I first watched the film, but having now almost completed Film 101, I feel like I can view it through a new lens.
Before going into this scene, I think it is important to address a glaring ideological aspect to the film- simply the fact that it is a war film. War films, or the idea of the “anti-war film”, is a very debated topic. Many believe that there is no such thing as a true anti-war film, and I mostly agree with that- I remember reading an article about how they spike our adrenaline and excite us. For example, there is a claim that the first Top Gun film significantly increased navy recruitment (albeit I don’t know the truth behind that). The ideology of these action-packed and violent films may be an attempt to display to horror of war, but they often have the negative effect of creating an idealistic and heroic version of it instead. While I am not preaching to undermine all of the brave war heroes of the past, this is not what should be fed into the minds of impressionable teenagers. War is hell. In an article I read in a high school politics class about Vietnam, a veteran talked about war as paradoxical, indescribable, and the part that some war films are hesitant to show about the side they are painting as the “good” side: the vileness of human nature. This is what I believe should be shown in war films- and this is why I like Kubrick’s.
Now, back to talking about the scene in Full Metal Jacket. If any scene in film were to address a paradox of war, this may be the most direct. Private Joker brandishes a pin of a peace sign, originally an anti-war symbol, while wearing a helmet that says “Born to Kill”. How can someone be both anti and pro-war? Well, Joker answers that: “I think I was trying to suggest something about the duality of man, sir.” One of the largest faults of proclaimed anti-war films is in making things black-and-white. That’s not how life is, and that is certainly not how war is. No one side or person is “good” or “bad”, rather, we all have darkness and (most of us) empathy inside of us. Even Private Joker, the main character we are inclined to root for, has his moments in the film that make you hate him- after all, he is no hero, he is just a man who is a soldier in a war. I appreciate Kubrick’s acknowledgment of this in his war films.
If I am talking about Full Metal Jacket, I feel the need to also talk about my favorite war film: Kubrick’s Paths of Glory. This film is awful- not in how it’s made, of course, but because it is made so well. There is no happy ending for the characters, in fact (spoiler alert), three soldiers who are innocent (in terms of committing any war crimes) are executed at the hands of their own leaders because a top general did not want to admit his own faults. This is the reality of war! People suck! And for a moment, this is the only feeling the film leaves with you- until the final scene. There is a bar of random men shown, with a female German hostage brought out to sing. At first, the soldiers are catcalling her and finding humor in her fear and tears. However, as soon as she finally starts singing, the whole mood changes. The soldiers begin to grow solemn. And then they begin to cry. These soldiers have wives, mothers, sisters, and children that they have left behind, much like this girl. Beyond just acknowledging her humanity, they now feel sympathy for her. This is hope for humanity in the midst of all of its faults which have been shown throughout the film. This is an ideology that I resonate with.
If you are taking Film 101, you have likely heard of the app Letterboxd. If you are a user of the app, you likely have felt the experience of watching a film and wondering at some point throughout the movie what your Letterboxd review would be, rather than fully enjoying the movie. Launched in 2011 in New Zealand by Matt Buchanan and Karl von Randow, Letterboxd serves as both a tool for cinephiles and casual movie-goers alike to log films they watch, stay up to date with their friends films, write their own reviews, and most famously users can post their top four favorite films on their profile. This top-four film feature has become an iconic marking of the Letterboxd platform, becoming the foundation of their red-carpet interviews or the new go-to icebreaker question amongst young film lovers.
Still, the demographic of the app is relatively young. The biggest age cohort for Letterboxd members is 18-24, followed by 25-35. The platform has also grown massively in recent years, with help from the isolated nature of the Covid-19 pandemic. In 2020, the app only had 1.8 million users, and in 2025 it reported 17 million users worldwide. Louis Chilton of The Independent examines how Letterboxd’s impact on younger generations can shape cinema in the future. Letterboxd has provided a way to see what movies younger generations are actually watching, and enjoying. The app’s top 250 most popular films “gives valuable insight into what sort of films will be considered the classics of the future, and indeed which classics from years past look set to endure” (Chilton). The app does more than tell users what to watch, however. It provides a chance for conversation and community to happen. In a world in which community spaces are constantly being diminished due to social media, Letterboxd allows a more informal style of cinema discussion. Any person can share their thought on a film, organize a list of their favorites, or comment on another review. Critiques are not exclusive to the critics anymore. This is not only exciting, but neccessary, because “if cinema is to survive into the future, it must adapt to a world that revolves around social media, and Letterboxd is, so far, the best attempt to reckon with this” (Chilton).
With any social media platform, there are concerns on how that can change the natural habits of a behavior. Rhys Hope, an A-level student studying film, expresses his concerns with the app on his blog Film East. While he acknowledges the app’s ability to connect cinephiles with each other and introduce new directors, writers, genres, and styles to users, he also shares how “since using Letterboxd, I have made a conscious effort to watch over 100 films each year, but I’m unsure who — or what — this goal is for.” (Hope). Hope’s sentiment stuck out to me because my 2025 new years goal was to watch 100 movies as well, a task I took as inspiration from a friend who completed the challenge in 2024. Due to a very film-heavy summer break and a convenient Film 101 course, I have already reached that goal, but I cannot help but wonder how the movies I chose to watch in this past year have been influenced by my Letterboxd account, and if I would have even given myself that goal in the first place if I did not have the app. I have always enjoyed the ability to organize and track my viewing habits, and compare with my peers our opinions on films, but I feel more influenced to choose a movie based on what is trending or what is deemed a good movie and not what I am in the mood to watch. After every Film 101 screening I have witnessed an immediate rush of Letterboxd reviews amongst other classmates accounts, but not once has there been a discussion after the screening. I am not criticizing myself or my classmates for getting up and moving on with our lives, but in a room full of people with ideas and excitement to talk about a piece of media we consumed, I find it fascinating that we love to log a few sentences into our phones and have not considered turning to the person sitting next to us and asking, “What did you think about that?”
The community power of Letterboxd holds power, but it still confines you to a screen. With that, “choosing your four favourite movies has gone from a fun way to show off the films you love to a meticulously crafted presentation of how well you appreciate, understand and respect the artform of filmmaking” (Hope). With any social media platform, theres a multitude of reasons for advancement in connectivity. You will find stories of families reuniting or failing businesses finding success again and much more. Letterboxd is simply about movies but it is also about creativity, self-expression, and exploration. The top-four feature can mean a multitude of things to different users, but just as Hope expresses, Letterboxd is not immune to the fact that it is a social media platform, and its impact on the self-esteem and effort put in by users, especially young users, is still seen in various ways. Letterboxd has been around for a decade and a half, but as it is expanding rapidly, I am curious to see how the app survives future social trends. I hope that it continues to boost a love for cinema in the younger cohort, but not at the cost of film becoming a performative art rather than a genuine interest.
Over break, I indulged in watching many films, with one of them being Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Infinity Castle. Having already read the manga, I was eager to see how the studio would translate such a deep arc into animation, especially since there had been so much discussion online about its production, given that it took Ufotable 3.5 years to complete the film. Needless to say, the animation lived up to the wait, and after seeing the scale of the animation, I now understand why the next part is projected for release in 2027.
This made me curious about what truly goes into animating a film like this. I always assumed animation was a straightforward, digital, hand-drawn process. However, according to an article by Brandefy, Infinity Castle relies on a “seamless fusion of traditional 2D drawings and advanced 3D animation”. While many anime today incorporate CG, Ufotable has perfected a method where digital elements enhance movement rather than disrupt it. Their shots feature dynamic camera paths, detailed backgrounds, layered lighting, and fluid character motion that feel unified rather than separate.
One of Ufotable’s most powerful techniques is “satsuei”, the Japanese term for compositing. This stage merges characters, effects, backgrounds, lighting, shadows, and camera movement into a single frame. Ufotable approaches compositing the way a live-action film crew approaches cinematography. They adjust lighting effects, atmospheric layers, and depth of field to create scenes that feel immersive and alive.
This explains why film looked the way it did. The shifting architecture of the castle, the pace of the battle sequences, and the glowing breathing techniques are not just aesthetic choices. They are the result of months spent animating one scene, then refining it through digital layering until it feels alive. When the film moves through twisting hallways or throws characters through collapsing rooms, the animation isn’t just depicting motion, it’s essentially engineering it.
Understanding this process made me appreciate the film even more. What seemed like a simple viewing experience is actually the outcome of years of technical labor. With that in mind, the wait for the next part feels justified.
Tonight marks the last Cinematheque of the year, with the cult classic Monty Python and the Holy Grail (Gilliam and Jones, 1975). I’ve only seen this movie once before, in 6th grade. On re-watch, I found lots of fun tidbits I did not get on the first watch. Every scene is filled with iconic bits, from “‘It’s just a flesh wound” to the Holy Hand Grenade.
The entire movie is very clever, even more so when you realize that the film was working on a tight budget of around 400K. Most of the gags and jokes in the film originated because the filmmakers did not have enough money. For example, the film ends the way it does because there was not room in the budget for an epic battle scene.
During the opening credits, the subtitle bit was created because they did not have the money for a fancy title card.
On second watch, I was able to appreciate the fast-talking dialogue and slightly more subtle jokes. Overall, I highly enjoyed the final movie of the Emory Cinematheque.
Recently, I watched 10 Things I Hate About You for the first time, and I couldn’t stop thinking about something we discussed in my philosophy class. I have always been curious about how different people make sense of life, and now that I know a bit of philosophy, I notice those ideas in films more than ever. One concept that stood out to me is Jean-Paul Sartre’s idea of bad faith.
Sartre argues that people are not born with a fixed personality or purpose. He believes that existence precedes essence, which means we become who we are based on the choices we make, not because of something built into us from birth. Given this, Sartre thinks many people fall into bad faith. Bad faith happens when we accept labels, roles, and expectations from society instead of choosing our identities for ourselves. Sartre defines this as not just deception, but self-betrayal as you become a character in someone else’s script.
After learning this, I realized that the idea of bad faith matches perfectly with Kat’s character in 10 Things I Hate About You. Kat refuses to be the kind of girl others expect her to be. She does not care about fitting in, she ignores typical dating rules, and she does not change her personality to make others comfortable. People think she is rude or strange, but Sartre would probably say she is the most authentic person in the film. She is choosing her own identity instead of borrowing one from the world around her. Her behavior is not an act for attention, it is her choosing to live truthfully, even when it costs her popularity/acceptance.
This makes me think about Sartre’s claim more seriously. Is living under roles and expectations always a bad thing? Following social norms can make life easier. It helps you avoid judgment and blend in, and sometimes that feels like a comfortable life. But if you never express who you really are, then are you actually living your own life or just copying what others want you to be?
I am still unsure about where I stand. Part of me understands why people choose comfort. Another part of me agrees with Sartre, who suggests that living authentically might be harder but also more meaningful. What I do know is that 10 Things I Hate About You illustrated Sartre’s philosophy in a straighforward way that I enjoyed.
In researching RRR and other Tollywood movies this week, I kept thinking about the ending section of the movie, in which Raju Rama is shown to be an incarnation of the actual Hindu God Rama. In a Western cultural context, this seemed absurd––if a character in an action movie turned out to secretly have been Jesus or Moses the entire time, it would undoubtedly be met with eye rolls and and bad reviews from the audience (if played straight).
In RRR, Raju Rama being Lord Rama just happens as part of the movie. Why? What? I needed to know.
There is no prohibition or social taboo against presenting Gods on screen in South India, and there is a concern that younger people do not relate to Hinduism or it’s Gods. Therefore, to get them back in the fold, and to present broadly-known cultural agendas on screen, there are Gods. A lot of Gods.
I’m currently watching a multi-episode documentary about the Nazi regime and the Second World War. It traces Adolf Hitler’s life from his birth in Braunau am Inn, through his years in the German army during World War I, and on to the rise of both his political career and his party, all the way to his death.
According to the article, the documentary is meant to appeal especially to a young audience through its combination of original archival footage and newly staged scenes. According to surveys, apparently 63% of Millennials and Gen Z in the United States do not know that over 6 million Jewish people were murdered in the Holocaust. The documentary was deliberately created to close this massive knowledge gap, especially among young people. However, this makes me wonder: in such a case, hasn’t the education system failed? Shouldn’t it be the responsibility of teachers to convey such a dark and important chapter of human history to students? That does not seem to be the case, and so a by Netflix produced documentary must now take over this job.
However, I see the problem that films and series cannot treat such a topic in a sufficiently thorough or approachable way. For such an important topic like this they should be used to build on existing knowledge and to gain new perspectives. Simply watching one documentary about National Socialism and thinking that this is enough is a misconception. A subject like this needs to be worked through carefully, and the historical background must be fully understood. I consider this knowledge extremely important, especially now that fascist tendencies in the politics of some Western countries are increasingly resurfacing.
The film The Shack, directed by Stuart Hazeldine and based on William P. Young’s best-selling novel, explores how one man’s story of tragedy transforms into a journey of faith and spiritual restoration. The film tells the story of Mack Philips, a grieving father whose faith and sense of purpose collapse after the tragic loss of his young daughter, Missy. After Missy’s murder, Mack struggles with overwhelming guilt for not protecting her, as well as the inability to forgive her murderer. In The Shack, Hazeldine argues that refusing to forgive keeps individuals trapped in isolation, preventing them from experiencing emotional healing and building meaningful relationships. Through Mack’s spiritual and emotional journey, the film shows how guilt and resentment have distanced him from his own family and God, and how forgiveness allows him to reconnect with love and community.
The first stage of Mack’s transformation began when he realized that judging others, an act which belongs to God alone, contradicts God’s divine love for people. When the personified figure of “Wisdom” asked Mack how well he could distinguish good and evil, he was certain that he could. However, Mack stated that his father, who had abused his mother, deserved punishment. Then, he was shown a vision — a young boy being beaten by his own father. At that moment, Mack understood that the boy he had judged was actually his father as a child, and that his judgment had been wrong. He realized that a human judgment is often limited and often fails to grasp the whole story. “Wisdom” then deepened the lesson by asking Mack to decide which of his children should go to heaven and which should go to hell. Mack couldn’t make a decision and asked “Wisdom” to take him instead. Through this moment, Mack came to understand the nature of God’s unconditional and sacrificial love. He loves every person, even when they are sinful. God won’t be selective with His children, but rather will love each one equally. By realizing God’s love and realizing that judgment belongs to God alone, Mack takes his first step toward forgiveness, learning that love cannot coexist with condemnation.
Mack’s journey enters its second phase when he begins to see how his anger and guilt have pushed him away from others. His rage over Missy’s killer blinded him to the pain within his own family, including the trauma of his abusive father and Kate’s feelings of guilt, as well as to even God’s enduring love that continued to reach out to him. The anger he held onto dragged him down, preventing him from connecting with those around him. Mack’s wife, Nan, and his children needed him, but he was so lost in his own sadness that he was unable to help his family through their own suffering. God reveals to Mack that holding onto hatred isolates him from every meaningful relationship in his life. Through this realization, Mack learns that forgiveness isn’t about dismissing the evil, but about releasing the pain so that reconciliation can happen. God tells him that sin is its own punishment; therefore, neither God nor Mack should punish people for it. When Mack finally chooses to forgive Missy’s murderer, he starts to open his heart again — to the love of God, the love of a father, and the love that binds his family. After Mack’s spiritual journey, he was finally able to share his experience of meeting God with Nan and help Kate work through her guilt and sadness. Freed from the weight of the guilt, Mack was finally able to live each day with genuine joy, as forgiveness eventually paved the way for emotional and spiritual healing.
In The Shack, Hazeldine transforms a story of unbearable loss into a profound reflection of love, forgiveness, and faith. Mack’s journey reminds viewers that forgiveness not only frees one from hatred but also enables building stronger relationships with those around them. The film allows the audience to witness Mack’s inner struggle, allowing them to walk beside him through anger, grief, and, ultimately, forgiveness. The Shack traces Mack’s spiritual journey and growth through his week-long encounter with the Trinity, allowing viewers to realize how a genuine understanding of God’s love can reshape the way one lives and loves.
In all honesty, I did not come into the screening for RRR with an open mind. Professor Zinman tried his best to hype the movie up to us in class but I already knew that there was no way that I would like, or more importantly even stay awake, during a three hour long film in a foreign language; so I brought a full water bottle of Diet Coke with me to help me try to get through it with caffeine. Little did I know how much of a banger this movie was going to be. Once again, Professor Zinman gave us an absolute gem and I loved all 187 minutes of it. I had a very skeptical idea of what the movie would be like, especially after the video we watched in class of the two men singing a song in another Indian film… wasn’t my cup of tea, and I didn’t think I could handle a whole screening of that. But every song and dance, war scene, bad CGI, everything was so beyond entertaining in RRR. I was smiling the whole time, and in hindsight, I would’ve been just fine without my caffeine. One of my favorite scenes was their big dance performance at the castle party, so for my searcher research I found a video of the director talking about the process of putting the Naatu Naatu scene together. It was so elaborate and exciting to watch, so I think it was super interesting to hear about the choreography and thoughts behind the creation of that specific scene. He talked about the use of costumes, like snapping the suspenders, and how even though it was a great upbeat song for the audience, that it was also a fight scene between the groups and how the choreographer used that concept. Just an incredibly interesting video about how much effort went into that moment and how many different aspects were intertwined to make it such a great movie.