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5.22: Review

  • Page ID
    134190
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    Whether a book or movie\(^{139}\) is a rotten tomato or a brilliant work of art, if people are reading or watching it, it's worth critiquing. A decent book/movie/TV show review should entertain, persuade, and inform, providing an original opinion without giving away too much of the plot.

    A great review can be a work of art in its own right. Read on to learn how to analyze a book/movie, come up with an interesting thesis and write a review as entertaining as your source material.

    Gather basic facts about the book/movie/TV show and Take Notes. You can do this before or after you watch/read the movie/book, but you should definitely do it before you write the review, because you'll need to weave the facts into your review as you write. Here's what you need to know: The title and year; the director's or author’s name; the names of the lead actors/characters; the genre.

    Start with a compelling fact or opinion on the book/movie. You want to get the reader hooked immediately. This sentence needs to give them a feel for your review and the work – is it good, great, terrible, or just okay? – and keep them reading.

    Give a clear, well-established opinion early on. Don't leave the reader guessing whether you like the book/movie or not. Let them know early on, so that you can spend the rest of the time "proving" your rating.

    • Using stars, a score out of 10 or 100, or the simple thumbs-up and thumbs-down is a quick way to give your thoughts. You then write about why you chose that rating.
    • Great Movie: "It is the rare movie that succeeds on almost every level, where each character, scene, costume, and joke firing on all cylinders to make a film worth repeated viewings."
    • Bad Movie: "It doesn't matter how much you enjoy kung-fu and karate films: with 47 Ronin, you're better off saving your money, your popcorn, and time."
    • Okay Movie: "I loved the wildly uneven Interstellar far more than I should have, but that doesn't mean it is perfect. Ultimately, the utter awe and spectacle of space swept me through the admittedly heavy-handed plotting and dialogue."

    Write your review. This is where taking notes during the movie really pays off. No one cares about your opinion if you can't give facts that support your argument.

    Move beyond the obvious plot analysis. Plot is just one piece of a movie and shouldn't dictate your entire review. Some movies don't have great or compelling plots, but that doesn't mean the movie itself is bad. Other things to focus on include:

    • Cinematography: "Her is a world drenched in color, using bright, soft reds and oranges alongside calming whites and grays that both builds, and slowly strip away, the feelings of love between the protagonists. Every frame feels like a painting worth sitting in."
    • Tone: "Despite discussing mental health, Jenny Lawson’s witty script keeps humor alive in her books.
    • Music and Sound: "No Country for Old Men's bold decision to skip music entirely pays off in spades. The eerie silence of the desert, punctuated by the brief spells of violent, up-close-and-personal sound effects of hunter and hunted, keeps you constantly on the edge of your seat."
    • Acting: "Gaga tears into the role with all the power and emotional intuition she brings to her music.”\(^{140}\)

    Bring your review full circle in the ending. Give the review some closure, usually by trying back to your opening fact. Remember, people read reviews to decide whether or not they should watch a movie/book/TV show. End on a sentence that tells them.

    Questions:

    • Have you used certain web sites – Yelp, Amazon, LinkedIn, Angie’s List – for reviewing work or an item? What makes a good review?

    Want An Example?

    Example: Remember the Titans Review \(^{141}\)

    The movie “Remember the Titans,” is about the segregation and football. It starts when two different schools, black and white students, combine their football team. The season before their senior year they all must go to a summer football camp together and join as one strong team to win the state champion. However, during this time they are not fond of each other and fight all the time. The coaches bring them together as one and each game is an adventure especially playing all white teams. In the end of the movie one of the captains gets severely hurt and cannot finish the game, but at the end the team finishes the job and takes home the champion.

    In my opinion, I think that this movie is very good. It teaches about segregation. It’s about leadership, sports, and commitment. I think a huge factor that plays in it is race and no matter what color you are everybody is the same. It is very inspirational, and it is based on a true story. In the movie there was a lot of injustice about race and it’s a great story. I think it brings faith back in humanity.

    My opinion early in the movie was that there was a lot of judgement between the whites and black and it made me very emotional to see how it was back them for an example how the blacks were treated and I thought that it was going to stay like that for the whole movie. However, in the end it came out to have a great outcome.

    Finally, my review of the movie would be a 10/10 just because it teaches so much about history and I love how it is based on a true story. I would definitely recommend this movie to someone who likes sports because it teaches a lot of leadership and respect to others.

    Tweet by Adam Cook on December 12, 2017 says: My professor handed back our 3 page film essays to my surprise I got a C after class I asked her why "you were supposed to write it about the movie The Emperor of Time.. you wrote it on The Emperor's new Groove but it was kinda good so I didn't fail. you" so that's how I'm doing



    This page titled 5.22: Review is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Sybil Priebe (Independent Published) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.

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