There are many different themes explored in Casablanca. There is one certainty: The main character in the movie, Rick, is looking for love and happiness. Rick and Ilsa's relationship really brings the movie's love theme to life, despite the film's overall strong love theme. The topic of war is also discussed. At the beginning of the film, we also see how war has affected the people of Casablanca. Throughout the entirety of the film, Rick and Ilsa are forced to make difficult decisions regarding both their relationship with one another and their future. As Time Passes By's initial lines and The Certain Past both proclaim, "You should recall this," Rick, Ilsa, and Louis in Casablanca can't get away from their recollections and the past. They are constantly brought back to their time together and the war. The two actors who have particularly stood out throughout the entirety of the film are Rick and Ilsa, who are in love but give up their love for the greater good. …show more content…
We can still see the subtle lighting used in each scene because the movie is in black and white. The soft focus lens is used to give the impression that the scene is magical, romantic, and emotionally charged by removing sharp edges and giving it a more diffuse appearance. In the airport scene, for instance, the camera was very close to Rick and Ilsa's faces. Additionally, the two actors were extremely close to one another because of their long-standing connection or relationship. The camera captured Ilsa's face in a very close-up shot as she wept over leaving Rick. The scene's softness is very evident, and you can see how it effortlessly piques the interest of the audience and engages their
For example, when Peg enters Edwards mansion the lighting is very dark, spooky, evil, and low key. Unlike the high key lighting Burton uses in the beginning of the movie when he shows the neighborhood, the low-key lighting used in this scene makes the mansion have a sense
Children laughing showing the happiness that is supposed to occur in youth. Even the lack of sound in the movie theatre gives you the impression of contentedness as the crowd watches a film. All these sounds add emotional depth to the scene that cinematography
The movie has a very strong supporting cast that plays their roles well, with Claude Rains, Paul Henreid, Peter Lorre, Dooley Wilson, and Madeleine Lebeau (Rich). Casablanca has a number of unforgettable quotes that have become part of American culture and constantly referenced
In the ethereal tapestry of Renaissance Florence, where love was but a pawn in the intricate game of power and alliances, Giovanni and Lusanna dared to traverse the treacherous terrain of passion. In this unforgiving landscape, where rigid gender roles held sway, their affair blossomed, challenging the very fabric of societal norms. Gene Brucker, the master chronicler, weaves a tale of profound complexity in his meticulous compilation of court documents. Through his discerning eye, the audience is invited to peer into the depths of this intricate case, where the clash of social classes and the weight of gender expectations obscure the truth. In the novel Giovanni and Lusanna, Love and Marriage in Renaissance Florence, Brucker’s narrative
When Casablanca came out in 1942, it was only three years since War World II had begun. Throughout the film you can see a lot of tension between other countries and Germany’s Nazi party. For example, Victor Laszlo a fugitive who spent about a year in a concentration camp, is running from the Nazi’s due to his resistance to Hitler and the Nazi party. There is a lot of tension as Laszlo tries to flee from France to Casablanca and then to America where the Germans have no control. Another example, is how the Germans treated Rick, they didn’t like Rick because Rick secretly helped people who were running from the Germans.
The Last of Love Many love stories around the world have ended in a joyous or a tragic mood. Thus, in the romantic play Cyrano de Bergerac by Edmond Rostand, much drama and love takes place. However, there is a love triangle among the main characters, Cyrano de Bergerac, Christian, and Roxane. Subsequently, the death scenes of Christian and Cyrano would illustrate significant aspects of physical and intangible love in humans.
The movie Casablanca has similarities to World War II. The movie begins by the viewer meeting Rick Blaine. He is the owner of a club that helps people from other countries receive their letters of transit. This club was a safe haven for many of the refugees. This club would allow for the refuges to obtain their letters of transit as well as earning some quick cash for traveling from gambling in the secret room.
In the end, in the brightness of the hanger, Rick and the French official are forced to abandon the shadows and their neutrality to pick a side. They let Isla and Lazlo leave, kill Major Strasser, and walk into the foggy darkness, neutrality abandoned, committed to freedom. The cinematography in Casablanca is critical in directing the audience’s attention, shaping the audiences feelings, and revealing the theme of the movie. Ultimately, the movie helped America abandon its neutrality, join the Allies and defeat
Casablanca Complexity of human relationships is a primary theme of “ Casablanca”. Throughout the movie we are trying to figure out the relationship between the characters, a relationship we don't learn about until about half way into the movie is that the man Ilsa is traveling with is actually her husband, and had been her husband for a while. We can tell pretty early on that there is history between Rick and Ilsa from the moment they saw each other. We are led to find out they were together while she was in Paris and they fell in love with each other barely knowing one another. Rick offers to take her away from all the bad stuff that was going on around them, she agreed, she wanted to meet him at the station.
These different lighting techniques are applied in the movie to help set the tone and mood for the film scene. The
Michael Curtiz’s Casablanca (1942) is a film based in WWII around different nations involvement in the war. Casablanca is a stylistic piece of propaganda based in Casablanca, Morocco, a hotspot for Europeans escaping the war and Nazi government. Within the movie each character represents a nations stand in the war. Because of this each character is compromised in certain ways and has clear flaws. Ilsa Lund, the main female character in the film is renowned for being extremely manipulative and overly emotional because of the way women were seen in this era.
The use of background light was an important focus in this picture, there was less attention to lighting the actors faces but in almost every frame there is well placed background light often combined with a moving light source. Repetition was also evident within the visual composition of the frame, the actors were rarely positioned within the center of the frame but always to the left or the right with a light source covering them from behind. Ridley Scott perfectly matches colorful high key light with low key lights creating impeccable contrast, this lighting used could be described as a modern Citizen Kane style. Although this is overall a very dark and low light film, the motif of shadows and darkness allows the beauty of light to truly be
Lighting is used rather traditionally for the majority of the movie and helps to distinguish the “good” from the “bad”. For instance, the original Maria is shown in soft-key, angelic lighting that casts a halo around her to emphasize her purity and beauty. The fake Maria, on the other hand, is shot in harsh lighting that creates a dark, unsettling vignette around her. This lighting style creates a contrast between protagonists and antagonists and is used frequently in Hollywood cinema.
Tim Burton 's use of this helps show the contrast of the insider and outsider world. When the viewer is watching they get a sense of suspense and start to second guess whether or not they should trust the outsider. In Edward Scissorhands Burton uses a high-key low-key light contrast when Peg is in her car and sees Edward 's house in her side mirror. When the viewers are watching they get a frightened sense and wonder whether or not Edward or whomever is in the house will
1. In the movie Casablanca, Rick has a complementary relationship over most people. These people include Sacha, Carl, Sam, Ugarte, Abduhl and even Ilsa at some parts of the movie. Rick tells and makes decisions over most of the characters of the movie.