Currently viewing the tag: "between"

Question: Have you noticed similarities between the movies “Falling Down” and “Pulp Fiction” ?
Fallind Down was, I understand, made first. There seem to be similar kinds of interwoven plot and violent incidents.

Answer:

Answer by afreeman20035252
The main theme, that of redemption, is missing from “Falling Down.” It’s in “Pulp Fiction.”

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Question: Between “It’s a Wonderful Life” and “Pulp Fiction”, what heartwarming holiday movie should I watch tonight?

Answer:

Answer by KC
Pulp Fiction!

C’mon! It’s classic!

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Question: what is the difference between “abridged fiction” and “unabridged” books?

Answer:

Answer by jenfleur
Abridged basically means shortened, so parts of the whole (or unabridged) book have been cut out.

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Question: What are the similarities between the movies “Taxi Driver” and “Stranger Than Fiction”?

Answer:

Answer by jscangialosi5
If you mean thematically, you could say that both films are about the transformation of one man, during a mid-life crisis/breakdown. Travis in Taxi Driver, lives a droll life, driving around, watching porn, he then snaps (mental breakdown) and transforms his life to be a man on a mission, albeit a murderous one.

Then there is Harold in Stranger than Fiction, who lives his boring life as an accountant, he snaps (midlife crisis) and begins to transform his life for the better. To quote an article I published on Stranger than Fiction, both Travis and Harold are the “everyman who manages to raise his head above the tides of society’s sludge slowly sinking the individual spirit.” Think of Travis’s monologue, “here is a man, who would not take it…”

I welcome you to read my article on Stranger than fiction if that helps too: http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/89945/stranger_than_fiction.html?cat=40

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Question: what’s the difference between “fiction” and “fantasy”?

Answer:

Answer by belle_fuchsia
fantasy is NOT real
fiction COULD be real meaning it’s realistic or real

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I am reading a work of fiction and keep coming across three dots after certain paragraphs and the next paragraph starts in the future. I understand what the author is doing, but I am curious as to what this type of punctuation is actually called. I thought it was an ellipsis, but this is incorrect. Any ideas?

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