Popular posts from this blog
Disability in "The Best Years of Our Lives"
Published in the Spring 2015 issue of Breath & Shadow: A Journal of Disability Culture and Literature The Best Years of Our Lives : Shattering Glass, Shattering Disability Taboos By Denise Noe The Best Years of Our Lives is a 1946 black and white motion picture rightly regarded as a classic. William Wyler directed this film from a screenplay by Robert E. Sherwood based on a novel by MacKinlay Kantor. The movie won seven Academy Awards including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor, Best Film Editing and Best Adapted Screenplay. One actor, Harold Russell, won two Academy Awards for his performance in this film: an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor and a special honorary award “for bringing hope and courage to his fellow veterans.” By casting Russell, who had lost his hands and forearms in a military training accident, the film shattered a major cinematic taboo: he was the first physically disabled person ever cast in a major role. To this day, Ru...
Are Aliens "Oriental" Whiz Kids?
Published in Exquisite Corpse . Why Do Aliens Look the Way they Do? By Denise Noe Frequently trumpeted by UFOlogists is the fact that Aliens, as described by those who claim to have seen them, look alike. 85% of reports indicate that the visitors share a common origin. Skeptics note that the Aliens described not only look like each other but also look like those depicted in the media: giant head, big, almond-shaped eyes, slit mouth, hairless body, skinny limbs. There is no doubt that a particular version of the extraterrestrial has entered contemporary folklore -- and I believe it does not require tabloid gullibility to discern the creature's true origins. Who is this Alien? An Oriental whiz kid. I use the word "Oriental" rather than "Asian" deliber...
Comments
Post a Comment