![]() ![]() ![]() The argumentative style is needed in order to convince the audience of the proposed thesis, and to convince the audience, the audience must first understand the film. The question asked when understanding this subplot would be, how does Kubrick depict said subplot through The Overlook Hotel, the setting and backdrop of this film? Through an argumentative and explanatory essay that has been approached with interpretive methods, a literary analysis will be provided on The Shining, proving that The Overlook Hotel is used by Kubrick as a focal point in dialogue, as a setting and as a character in order to depict that The Shining speaks specifically about how America rose from the ashes of Native Americans. ![]() Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining has one specific subplot that is a symbolic reference to how America was built from the ashes of Native Americans (Ager). Only after thinking about the film, and watching it again would one realize that Kubrick had done something special. Specifically, The Shining has at least two major subplots that on a first viewing would not normally be noticed. The Shining is famous for its many subplots and details. Twenty-nine years later, Kubrick released The Shining, a movie that completely changed how a horror film would be seen, shot and perceived from then on. Although this film is largely unheard of, it is what started a career that some see as one of the best in film history. ![]() In 1951 Stanley Kubrick released Day of Flight, his first feature film as director (LoBrutto 508). ![]()
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