Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Pineda
BSAT- 801
Title
Mocking Jay
Synopsis
Relation to
Government
This is the 3rd sequel
of the hunger games
trilogy. In this movie
there is an uprising
against the capitol
which stands as the
government in this
movie. This shows
that
when
a
government is cruel
with their people there
can be an uprising.
So Yang-Ho that he wants to see his daughter YeSeung. The five inmates then plan to make a miracle
happen.
The Purge
In an America wracked by crime and overcrowded
prisons, the government has sanctioned an annual 12hour period in which any and all criminal activityincluding murder-becomes legal. The police can't be
called. Hospitals suspend help. It's one night when the
citizenry regulates itself without thought of punishment.
On this night plagued by violence and an epidemic of
crime, one family wrestles with the decision of who they
will become when a stranger comes knocking. When an
intruder breaks into James Sandin's (Ethan Hawke)
gated community during the yearly lockdown, he begins
a sequence of events that threatens to tear a family
apart. Now, it is up to James, his wife, Mary (Lena
Headey), and their kids to make it through the night
without turning into the monsters from whom they hide
The Prince New York City cop Daniel Ciello is involved in some
of the City
questionable police practices. He is approached by
internal affairs and in exchange for him potentially being
let off the hook, he is instructed to begin to expose the
inner workings of police corruption. Danny agrees as
long as he does not have to turn in his partners but he
soon learns that he cannot trust anyone and he must
decide whose side he is on and who is on his.
The
Fifth The story begins as WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange
Estate
(Benedict Cumberbatch) and his colleague Daniel
Domscheit-Berg (Daniel Brhl) team up to become
underground watchdogs of the privileged and powerful.
On a shoestring, they create a platform that allows
whistle-blowers to anonymously leak covert data,
shining a light on the dark recesses of government
secrets and corporate crimes. Soon, they are breaking
more hard news than the world's most legendary media
organizations combined. But when Assange and Berg
gain access to the biggest trove of confidential
intelligence documents in U.S. history, they battle each
other and a defining question of our time: what are the
costs of keeping secrets in a free society-and what are
the costs of exposing them?