Friday, October 10, 2014

MOVIES EFFECTS TO CHILDREN

For one, Disney movies provide children, parents, teachers and daycare workers with a little breathing space. While the children are busy watching these movies, parents and others can complete chores, etc. Moreover, these movies can help strengthen children’s communication, language, problem-solving and coping skills. Some Disney movies can even teach children words in foreign languages. Furthermore, these movies are used as a social tool, in which parents and children can come together over a common interest or activity.
Some parents feel the need to provide their children with regular or constant entertainment or to indulge them with what they feel makes their children happy. For others, it has almost become reflexive, “Disney is for kids”, movies have become an American way of life from childhood, and of course, this does not exclude other countries.

However, there is evidence that child-based movies have become significantly more violent in recent years and that parents have increased the amount of time they allow their children to watch them. In the past, children watched a limited amount of television and movies. Most children in the 60s, 70s, and 80s, tended to go to the movie theater to watch child-based movies, but since the advent of the VCR, child-based movies are a constant. In fact, in the past “going to the movies” was an exciting event for most children. Why? Not only tto watch a movie, but it also gave them a chance to socialize with friends. With the VCR and CDs, Netlix and the like, movies can also become a solitary, isolative way of life.
It is important to note that a passive lifestyle that consists of spending large amounts of time watching movies and television can influence a child’s thoughts and behaviors. If a child sees violent, sexual and/or unrealistic child-based movies and cartoons, he or she may internalize these images and concepts and this can contribute to acting them out in school or at home. Emotions from movies and music can also be internalized.
Belief systems in children and teens are also influenced by movies, especially in the absence of an already established belief system. Many times present-day, child-based movies and cartoons are based on an element of aggression, which counteracts what the children might learn in school or at home. It is this extreme or constant attachment with television and movies that can lend itself well to depression in particular, but other mental health issues. Not that it is necessarily causal, though in can be in some instances, but it can be one contributing factor among several.
Moreover, DVDs and internet-streaming, child-based movies and cartoons are readily accessible, which means that some children watch them over and over again, every day. In fact, child-based movies and cartoons are often used as “substitute babysitters.” According to a 1996 survey, eight out of 10 child-based cartoons are violent in nature.
Why are these violent and/or aggressive movies and cartoons shown to children? Primarily because children often lose interest in tamer movies. Movies with at least some violence have more “hook”.  Violent, or aggressive child-based movies and cartoons, or child TV programs or movies spiced with a little sexuality, may hold a child’s attention longer so that is what the market sells. Sexual adults create children’s movies, so if a little sexual innuendo finds itself in a Sponge Bob movies for children, or a Dreamworks kids-flick, it shouldn’t be surprising.
As for violence, even many 5 and 6 year-olds are familiar with horror movies like the Chainsaw Massacre, Scream, Friday the 13th and Chucky, standard staples on cable television,and in some communities, the vast majority of children ages 8 and up.

MOVIE THEMES...

Don’t reinvent the wheel. You’ve heard the phrase a million times, and never does it ring as true as when applied to screenwriting.
Often, you will hear people complain that it feels like they have seen the same movie 100 times, only this time with different actors and a new title. It’s true. Most movies do tell the same story over and over again. Few movies differentiate themselves by creating a revolutionary storyline.
Yes, it is common for films to center around the same theme. However, there is no need for dismay; just because a ton of movies are about the same thing doesn’t mean they are all the same movie. For example, take Due Date. The story is practically a carbon copy of Planes, Trains, and Automobiles. Both films have identical story lines, similar characters, and the same motifs. Yet, the two films are clearly different. It’s not the story itself, but the way the story is told that makes a movie great.
Listed below are the top 10 themes/motifs used in film. These themes serve as a staple to the underlying plots of most films. The most common themes in films describe an opinion about society, human nature, or life in general.
And while you’re getting ready to scoff at Hollywood for using the same themes repeatedly, think about how amazing it is that the same kinds of stories can be told in so many different ways. And while most of the repeated adaptations are lackluster, every so often one triumphantly takes the world by storm.
So, take a look at the most common themes and motifs in film. And embrace the wheel. It’s there for a reason.
There are certain undeniable events that will always happen: the moon will rise, the sun will set, and man will struggle against the inevitable power that is Mother Nature. Call it sadistic, but Hollywood has always had a fascination with films that portray the possibility of the total obliteration of mankind (Armageddon, The Day After Tomorrow, Volcano). However, the theme of Man vs. Nature can extend beyond the destruction of planet earth. These films can focus on an individual battling an animal of nature (Jaws) and can often incorporate utopian themes. Man vs. Nature can also extend to technology perverting nature. These films often warn of the danger of tampering with the natural elements. When technology runs amok, monsters and obstacles are created (Jurassic Park). Action flicks are a staple for Man vs. Nature, but no matter what genre these films surface from, the theme always revolves around the power of natural world and the perseverance of mankind. 

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LYDIA FORSON

Born in MANKESSIM GHANA, Lydia Forson received her early life education at Wilmore Elementary school in KENTUCKY US. At the age of nine, she relocated from the United States to Ghana where she continued her formative education at Akosombo International School. She also attended ST LUIS SECONDARY SCHOOL where she completed her senior secondary school education.
She graduated from the UNIVERSITY OF GHANA where she earned a Bachelor’s degree in English Language and Information Studies.






TONTO DIKEH

Tonto Charity Dikeh, also known as Tonto Dike (born 9 June 1985), is a Nigerian actress and singer from Rivers State and is of the Ikwerre Tribe. Dikeh, is from a family of seven.
In 2005 she competed against other contestants on a reality TV show called The Next Movie Star; she was the first runner up. Dikeh's appearance on the show was as a means of getting closer to the "big time", she says,[2] and her start in the Nigerian movie industry came soon after.

 


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YVONNE OKORO

Chinyere Yvonne Okoro is a Ghanaian actress of Nigerian and Ghanaian origin. She has received Ghana Movie Awards Best Actress Award in 2010 and was nominated for African Movie Academy Awards Best Actress twice in a row in 2011 and 2012 for her movies Pool Party and Single Six. She was honoured with a Distinguished Achievement Award in 2012 at Nigeria Excellence Awards.She is among the top best actresses in Ghana and known for her remarkable performances.




 

GENEVIEVE NNAJI 

 

Nnaji was born in Mbaise, Imo State, Nigeria but grew up in Lagos, the fourth of eight children and was brought up in a middle class environment. Her father worked as an engineer and her mother as a nursery teacher. She attended Methodist Girls College (Yaba, Lagos), before transferring into the University of Lagos. While at the university, she began auditioning for acting jobs amongst the many Nollywood projects.[
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JOSELYN DUMAS

Dumas was born Joselyn Canfor-Dumas in GHANA and spent her early childhood in ACCRA, Ghana. She had her basic education at Morning Star School and proceeded to the Archbishop Porter Girls Senior High School where she became the Entertainment Prefect. Joselyn furthered her studies and graduated with an in ASSOCIATE DEGREE in PARALEGAL Studies.
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                                                AKOSUA BUSIA

 
The daughter of KOFI ABREFA BUSIA, the ex-prime minister of the REPUBLIC OF GHANA Akosua is the daughter of a prince of the ROYAL FAMILY OF WENCHI a subgroup of the ASHANTI. She herself is not a princess, however, since the Akans of Ghana trace their ancestry through the female line. Her sister Abena Busia is a poet and academic, an associate professor in English at RUTGERS UNIVERSITY

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NADIA BUARI

She once dated MICHAEL ESSIEN. As of January 2014, she is dating Nollywood actor JIM IYKE and the relationship is bobbling each day with the couple releasing pictures of their tours around the world when Nadia had her birthday.On 21 March, 2014, Iyke proposed to Nadia with a six-carat-diamond ring, which was designed for specially selected countries including Ghana, Gabon, with London providing the final finish.




                               JULIET IBRAHIM

Juliet Ibrahim is a GHANANIAN actress, film producer,[singer and humanitarian of LEBANESE, LIBERIAN and GHANANIAN descent. She won the Best Actress in a Leading Role award at the 2010 GHANA MOVIE AWARDS for her role in 4 play. She has been referred to as the "Most Beautiful West African Woman" according to A-listers Magazine.In 2014 she released a music video for her hit song "Its Over Now" featuring General Pype.

 

TOP 10 ACTRESS IN GHANA

YVONNE NELSON

Yvonne was born in Accra-Ghana, to Miss Margaret Gaddy and Mr. O. Nelson in Accra. She hails from Cape Coast in the Central Region but spent most of her early years in Accra. She had her basic and junior high education at St. Martin De Porres in Dansoman, Accra. She got so much into music and yearned to be a pop star in junior high. She went to Aggrey Memorial Senior High School. Driven by the passion to be in the lime light, she won her first beauty pageant, Miss Aggrey, in Aggrey Memorial Senior High School, performing a song by LAURYN HILL. She then went to the CENTER UNIVERSITY COLLAGE, where she did a degree course Human Resource Management.



JACKIE APPIAH

Jackie is the last of five children. She was born in CANADA and spent her early childhood in Canada, and moved to GHANA with her mother at age 10. She is popularly known by her maiden name, Appiah. Jackie married in 2005 and has one son. Jackie's father is Kwabena Appiah (the younger brother of the late Joe Appiah-a famed lawyer in KUMASIcurrently residing in TORONTO Canada.