Ⅰ 書和電影你更喜歡哪個為什麼英語作文
Personally, I prefer books. Movies have only been around for a small amount of time and by favoring movies, I am not immersing myself in the words and thoughts of great women and men of the past. I can not imagine simply not reading books which have captured the hearts of so many people. Although many films try to bring out what the author was trying to say, they usually have big budgets and a lot of editing. I like that most of the authors who are famous, had incredibly raw and emotional lives and I really think that their inspiration came from that.
When reading a book, we are so engrossed into the story line that our mind's eye has crafted a picture and emotional response that is highly intense and real. With this in mind, a movie proction would be hard pressed to match what we already have formed within our mental file cabinet.
Ⅱ 介紹你最喜歡的一部電影或一本書英文作文。
Transformers
My
favourite
movie
is
Transformers
3.
This
film
was
made
in
America.
It
used
a
lot
of
high-techs
and
computer
special
effects.
I
like
it
very
much.
This
film
has
huge
scenes
and
famous
movie
stars.
Besides,
it
has
good
story,
and
it
told
me
to
respect
anybody
protects
us.
This
film
asked
us
to
be
brave
to
fight
the
enemies
and
have
the
courage
to
live
in
the
danger.
It
also
have
a
lot
of
robot
troys
I
like.
This
is
my
favourite
movie.
翻譯:
我最喜歡的電影是變形金剛3.這部電影是在美國.它使用了很多高技術和電腦特效.我非常喜歡它.這部電影有巨大的場景和著名的電影明星.此外,它有很好的故事,它讓我尊重保護我們.它告訴我們要勇敢地與敵人進行斗爭,有勇氣在危險中生存.它也有很多我喜歡的機器人玩具總動員.這是我最喜歡的電影.
Ⅲ 介紹一本書或電影(英文) 急....!!!
My favourite movie is the The Shawshank Redemption 。it is about a man who has been set up by others and has been put into prison and the prosses he spends in the Shawshank Prison.The end of the story is he break out of the prison successfully and start a new life with his partner.
My favourite part is when prison warden find out that he was missing.i enjoy this movie very much ,because first it let me know the importance of the belif.i still remember at very begining ,people told ANdy is impossible to get out with such a little awl,unless you take 600years,but Andy only take 19years to achieve his goal,he bilieve he will get out of there one day,so he made it.
The second thing that insprie me that much is the freedom.Red once saidThese walls are kind of funny like that. First you hate them, then you get used to them. Enough time passed, get so you depend on them. That』s institutionalizing.However,Andy never give up to get the freedom ,and he brought in some nice into prison, he set up a library and ecate people in prison to get knowledge.
Last but not the least,i think he really takes care of his friends. He bilieve everyone should share the same right.
That's all. Thank you for your listening.
Ⅳ 求一篇關於電影或書介紹的英語作文
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
by Martina "I wouldn't be surprised if today was known as Harry Potter day in the future - there will be books written about Harry - every child in our world will know his name."
Professor McGonagall, in the first chapter titled "The Boy Who Lived" By now there's not much that can be said about the Harry Potter phenomenon that hasn't been said already. Worshipped by kids, enjoyed by alts, this modern myth has become an accepted classic worldwide. Pull any of the series off a shelf anywhere in the world and you're holding magic. It's not hard to see why. Right from the first page of "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" (or "Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone" for those reading in the UK) Rowling proves that she knows a thing or two about the kind of magic that brings stories to life. The book starts with Harry as an infant, the child of a wizard and witch. He is suddenly left orphaned after an attack by the evil and powerful wizard Voldemort, a villain so dastardly that most wizards and witches refer to him as "You-Know-Who". Mysteriously, Harry survives and Voldemort, his power apparently broken in his attempt to kill the child, disappears leaving many to think he's gone for good. Codex Alera spreads fast and Harry is hailed as a hero. Even though he's just a baby his victory over Voldemort makes him an overnight celebrity among magic users the world over. As a result, the Headmaster and Deputy Headmistress of Hogwarts school of Witchcraft and Wizardry step in to decide Harry's future. They decide to take the child out of the spotlight and allow him to live a normal life with his only remaining relations, a Muggle family named Dursley, until he is of age to attend the Hogwarts school. They leave Harry on the doorstep of the Dursley's home, with no more than a letter of explanation. The story truly begins nearly ten years later, after Harry has enred a childhood of constant scorn and hatred at the hands of his new family. Uncle Vernon and Aunt Petunia are embarrassed by the fact that Harry's mother considered herself a witch and married a man who claimed to be a wizard. The Dursley's simply don't hold with such nonsense. They consider themselves respectable. As Muggles go, the Dursley's may not be prime examples of the worst of their kind, but they rank pretty high. They force Harry to sleep in a cupboard under the stairs and to wear their spoiled son's damaged cast-offs. Harry is little more than a servant and a punching bag to his cousin Dudley. But worst of all, Mr. Dursley has not read Dumbledore's letter to Harry, leaving the boy unaware of such things as his heritage, the truth about his parents death and his emerging powers. Then everything changes with the delivery of a letter in a very unusual fashion. From that point on, Harry's life is never the same again. The letter is actually an acceptance letter, a notification to Harry that he has a place at Hogwart's school. Literally rescued from the Dursley's and taken under the wing of Hagrid, the school's lovable giant of a groundskeeper, Harry embarks on the adventure of a lifetime in the hallowed halls of Hogwarts where in addition to his studies he makes close friends and a lifelong enemy, discovers a talent for a very unusual sport called Quidditch and solves a mystery that threatens the world, not to mention his very existence. The magic potion Rowling herself concocts starts solidly with Harry, a remarkably unassuming kid who's got "hero of mythical proportions" written all over him. He's courageous, clever and resourceful. He's got a special talent in the form of magical powers, and a noble and mysterious birth. He's wounded - a big one in myths - not just physically as evidenced by the scar on his forehead, but emotionally as well e to the death of his parents, not to mention a tortured upbringing by uncaring relations that rivals Cinderella's. But most of all, as was hinted right from the start, he's got one heck of a destiny. All this comes together to introce a character the reader immediately bonds with. You *really* want to be this kid's friend and hang out with him to see what happens. Next into the potion goes a heavy dose of down-to-earth realism - the kind of everyday stuff recognized by almost every kid in the world... but WAIT! You, gentle reader, are never allowed to get comfortable in the world of the often stupid, ever boring Muggles, because you're not one of them, are you? Of course not. You know better, because Rowling blends in the essence of magic fantasy with such skill that Harry's world literally shimmers with it. Because you're not a Muggle, you can see it all around you as you read. The rest of the ingredients are just as high in quality, from the magical, mysterious yet somehow familiar Hogwarts School to the friends that help Harry get through it all, to the exciting conclusion. Rowling serves it all up with a deceptively simple and straight forward writing style that sparks
a response deep in the subconscious, drawing the reader in and holding on tight. The fact is, this story is not just read, it's experienced and that's the magic right there. Of course, alts have to fight their Muggle tendencies and inlge in a little suspension of disbelief to get full enjoyment of the story. For example, those of you who read a lot of Tom Clancy might have trouble getting past the fact that such occurrences as motorcycles flying over London and entire groups of people who vanish into thin air at train stations, go virtually unnoticed. The exact purpose of the wizards trained at Hogwarts in relation to the world is never really explained, except in some vague reference to the further study and possible control of the other preternatural type creatures such as dragons, zombies and vampires who also go unnoticed by the Muggle world. Apparently, when it comes to Muggle mind control, it's everyone's game. Those readers with sci-fi leanings might start picturing Hogwarts as existing in an alternate dimension of sorts but that's not the point. The point is suspension of disbelief. It just all happens because it does and no one in the real world knows about it but those involved... and that's that. Though I thoroughly loved this book, my only off moment came near the end, where I began to wonder exactly how suitable the images depicted were for the impressionable minds of Rowling's younger readers. Still, at the ripe old age of 32, I might just be over-reacting. "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" is a fantastic book, well plotted with strong characters that not only talk and act like real kids, but are also great role models as well. These kids do their homework, brush their teeth, study for exams and still have time to get into trouble in the name of a good cause. There is one excellent and well spelled out moral in the story that doesn't detract from the plot and if the reason why Harry survived Voldemort's attack doesn't leave you with a lump in your throat and a tear in your eye, I suggest you read it again. I highly recommend this book to anyone who hasn't read it yet, kid or alt. Let it carry you away with the knowledge that you're reading a classic that will be read and loved by generations to come, just like the fairy-tales of old.