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Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Blue: The American Dream. Durch den Boxsport versucht Gary „Blue“ Meekins (Don Wallace), der Straße zu entkommen. Ein alter Freund überredet ihn, bei einem Raubüberfall auf einen örtlichen Drogendealer zu helfen, doch die Opfer entpuppen sich als unschuldige Familie. Von Schuldgefühlen geplagt, sucht Blue im Ring nach Wiedergutmachung.

  2. Bedeutung des “American Dream” – Filmanalyse. Barbara Kopple versucht in ihrem Dokumentarfilm “American Dream” vor allem die Emotionen und Gefühle der Teilnehmer*innen des Streiks festzuhalten. Deswegen wurden von beiden Parteien Mitglieder interviewt und befragt. Das wurde dann auch in den Dokumentarfilm mit aufgenommen.

  3. The American is a 2010 American action thriller film directed by Anton Corbijn and starring George Clooney, Thekla Reuten, Violante Placido, Irina Björklund, and Paolo Bonacelli. [4] Based on the 1990 novel A Very Private Gentleman by Martin Booth, it was loosely adapted to screenplay by Rowan Joffé. The film was released on September 1, 2010.

  4. Even most blue-collar families could afford such elements of a middle-class lifestyle as new cars, suburban homes, and regular vacations. Most African Americans, however, were not members of the middle class. In 1950, the median income for white families was $20,656, whereas for black families it was $11,203. By 1960, when the average white family earned $28,485 a year, blacks still lagged ...

  5. Available on Philo, iTunes. Gary “Blue” Meekins is a middleweight fighter struggling to box his way to the American dream, but Harlem’s mean streets threaten to turn him into another statistic when an old friend cons him into helping rob a local drug dealer. But the heist goes disastrously wrong when the victims turn out to be an innocent ...

  6. Consumed with guilt due to his past act actions, a middleweight fighter struggles to make his dream of boxing a reality. Director Ryan Miningham Producer Marie Adler, Wayne Barrow, Jamie Miningham ...

    • Crime, Drama
  7. Book Guides. The Great Gatsby is a tragic love story on the surface, but it's most commonly understood as a pessimistic critique of the American Dream. In the novel, Jay Gatsby overcomes his poor past to gain an incredible amount of money and a limited amount of social cache in 1920s NYC, only to be rejected by the "old money" crowd.