Sentences with phrase «elegiac tone»

The phrase "elegiac tone" refers to a way of writing or speaking that expresses sadness, mourning, or a sense of loss. It often evokes a feeling of nostalgia or longing for something that is gone or no longer the same. Full definition
If they advance this narrative» preferably in elegiac tones» they'll receive wonderful notices, and be hailed by secularists in the press.
The artists had reached early middle age by the time they created FROZEN YOUTH, a fact that may account for the wistful, elegiac tone present in much of their work at this time.
The elegiac tone of Flags of Our Fathers and Letters From Iwo Jima speak to the scars created on the battlefield in service to one's country, while Gran Torino promotes self - sacrifice over vengeance as Walt Kowalski, the film's hero, chooses to sacrifice himself to save a troubled youth.
Shane is directly referenced in one scene and the elegiac tone of the film recalls Clint Eastwood's Oscar - winning Unforgiven.
Corliss can be forgiven, I think, for the elegiac tone of his farewell article; he is saying goodbye to FILM COMMENT after many productive and valuable years, and his leavetaking must be painful because a large portion of his life was invested in the magazine.
After marrying movie star Marilyn Monroe, he wrote The Misfits (1961) for her which would eerily (considering its elegiac tone) be the last film for both her and co-star Clark Gable and one of the very last for Montgomery Clift who was born on this same day in 1920...
what seems to interest Anderson more than the novel's plot twists is its elegiac tone, a half - remembered vision of a time and place that may or may not have existed.
The loss of Walker provides an elegiac tone for the movie that happily replaces the machismo and ego - butting contests of the rest of the films; characters realize that family is more important than action.
It's very slow - paced — even the action scenes are related in an elegiac tone.
That sentence wouldn't be out of place in any of Burke's Dave Robicheaux novels, all of which have been distinguished by their elegiac tone, but it's only fitting that it should appear in this heartfelt, post-Katrina ode to a lost New Orleans and a lost world.
Smith's descriptions are lush but extensive; they seem to go on forever and bog down Delvin's story considerably, giving the narrative a plodding, elegiac tone.
Given the prominent struggles of great newspapers to survive, it was hard not to find an elegiac tone in «News / Prints: Printmaking and the Newspaper,» but artist and curator Anders Bergstrom sees the exhibition as a celebration of the newspaper in art.
Tragic events, like the fire in his studio and a traffic accident which almost cost him his life, made Gorky's art take on a cold, elegiac tone, as seen in The Limit and The Orators, both from 1947, until his tragic death in 1948.
With their elegiac tone, the new pictures, Ms. Sherman's first in five years, seem specifically designed to prompt reflection on the histories she has taken these divas through over time.
Through the way, he juxtaposed an elegiac tone with polystylistic satire, abruptly combining contrasting musical genres, and breaking every rule in classical symphony arrangement as fast as he could.
Bradley Walker Tomlin, (born August 19, 1899, Syracuse, New York, U.S. — died May 11, 1953, New York City), American artist whose paintings introduced an elegiac tone to post-World War II abstract art.
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