Based on your choice, you are tasked with writing an at least a 2000-word long moviereview to discuss and analyze how one of the movies offered by this course is related tointercultural communication.

Based on your choice, you are tasked with writing an at least a 2000-word long moviereview to discuss and analyze how one of the movies offered by this course is related tointercultural communication. Given a selection of important topics discussed in class,you will be asked to provide an analysis of how a topic is covered and expounded in themovie you have chosen. Also demonstrate critical thinking skills based on conceptsacquired in class in order to voice your thoughts and opinions on the topic chosen.In order to put the chosen movie into a more comprehensive context, your paper shouldalso demonstrate critical thinking skills based on concepts acquired in class andresearch in order to express your thoughts and opinions on the topic chosen. You shouldapply not a descriptive but an analytical focus in order to provide as complete anunderstanding of a theory (or theories and their applications) as possible.Your written assignment should comply with the APA format. In your review use at leastsix reliable and independent sources (including the mandatory textbook) that haverelevance to the chosen topic/theory to be discussed in your paper.Please note that there is no paper topic approval by your professor or the teachingassistant.The research paper is to be (double-spaced, 12-point font) submitted on time. ONLY *.*doc and *.*docx format will be accepted, other file formats (pages, txt, rtf,Google Drive, etc.) will be rejected without notice.Hi writer, Choose 1 out of these 15 videos to write the term paper on. I WILL LINK YOU THE VIDEO ONCE YOU’VE SELECTED A VIDEO OF INTEREST.Choose one of the following short-clip videos:• Babel (Directed by Alejandro Iñárritu, 2006): Tragedy strikes a married couple on vacation in the Moroccan desert, touching off an interlocking story involving four different families.• Before Sunrise (Directed by Richard Linklater, 1995): A young man and woman meet on a train in Europe, and wind up spending one evening together in Vienna. Unfortunately, both know that this will probably be their only night together.• Blocus 138 — Innu Resistance (Directed by Réal Junior Leblanc, 2012): this documentary shows the events of March 9th, 2012, during the road block of the 138, and describes, with exactitude, the action and emotion of the moment, a part of Wapikoni Project to help give indigenous youth a voice.• Incendies (Directed by Denis Villeneuve, 2010): twins’ journey to the Middle East to discover their family history and fulfill their mother’s last wishes.• La Haine (Directed by Mathieu Kassovitz, 1995): 24 hours in the lives of three young men in the French suburbs the day after a violent riot.• Gran Torino (Directed by Clint Eastwood, 2008): disgruntled Korean War veteran Walt Kowalski sets out to reform his neighbor, a Hmong teenager who tried to steal Kowalski’s prized possession: a 1972 Gran Torino.• Green Book (Directed by Peter Farrelly, 2018): A working-class Italian-American bouncer becomes the driver of an African-American classical pianist on a tour of venues through the 1960s American South.• Invictus (Directed by Clint Eastwood, 2009): Nelson Mandela, in his first term as the South African President, initiates a unique venture to unite the apartheid-torn land: enlist the national rugby team on a mission to win the 1995 Rugby World Cup.• Maudie (Directed by Aisling Walsh, 2016): an arthritic Nova Scotia woman works as a housekeeper while she hones her skills as an artist and eventually becomes a beloved figure in the community.• Paris, je t’aime (segment “Place des Fetes” Directed by Oliver Schmitz, 2006): a Nigerian man dying from a stab wound in the Place des fêtes asks a female paramedic for a cup of coffee. It is then revealed that he had fallen in love at first sight with her some time previously. By the time she remembers him, and has received the coffee, he has died.• Paris, je t’aime (segment “Tuileries” Directed by Ethan and Joel Coen, 2006): the Coen Brothers worked with Steve Buscemi to create the character of Tuileries, an American tourist drawn into a conflict when he makes eye contact with a feuding young couple on the Paris Metro.• Paris, je t’aime (segment “Quais de Seine” Directed by Paul Mayeda Berges and Gurinder Chadha, 2018): A young man, hanging out with two friends who taunt all women who walk by, strikes up a friendship with a young Muslim woman.• Roma (Directed by Alfonso Cuarón, 2018): A year in the life of a middle-class family’s maid in Mexico City in the early 1970s.• Qallunaat! Why White People Are Funny (Directed by Mark Sandiford, 2007): a documentary written from the Inuit perspective on the oddities of Qallunaat (the Inuit word for white people). A mix of satire, comedy and indigenous facts on everything from why white people are obsessed with owning things to their odd dating habits.All uploaded files have been sent to support@99papers.com