Foram encontradas 45.349 questões.
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDATEC
Orgão: Pref. Criciúma-SC
Poor Things – Emma Stone transfixes in Lanthimos’s thrilling carnival of oddness
- It may only be the beginning of the year, but it’s hard to imagine that there will be a funnier,
- filthier, or more extravagantly peculiar film this year than Yorgos Lanthimos’s latest picture. To
- describe Poor Things, which is adapted by Tony McNamara from the 1992 novel by Alasdair Gray,
- as creatively uninhibited hardly does justice to the wild, wild ride that this explosively inventive
- picture takes us on. Driven by a courageous and physically committed performance from Emma
- Stone, the film follows her journey as Bella Baxter, at the start of the picture a barely verbal blank
- slate, who embarks on an autodidact voyage of discovery to become the ultimate self-made
- woman.
- Like in the book, the period is impossible to pin down exactly. The story unfolds in a parallel
- past, a gothic, steampunk-infused Victoriana, a world that is distorted by the patriarchal power
- disparities in society. Without giving away the specifics, the picture is a subversive spin on Mary
- Shelley’s Frankenstein, with the role of Bella’s creator and guardian taken by unorthodox genius
- Dr Godwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe). Called “God” by Bella, Godwin bears grotesque scars on his face
- and body resulting from his childhood experience as the subject of his father’s deranged scientific
- curiosity – an experience that failed to stymie his own rather baroque quest for empirical facts.
- When Godwin recruits eager student Max McCandles (Ramy Youssef) to keep a record of Bella’s
- accelerated progress, her grasp of language expands exponentially.
- But Bella’s hunger knowledge and experience is too voracious to be contained the
- walls Godwin’s mansion. She grasps the opportunity offered by caddish lawyer and man
- about-town Duncan Wedderburn (a marvelously hammy Mark Ruffalo) and ventures forth
- London, first to Lisbon, then by steamship to Alexandria, and finally to a Parisian brothel. As Bella’s
- horizons broaden, so the look of the film alters to encompass her experiences. The chapter set
- predominantly in Godwin’s home is black and white, but once Bella ventures forth, the film shifts
- into color. But not just any color – there’s an uncanny, hyperreal quality to the palette that makes
- each frame look like a hand-tinted piece of Victorian postcard erotica.
- It’s an alchemic combination, this continuing collaboration between Lanthimos and Stone, a
- working relationship that started with The Favourite and will continue with another feature film
- project, titled Kinds of Kindness. They unleash in each other an extra level of uninhibited artistic
- daring that must be rooted in an uncommon degree of mutual trust. Nowhere is this more evident
- than in the physicality of Stone’s remarkable performance. Stone’s virtuoso use of her body – the
- way it inhabits space, the way she gradually masters her gangling, string-like limbs, the guilelessly
- open play of emotions in her face – is one of the most crucial elements in our experience of Bella’s
- journey.
- That journey is supported by a deliciously eccentric score by Jerskin Fendrix. An uneasy,
- detuned four-note motif played on flayed violin strings opens the film and returns in various
- incarnations throughout, sounding at one point like a hippo mating with a harmonium. The gradual
- build of intricacy and sophistication in the music brilliantly mirrors Bella’s intellectual growth.
- Bella’s appetite for novelty is reflected in film-making that evokes a similar sense of wonder and
- discovery in the audience. From the quirky flamboyance of Holly Waddington’s costumes to the
- off-kilter production design by Shona Heath and James Price, Poor Things is an endlessly
- fascinating carnival of oddness.
(Available at: www.theguardian.com/film/2024/jan/14/poor-things-review-yorgos-lanthimos-emma-stone-frankenstein – text specially adapted for this test).
What are the words in bold “which” (l. 03), “this” (l. 04), and “who” (l. 07) referring to, respectively?
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDATEC
Orgão: Pref. Criciúma-SC
Poor Things – Emma Stone transfixes in Lanthimos’s thrilling carnival of oddness
- It may only be the beginning of the year, but it’s hard to imagine that there will be a funnier,
- filthier, or more extravagantly peculiar film this year than Yorgos Lanthimos’s latest picture. To
- describe Poor Things, which is adapted by Tony McNamara from the 1992 novel by Alasdair Gray,
- as creatively uninhibited hardly does justice to the wild, wild ride that this explosively inventive
- picture takes us on. Driven by a courageous and physically committed performance from Emma
- Stone, the film follows her journey as Bella Baxter, at the start of the picture a barely verbal blank
- slate, who embarks on an autodidact voyage of discovery to become the ultimate self-made
- woman.
- Like in the book, the period is impossible to pin down exactly. The story unfolds in a parallel
- past, a gothic, steampunk-infused Victoriana, a world that is distorted by the patriarchal power
- disparities in society. Without giving away the specifics, the picture is a subversive spin on Mary
- Shelley’s Frankenstein, with the role of Bella’s creator and guardian taken by unorthodox genius
- Dr Godwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe). Called “God” by Bella, Godwin bears grotesque scars on his face
- and body resulting from his childhood experience as the subject of his father’s deranged scientific
- curiosity – an experience that failed to stymie his own rather baroque quest for empirical facts.
- When Godwin recruits eager student Max McCandles (Ramy Youssef) to keep a record of Bella’s
- accelerated progress, her grasp of language expands exponentially.
- But Bella’s hunger knowledge and experience is too voracious to be contained the
- walls Godwin’s mansion. She grasps the opportunity offered by caddish lawyer and man
- about-town Duncan Wedderburn (a marvelously hammy Mark Ruffalo) and ventures forth
- London, first to Lisbon, then by steamship to Alexandria, and finally to a Parisian brothel. As Bella’s
- horizons broaden, so the look of the film alters to encompass her experiences. The chapter set
- predominantly in Godwin’s home is black and white, but once Bella ventures forth, the film shifts
- into color. But not just any color – there’s an uncanny, hyperreal quality to the palette that makes
- each frame look like a hand-tinted piece of Victorian postcard erotica.
- It’s an alchemic combination, this continuing collaboration between Lanthimos and Stone, a
- working relationship that started with The Favourite and will continue with another feature film
- project, titled Kinds of Kindness. They unleash in each other an extra level of uninhibited artistic
- daring that must be rooted in an uncommon degree of mutual trust. Nowhere is this more evident
- than in the physicality of Stone’s remarkable performance. Stone’s virtuoso use of her body – the
- way it inhabits space, the way she gradually masters her gangling, string-like limbs, the guilelessly
- open play of emotions in her face – is one of the most crucial elements in our experience of Bella’s
- journey.
- That journey is supported by a deliciously eccentric score by Jerskin Fendrix. An uneasy,
- detuned four-note motif played on flayed violin strings opens the film and returns in various
- incarnations throughout, sounding at one point like a hippo mating with a harmonium. The gradual
- build of intricacy and sophistication in the music brilliantly mirrors Bella’s intellectual growth.
- Bella’s appetite for novelty is reflected in film-making that evokes a similar sense of wonder and
- discovery in the audience. From the quirky flamboyance of Holly Waddington’s costumes to the
- off-kilter production design by Shona Heath and James Price, Poor Things is an endlessly
- fascinating carnival of oddness.
(Available at: www.theguardian.com/film/2024/jan/14/poor-things-review-yorgos-lanthimos-emma-stone-frankenstein – text specially adapted for this test).
Which of the following adapted excerpts does NOT contain a passive voice structure?
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDATEC
Orgão: Pref. Criciúma-SC
Poor Things – Emma Stone transfixes in Lanthimos’s thrilling carnival of oddness
- It may only be the beginning of the year, but it’s hard to imagine that there will be a funnier,
- filthier, or more extravagantly peculiar film this year than Yorgos Lanthimos’s latest picture. To
- describe Poor Things, which is adapted by Tony McNamara from the 1992 novel by Alasdair Gray,
- as creatively uninhibited hardly does justice to the wild, wild ride that this explosively inventive
- picture takes us on. Driven by a courageous and physically committed performance from Emma
- Stone, the film follows her journey as Bella Baxter, at the start of the picture a barely verbal blank
- slate, who embarks on an autodidact voyage of discovery to become the ultimate self-made
- woman.
- Like in the book, the period is impossible to pin down exactly. The story unfolds in a parallel
- past, a gothic, steampunk-infused Victoriana, a world that is distorted by the patriarchal power
- disparities in society. Without giving away the specifics, the picture is a subversive spin on Mary
- Shelley’s Frankenstein, with the role of Bella’s creator and guardian taken by unorthodox genius
- Dr Godwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe). Called “God” by Bella, Godwin bears grotesque scars on his face
- and body resulting from his childhood experience as the subject of his father’s deranged scientific
- curiosity – an experience that failed to stymie his own rather baroque quest for empirical facts.
- When Godwin recruits eager student Max McCandles (Ramy Youssef) to keep a record of Bella’s
- accelerated progress, her grasp of language expands exponentially.
- But Bella’s hunger knowledge and experience is too voracious to be contained the
- walls Godwin’s mansion. She grasps the opportunity offered by caddish lawyer and man
- about-town Duncan Wedderburn (a marvelously hammy Mark Ruffalo) and ventures forth
- London, first to Lisbon, then by steamship to Alexandria, and finally to a Parisian brothel. As Bella’s
- horizons broaden, so the look of the film alters to encompass her experiences. The chapter set
- predominantly in Godwin’s home is black and white, but once Bella ventures forth, the film shifts
- into color. But not just any color – there’s an uncanny, hyperreal quality to the palette that makes
- each frame look like a hand-tinted piece of Victorian postcard erotica.
- It’s an alchemic combination, this continuing collaboration between Lanthimos and Stone, a
- working relationship that started with The Favourite and will continue with another feature film
- project, titled Kinds of Kindness. They unleash in each other an extra level of uninhibited artistic
- daring that must be rooted in an uncommon degree of mutual trust. Nowhere is this more evident
- than in the physicality of Stone’s remarkable performance. Stone’s virtuoso use of her body – the
- way it inhabits space, the way she gradually masters her gangling, string-like limbs, the guilelessly
- open play of emotions in her face – is one of the most crucial elements in our experience of Bella’s
- journey.
- That journey is supported by a deliciously eccentric score by Jerskin Fendrix. An uneasy,
- detuned four-note motif played on flayed violin strings opens the film and returns in various
- incarnations throughout, sounding at one point like a hippo mating with a harmonium. The gradual
- build of intricacy and sophistication in the music brilliantly mirrors Bella’s intellectual growth.
- Bella’s appetite for novelty is reflected in film-making that evokes a similar sense of wonder and
- discovery in the audience. From the quirky flamboyance of Holly Waddington’s costumes to the
- off-kilter production design by Shona Heath and James Price, Poor Things is an endlessly
- fascinating carnival of oddness.
(Available at: www.theguardian.com/film/2024/jan/14/poor-things-review-yorgos-lanthimos-emma-stone-frankenstein – text specially adapted for this test).
If the adapted excerpt “It must be rooted in mutual trust” were rewritten in the present perfect tense, the underlined word “must” should be followed by:
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDATEC
Orgão: Pref. Criciúma-SC
Poor Things – Emma Stone transfixes in Lanthimos’s thrilling carnival of oddness
- It may only be the beginning of the year, but it’s hard to imagine that there will be a funnier,
- filthier, or more extravagantly peculiar film this year than Yorgos Lanthimos’s latest picture. To
- describe Poor Things, which is adapted by Tony McNamara from the 1992 novel by Alasdair Gray,
- as creatively uninhibited hardly does justice to the wild, wild ride that this explosively inventive
- picture takes us on. Driven by a courageous and physically committed performance from Emma
- Stone, the film follows her journey as Bella Baxter, at the start of the picture a barely verbal blank
- slate, who embarks on an autodidact voyage of discovery to become the ultimate self-made
- woman.
- Like in the book, the period is impossible to pin down exactly. The story unfolds in a parallel
- past, a gothic, steampunk-infused Victoriana, a world that is distorted by the patriarchal power
- disparities in society. Without giving away the specifics, the picture is a subversive spin on Mary
- Shelley’s Frankenstein, with the role of Bella’s creator and guardian taken by unorthodox genius
- Dr Godwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe). Called “God” by Bella, Godwin bears grotesque scars on his face
- and body resulting from his childhood experience as the subject of his father’s deranged scientific
- curiosity – an experience that failed to stymie his own rather baroque quest for empirical facts.
- When Godwin recruits eager student Max McCandles (Ramy Youssef) to keep a record of Bella’s
- accelerated progress, her grasp of language expands exponentially.
- But Bella’s hunger knowledge and experience is too voracious to be contained the
- walls Godwin’s mansion. She grasps the opportunity offered by caddish lawyer and man
- about-town Duncan Wedderburn (a marvelously hammy Mark Ruffalo) and ventures forth
- London, first to Lisbon, then by steamship to Alexandria, and finally to a Parisian brothel. As Bella’s
- horizons broaden, so the look of the film alters to encompass her experiences. The chapter set
- predominantly in Godwin’s home is black and white, but once Bella ventures forth, the film shifts
- into color. But not just any color – there’s an uncanny, hyperreal quality to the palette that makes
- each frame look like a hand-tinted piece of Victorian postcard erotica.
- It’s an alchemic combination, this continuing collaboration between Lanthimos and Stone, a
- working relationship that started with The Favourite and will continue with another feature film
- project, titled Kinds of Kindness. They unleash in each other an extra level of uninhibited artistic
- daring that must be rooted in an uncommon degree of mutual trust. Nowhere is this more evident
- than in the physicality of Stone’s remarkable performance. Stone’s virtuoso use of her body – the
- way it inhabits space, the way she gradually masters her gangling, string-like limbs, the guilelessly
- open play of emotions in her face – is one of the most crucial elements in our experience of Bella’s
- journey.
- That journey is supported by a deliciously eccentric score by Jerskin Fendrix. An uneasy,
- detuned four-note motif played on flayed violin strings opens the film and returns in various
- incarnations throughout, sounding at one point like a hippo mating with a harmonium. The gradual
- build of intricacy and sophistication in the music brilliantly mirrors Bella’s intellectual growth.
- Bella’s appetite for novelty is reflected in film-making that evokes a similar sense of wonder and
- discovery in the audience. From the quirky flamboyance of Holly Waddington’s costumes to the
- off-kilter production design by Shona Heath and James Price, Poor Things is an endlessly
- fascinating carnival of oddness.
(Available at: www.theguardian.com/film/2024/jan/14/poor-things-review-yorgos-lanthimos-emma-stone-frankenstein – text specially adapted for this test).
In the sentence “They unleash in each other an extra level of uninhibited artistic daring that must be rooted in an uncommon degree of mutual trust” (l. 28-29) the author makes a deduction, and the use of the underlined word “must” suggests that the author feels this statement is:
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDATEC
Orgão: Pref. Criciúma-SC
Poor Things – Emma Stone transfixes in Lanthimos’s thrilling carnival of oddness
- It may only be the beginning of the year, but it’s hard to imagine that there will be a funnier,
- filthier, or more extravagantly peculiar film this year than Yorgos Lanthimos’s latest picture. To
- describe Poor Things, which is adapted by Tony McNamara from the 1992 novel by Alasdair Gray,
- as creatively uninhibited hardly does justice to the wild, wild ride that this explosively inventive
- picture takes us on. Driven by a courageous and physically committed performance from Emma
- Stone, the film follows her journey as Bella Baxter, at the start of the picture a barely verbal blank
- slate, who embarks on an autodidact voyage of discovery to become the ultimate self-made
- woman.
- Like in the book, the period is impossible to pin down exactly. The story unfolds in a parallel
- past, a gothic, steampunk-infused Victoriana, a world that is distorted by the patriarchal power
- disparities in society. Without giving away the specifics, the picture is a subversive spin on Mary
- Shelley’s Frankenstein, with the role of Bella’s creator and guardian taken by unorthodox genius
- Dr Godwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe). Called “God” by Bella, Godwin bears grotesque scars on his face
- and body resulting from his childhood experience as the subject of his father’s deranged scientific
- curiosity – an experience that failed to stymie his own rather baroque quest for empirical facts.
- When Godwin recruits eager student Max McCandles (Ramy Youssef) to keep a record of Bella’s
- accelerated progress, her grasp of language expands exponentially.
- But Bella’s hunger knowledge and experience is too voracious to be contained the
- walls Godwin’s mansion. She grasps the opportunity offered by caddish lawyer and man
- about-town Duncan Wedderburn (a marvelously hammy Mark Ruffalo) and ventures forth
- London, first to Lisbon, then by steamship to Alexandria, and finally to a Parisian brothel. As Bella’s
- horizons broaden, so the look of the film alters to encompass her experiences. The chapter set
- predominantly in Godwin’s home is black and white, but once Bella ventures forth, the film shifts
- into color. But not just any color – there’s an uncanny, hyperreal quality to the palette that makes
- each frame look like a hand-tinted piece of Victorian postcard erotica.
- It’s an alchemic combination, this continuing collaboration between Lanthimos and Stone, a
- working relationship that started with The Favourite and will continue with another feature film
- project, titled Kinds of Kindness. They unleash in each other an extra level of uninhibited artistic
- daring that must be rooted in an uncommon degree of mutual trust. Nowhere is this more evident
- than in the physicality of Stone’s remarkable performance. Stone’s virtuoso use of her body – the
- way it inhabits space, the way she gradually masters her gangling, string-like limbs, the guilelessly
- open play of emotions in her face – is one of the most crucial elements in our experience of Bella’s
- journey.
- That journey is supported by a deliciously eccentric score by Jerskin Fendrix. An uneasy,
- detuned four-note motif played on flayed violin strings opens the film and returns in various
- incarnations throughout, sounding at one point like a hippo mating with a harmonium. The gradual
- build of intricacy and sophistication in the music brilliantly mirrors Bella’s intellectual growth.
- Bella’s appetite for novelty is reflected in film-making that evokes a similar sense of wonder and
- discovery in the audience. From the quirky flamboyance of Holly Waddington’s costumes to the
- off-kilter production design by Shona Heath and James Price, Poor Things is an endlessly
- fascinating carnival of oddness.
(Available at: www.theguardian.com/film/2024/jan/14/poor-things-review-yorgos-lanthimos-emma-stone-frankenstein – text specially adapted for this test).
The highlighted word “oddness” (l. 41) means the quality of being:
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDATEC
Orgão: Pref. Criciúma-SC
Poor Things – Emma Stone transfixes in Lanthimos’s thrilling carnival of oddness
- It may only be the beginning of the year, but it’s hard to imagine that there will be a funnier,
- filthier, or more extravagantly peculiar film this year than Yorgos Lanthimos’s latest picture. To
- describe Poor Things, which is adapted by Tony McNamara from the 1992 novel by Alasdair Gray,
- as creatively uninhibited hardly does justice to the wild, wild ride that this explosively inventive
- picture takes us on. Driven by a courageous and physically committed performance from Emma
- Stone, the film follows her journey as Bella Baxter, at the start of the picture a barely verbal blank
- slate, who embarks on an autodidact voyage of discovery to become the ultimate self-made
- woman.
- Like in the book, the period is impossible to pin down exactly. The story unfolds in a parallel
- past, a gothic, steampunk-infused Victoriana, a world that is distorted by the patriarchal power
- disparities in society. Without giving away the specifics, the picture is a subversive spin on Mary
- Shelley’s Frankenstein, with the role of Bella’s creator and guardian taken by unorthodox genius
- Dr Godwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe). Called “God” by Bella, Godwin bears grotesque scars on his face
- and body resulting from his childhood experience as the subject of his father’s deranged scientific
- curiosity – an experience that failed to stymie his own rather baroque quest for empirical facts.
- When Godwin recruits eager student Max McCandles (Ramy Youssef) to keep a record of Bella’s
- accelerated progress, her grasp of language expands exponentially.
- But Bella’s hunger knowledge and experience is too voracious to be contained the
- walls Godwin’s mansion. She grasps the opportunity offered by caddish lawyer and man
- about-town Duncan Wedderburn (a marvelously hammy Mark Ruffalo) and ventures forth
- London, first to Lisbon, then by steamship to Alexandria, and finally to a Parisian brothel. As Bella’s
- horizons broaden, so the look of the film alters to encompass her experiences. The chapter set
- predominantly in Godwin’s home is black and white, but once Bella ventures forth, the film shifts
- into color. But not just any color – there’s an uncanny, hyperreal quality to the palette that makes
- each frame look like a hand-tinted piece of Victorian postcard erotica.
- It’s an alchemic combination, this continuing collaboration between Lanthimos and Stone, a
- working relationship that started with The Favourite and will continue with another feature film
- project, titled Kinds of Kindness. They unleash in each other an extra level of uninhibited artistic
- daring that must be rooted in an uncommon degree of mutual trust. Nowhere is this more evident
- than in the physicality of Stone’s remarkable performance. Stone’s virtuoso use of her body – the
- way it inhabits space, the way she gradually masters her gangling, string-like limbs, the guilelessly
- open play of emotions in her face – is one of the most crucial elements in our experience of Bella’s
- journey.
- That journey is supported by a deliciously eccentric score by Jerskin Fendrix. An uneasy,
- detuned four-note motif played on flayed violin strings opens the film and returns in various
- incarnations throughout, sounding at one point like a hippo mating with a harmonium. The gradual
- build of intricacy and sophistication in the music brilliantly mirrors Bella’s intellectual growth.
- Bella’s appetite for novelty is reflected in film-making that evokes a similar sense of wonder and
- discovery in the audience. From the quirky flamboyance of Holly Waddington’s costumes to the
- off-kilter production design by Shona Heath and James Price, Poor Things is an endlessly
- fascinating carnival of oddness.
(Available at: www.theguardian.com/film/2024/jan/14/poor-things-review-yorgos-lanthimos-emma-stone-frankenstein – text specially adapted for this test).
Analyze the following statements about the text and mark T, if true, or F, if false.
( ) The article considers that the main character develops throughout the story from a “blank slate” to a “self-made woman”.
( ) Duncan Wedderburn’s role in the story was to offer Bella the opportunity to experience the world.
( ) The author highlights the historical accuracy of costumes and props as a captivating feature in the movie.
The correct order of filling the parentheses, from top to bottom, is:
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDATEC
Orgão: Pref. Criciúma-SC
Poor Things – Emma Stone transfixes in Lanthimos’s thrilling carnival of oddness
- It may only be the beginning of the year, but it’s hard to imagine that there will be a funnier,
- filthier, or more extravagantly peculiar film this year than Yorgos Lanthimos’s latest picture. To
- describe Poor Things, which is adapted by Tony McNamara from the 1992 novel by Alasdair Gray,
- as creatively uninhibited hardly does justice to the wild, wild ride that this explosively inventive
- picture takes us on. Driven by a courageous and physically committed performance from Emma
- Stone, the film follows her journey as Bella Baxter, at the start of the picture a barely verbal blank
- slate, who embarks on an autodidact voyage of discovery to become the ultimate self-made
- woman.
- Like in the book, the period is impossible to pin down exactly. The story unfolds in a parallel
- past, a gothic, steampunk-infused Victoriana, a world that is distorted by the patriarchal power
- disparities in society. Without giving away the specifics, the picture is a subversive spin on Mary
- Shelley’s Frankenstein, with the role of Bella’s creator and guardian taken by unorthodox genius
- Dr Godwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe). Called “God” by Bella, Godwin bears grotesque scars on his face
- and body resulting from his childhood experience as the subject of his father’s deranged scientific
- curiosity – an experience that failed to stymie his own rather baroque quest for empirical facts.
- When Godwin recruits eager student Max McCandles (Ramy Youssef) to keep a record of Bella’s
- accelerated progress, her grasp of language expands exponentially.
- But Bella’s hunger knowledge and experience is too voracious to be contained the
- walls Godwin’s mansion. She grasps the opportunity offered by caddish lawyer and man
- about-town Duncan Wedderburn (a marvelously hammy Mark Ruffalo) and ventures forth
- London, first to Lisbon, then by steamship to Alexandria, and finally to a Parisian brothel. As Bella’s
- horizons broaden, so the look of the film alters to encompass her experiences. The chapter set
- predominantly in Godwin’s home is black and white, but once Bella ventures forth, the film shifts
- into color. But not just any color – there’s an uncanny, hyperreal quality to the palette that makes
- each frame look like a hand-tinted piece of Victorian postcard erotica.
- It’s an alchemic combination, this continuing collaboration between Lanthimos and Stone, a
- working relationship that started with The Favourite and will continue with another feature film
- project, titled Kinds of Kindness. They unleash in each other an extra level of uninhibited artistic
- daring that must be rooted in an uncommon degree of mutual trust. Nowhere is this more evident
- than in the physicality of Stone’s remarkable performance. Stone’s virtuoso use of her body – the
- way it inhabits space, the way she gradually masters her gangling, string-like limbs, the guilelessly
- open play of emotions in her face – is one of the most crucial elements in our experience of Bella’s
- journey.
- That journey is supported by a deliciously eccentric score by Jerskin Fendrix. An uneasy,
- detuned four-note motif played on flayed violin strings opens the film and returns in various
- incarnations throughout, sounding at one point like a hippo mating with a harmonium. The gradual
- build of intricacy and sophistication in the music brilliantly mirrors Bella’s intellectual growth.
- Bella’s appetite for novelty is reflected in film-making that evokes a similar sense of wonder and
- discovery in the audience. From the quirky flamboyance of Holly Waddington’s costumes to the
- off-kilter production design by Shona Heath and James Price, Poor Things is an endlessly
- fascinating carnival of oddness.
(Available at: www.theguardian.com/film/2024/jan/14/poor-things-review-yorgos-lanthimos-emma-stone-frankenstein – text specially adapted for this test).
Mark the correct alternative about the text.
Provas
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FUNDATEC
Orgão: Pref. Criciúma-SC
Poor Things – Emma Stone transfixes in Lanthimos’s thrilling carnival of oddness
- It may only be the beginning of the year, but it’s hard to imagine that there will be a funnier,
- filthier, or more extravagantly peculiar film this year than Yorgos Lanthimos’s latest picture. To
- describe Poor Things, which is adapted by Tony McNamara from the 1992 novel by Alasdair Gray,
- as creatively uninhibited hardly does justice to the wild, wild ride that this explosively inventive
- picture takes us on. Driven by a courageous and physically committed performance from Emma
- Stone, the film follows her journey as Bella Baxter, at the start of the picture a barely verbal blank
- slate, who embarks on an autodidact voyage of discovery to become the ultimate self-made
- woman.
- Like in the book, the period is impossible to pin down exactly. The story unfolds in a parallel
- past, a gothic, steampunk-infused Victoriana, a world that is distorted by the patriarchal power
- disparities in society. Without giving away the specifics, the picture is a subversive spin on Mary
- Shelley’s Frankenstein, with the role of Bella’s creator and guardian taken by unorthodox genius
- Dr Godwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe). Called “God” by Bella, Godwin bears grotesque scars on his face
- and body resulting from his childhood experience as the subject of his father’s deranged scientific
- curiosity – an experience that failed to stymie his own rather baroque quest for empirical facts.
- When Godwin recruits eager student Max McCandles (Ramy Youssef) to keep a record of Bella’s
- accelerated progress, her grasp of language expands exponentially.
- But Bella’s hunger knowledge and experience is too voracious to be contained the
- walls Godwin’s mansion. She grasps the opportunity offered by caddish lawyer and man
- about-town Duncan Wedderburn (a marvelously hammy Mark Ruffalo) and ventures forth
- London, first to Lisbon, then by steamship to Alexandria, and finally to a Parisian brothel. As Bella’s
- horizons broaden, so the look of the film alters to encompass her experiences. The chapter set
- predominantly in Godwin’s home is black and white, but once Bella ventures forth, the film shifts
- into color. But not just any color – there’s an uncanny, hyperreal quality to the palette that makes
- each frame look like a hand-tinted piece of Victorian postcard erotica.
- It’s an alchemic combination, this continuing collaboration between Lanthimos and Stone, a
- working relationship that started with The Favourite and will continue with another feature film
- project, titled Kinds of Kindness. They unleash in each other an extra level of uninhibited artistic
- daring that must be rooted in an uncommon degree of mutual trust. Nowhere is this more evident
- than in the physicality of Stone’s remarkable performance. Stone’s virtuoso use of her body – the
- way it inhabits space, the way she gradually masters her gangling, string-like limbs, the guilelessly
- open play of emotions in her face – is one of the most crucial elements in our experience of Bella’s
- journey.
- That journey is supported by a deliciously eccentric score by Jerskin Fendrix. An uneasy,
- detuned four-note motif played on flayed violin strings opens the film and returns in various
- incarnations throughout, sounding at one point like a hippo mating with a harmonium. The gradual
- build of intricacy and sophistication in the music brilliantly mirrors Bella’s intellectual growth.
- Bella’s appetite for novelty is reflected in film-making that evokes a similar sense of wonder and
- discovery in the audience. From the quirky flamboyance of Holly Waddington’s costumes to the
- off-kilter production design by Shona Heath and James Price, Poor Things is an endlessly
- fascinating carnival of oddness.
(Available at: www.theguardian.com/film/2024/jan/14/poor-things-review-yorgos-lanthimos-emma-stone-frankenstein – text specially adapted for this test).
Which of the following questions is NOT answered in the text?
Provas
Administrative assistants are often the backbone of an organization, providing support to managers, teams, and clients. They handle a variety of tasks, such as scheduling, organizing, communicating, and problem-solving. To succeed in this role, they need not only technical skills, but also soft skills and personality traits that help them work effectively with others and adapt to changing situations.
Hard skills for the administrative assistant are the overriding technical office skills that you bring to the workplace. Hard skills can be learned and can be acquired through training, work or a combination of both. Hard skills are considered transferable which means, once learned, you can transfer them from job to job. That’s because hard skills are standard across industries and would be very similar at several different organizations and industries. Hard skills are considered measurable, which means an employer can test you on these skills.
On the other hand, soft skills are personal qualities that allow one to relate to others more effectively. Some soft skills include having a positive attitude and effective time management. Also called people skills, soft skills are considered social skills such as communication skills, listening skills, character or personality traits, attitudes, and emotional intelligence, such as the ability to show empathy to others. Once learned, these skills will enhance your personal interactions on the job.
(https://officeskills.org/19.10.2023)
Na última sentença do texto – Once learned, these soft skills will enhance your personal interactions on the job –, a palavra em negrito pode ser substituída, mantendo o mesmo significado, por
Provas
Administrative assistants are often the backbone of an organization, providing support to managers, teams, and clients. They handle a variety of tasks, such as scheduling, organizing, communicating, and problem-solving. To succeed in this role, they need not only technical skills, but also soft skills and personality traits that help them work effectively with others and adapt to changing situations.
Hard skills for the administrative assistant are the overriding technical office skills that you bring to the workplace. Hard skills can be learned and can be acquired through training, work or a combination of both. Hard skills are considered transferable which means, once learned, you can transfer them from job to job. That’s because hard skills are standard across industries and would be very similar at several different organizations and industries. Hard skills are considered measurable, which means an employer can test you on these skills.
On the other hand, soft skills are personal qualities that allow one to relate to others more effectively. Some soft skills include having a positive attitude and effective time management. Also called people skills, soft skills are considered social skills such as communication skills, listening skills, character or personality traits, attitudes, and emotional intelligence, such as the ability to show empathy to others. Once learned, these skills will enhance your personal interactions on the job.
(https://officeskills.org/19.10.2023)
In the excerpt from the second paragraph – are the overriding technical office skills – the word in bold may be substituted with no change in meaning by
Provas
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