nature films such as Irving Pichel and Ernest B. Schoedsack’s The Most Dangerous Game (1933), Peter Brook’s Lord Of The Flies (1963), which one Top Ten Films National Board of Review award, and last but not least one of the most successful man vs. nature films Steven Spielberg’s Jaws (1975). Jaws won three Oscars for best sound, best film editing, and best music, original dramatic score. Modern and worthy successes of the genre include Into the Wild and Wild. These films are part of a more recent trend. In a modern review of man vs. nature films published in The New York Times, noted film critic A. O. Scott wrote, “The paradox of all these accounts of lonely wandering is that they actively solicit the companionship of readers and viewers”. Defining the features of today’s man vs. nature
nature films such as Irving Pichel and Ernest B. Schoedsack’s The Most Dangerous Game (1933), Peter Brook’s Lord Of The Flies (1963), which one Top Ten Films National Board of Review award, and last but not least one of the most successful man vs. nature films Steven Spielberg’s Jaws (1975). Jaws won three Oscars for best sound, best film editing, and best music, original dramatic score. Modern and worthy successes of the genre include Into the Wild and Wild. These films are part of a more recent trend. In a modern review of man vs. nature films published in The New York Times, noted film critic A. O. Scott wrote, “The paradox of all these accounts of lonely wandering is that they actively solicit the companionship of readers and viewers”. Defining the features of today’s man vs. nature