I believe the answer is a brief biography that describes Pare Lorentz's life and film career.
I just took the test.
This question seems to be incomplete. However, there is enough information to find the right answer.
Answer:
Go back to see it
Explanation:
In Where the Red Fern Grows (1961) by Wilson Rawls, Billy loses his two hunting dogs. Old Dan died defending the boy from a mountain lion. And Ann died soon after due to sadness. When Billy discovers that red fern has grown over their tombs, he thinks is a magical event, due to an old legend of that plant only growing if being planted by an angel. Being his last day in the Ozarks, Billy (as an adult in the narration) claims he always wanted to go back to that place, to see the tombs and the ref dern.
A. The beauties have been permanently scarred by the speaker.
The best way to begin her speech would be with <span>something familiar to the audience about the topic. The correct option among all the options that are given in the question is the first option or option "A". I hope that this is the answer that has actually come to your help.</span>
Hello. Although You have submitted a text, You have not submitted any questions about it, which prevents me from giving you any answers. However, I will tell you what this text means and I hope it will help you.
This text is an excerpt from "True West" written by Sam Shepard, where we read about the dispute between two brothers. Those brothers are Lee and Austin and they're competing over who can write the best Western theater play.
In the excerpt shown above, Lee is claiming that he can write about the real western, escaping the stereotyped myth that western theater plays present. That's because Lee has lived in the Wild West and knows what he was really like, so he believes he can write a much better play, real and full of success.