Contrast maybe i’m not sure
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
A screen director does not relinquish control on opening night in the way that a stage director does. The director remains in control of pace, structure, builds and reactions as he or she works with the cinematographer and editor to stitch together a disparate collection of shots, score, sfx, cgi, audio, etc into a whole movie. The pauses, builds, responsiveness to an audience that actors read and manage on stage are the business of the director in a screen production. Once the actors have gone home there is still major work to do before it reaches the audience.
 
        
                    
             
        
        
        
I'm like, way too obsessed with the 2000s and shouldn't know as much as I do.  So, like, excuse me if I go a bit overboard here.
Fashion in the early 2000s was mainly form-fitting on the top (blouses were pretty big), while the bottom was more loose, like flared jeans or sagging your pants.  Loose, trapeze type dresses (but like, structured on the top but completely unstructured past the bust.  I don't think there's a name for that type of dress, it's just so weird and /such/ a fashion crime).
This started to change around maybe 2004-2005? ish when emo/pop punk started getting way more traction and Paris Hilton became a major style influence (like, I could write an essay about her genius.  She influenced an entire dam/n generation and CREATED the Kardashians.  What an icon).  Jeans became tighter (if emo did anything right, it was getting rid of bell bottoms for good) and more low rise.  Actually, severely low-rise (thanks, Paris Hilton).  And the god awful whatever-the-heII-that-was dress was replaced by slip dresses (courtesy of our lord and savior, Paris Hilton again).  Oh yeah, I also can't not mention the Juicy Couture tracksuits which were /huge/ in the early 2000s.  (Also, I think tube tops were either early 2000s or mid-2000s, which was major because the partying scene literally exploded.)
TL;DR mostly form-fitting.  If you need examples, just cite Paris Hilton or Juicy Couture.
        
             
        
        
        
C. Suffering. Siddhartha was a prince who spend all of his young years behind confined walls in a lavish estate. His father did this to prevent him from seeing the suffering that was common among the regular people. When Siddhartha climbed the wall in secret, he was astonished by the poverty, hunger, and disease among the commoners. This inspired him to seek inner understanding about ending suffering and started his path of becoming Buddha.