Of course the tango musical theme combined with extensive monologues by Paul forces viewer to dance with and listen into the characters, almost becoming one. Through Ouisa we are shown how we all look for something new to enter our lives, even a sham like Paul can turn us around, give a new meaning to the mundane. As a result, a chain of 'friend of a friend' statements can be made to connect any two people in a maximum of six steps. We are equated to John Kittridge who lives his self involved life not noticing the people around him - not the hippy couple in the park who happen to be artists, nor his kids away in college, not even his wife's true personality. Six degrees Six degrees of separation is the idea that all people on average are six, or fewer, social connections away from each other. Through Ouisa Kittridge it teaches us how mundane our everyday events are, that we all need something drastic to happen to bring us out of sleepy everyday into a fun, exciting, new being. In reality it adds another perspective on our daily lives.
It discusses how we are all no more then 6 degrees of separation from eachother. Very original in plot, colors, and directing, with a superb soundtrack. In that search, Ouisa in particularly starts to critically study their lives and how much compassion they actually have. Their encounter with him ends up being an all-too-familiar story that leads them on a search for him after he leaves their house the next morning. After tending to his wounds, the Kittredges invite him to stay the night. Beyond the attraction of talking Paul into getting them roles in the movie, Ouisa, Flan, and Geoffrey all end up being captivated by Paul's charm, charisma, pedigree, and eloquence.
Tomorrow, Paul is meeting up with his father, who is in town directing a movie of "Cats". He was a friend of the Kittredges' children, who are attending Harvard more importantly, he's the son of actor and Director Sidney Poitier. The young man, Paul Poitier (Will Smith), had just arrived in the city when he was mugged outside their building, he sported a minor knife wound to the abdomen. They relay a story to their friends and acquaintances that becomes legendary over time: their encounter with a young black stranger who came stumbling upon their front door one evening as they were courting Geoffrey Miller (Sir Ian McKellen), an important investor who could make them wealthy beyond their dreams. Their prized possession is a double-sided Kandinsky: one side represents control the other, chaos. Six degrees of separation is the idea that all living things and everything else in the world is six or fewer steps away from each other so that a chain of. In this review, approaches to the development of radiosensitizers and the current state of research in this field are discussed, including promising new agents in various stages of clinical development.New Yorkers Louisa "Ouisa" Kittredge (Stockard Channing) and John Flanders "Flan" Kittredge (Donald Sutherland) are upper-class private art dealers, pretentious, but compassionate. Under such a framework, it would become possible for one area to consider questions and problems found in other areas of radiosensitization, using a common analogy, that would allow for further development and unification of this multifaceted discipline. It is the aim of this review to develop the six degrees of separation from oxygen analogy as a unifying framework for conceptually organizing the field and for giving context to its varied subspecializations and theories.
As the prime mover of all radiosensitizers, the pervasive influence of oxygen has consciously or unconsciously influenced the direction of research and development and provided the benchmark against which all other compounds and approaches are measured. The popular theory six degrees of separation is used in this review as an analogy to relate all radiosensitization to oxygen.