7.2.9 Top Movies Info
"7.2.9 Top Movies"
In the context of computer science and programming, refers to a specific coding exercise found in the CodeHS AP Computer Science Principles curriculum.
- The implication: A 7.2 is the minimum requirement for a film to be considered a "Classic" rather than just "Good."
- The Experience: Watching a 7.2 movie is the most reliable cinematic experience. A 9.5 movie might depress you. A 4.0 movie will annoy you. A 7.2 movie will entertain you.
- Seven Samurai (1954): Akira Kurosawa’s epic is the blueprint for the "team on a mission" narrative. Its influence ripples through The Magnificent Seven, Star Wars, and nearly every action blockbuster since. Its kinetic editing and sweeping scope proved that action cinema could be art.
- In the Mood for Love (2000): Wong Kar-wai’s visually intoxicating romance represents the height of stylized cinema. It is a film about repression and missed connections, utilizing color, music, and frame composition to evoke emotions that dialogue cannot express. Its rise in recent critical polls signals a shift toward valuing atmospheric mood over traditional plotting.
Action & Thriller: The Adrenaline Keepers
- Typical Rating: ~8.1 (Higher end of the scale)
- The 7.2 Connection: Many cult comedies settle in the 7-range because humor is subjective. A "7.2 Comedy" is usually a film that is brilliant but weird. It alienates just enough people to drop from an 8, but is beloved by everyone else.
Initialize the List
: Use square brackets [] to create a list named movie_list containing four strings of your choice . 7.2.9 Top Movies
In sci-fi, 7.2.9 movies are the ones that ask big questions without forgetting to blow up a spaceship or two. The implication: A 7
7.0 to 7.9
On a standard 1–10 scale, a is widely considered the hallmark of a high-quality, enjoyable film. Seven Samurai (1954): Akira Kurosawa’s epic is the
Initial Output
: Print the first movie in the list using movies[0] . Modification : Change that first movie to "Star Wars".