You underline the film title according to MLA guidelines. Among the other sources underlined are plays, books, magazines, pamphlets, CDs, TV programs, newspapers, works of art, or audiocassettes. Depending on the class, you may be able to italicize instead of underline, though you should ask your teacher.
Here are a few examples:
We went to see the film "Close Encounters of a Third Kind" last night.
The film "The Exorcist" was banned in the UK for many years.
One of my favorite films is "The Hunt for Red October".
Answer #2: That is incorrect. You would underline (or italicize if typing) the names of movies. The same holds true for the titles of magazines, books, newspapers, academic journals, television shows, long poems, plays, operas, musical albums, and works of art.
I CONCUR with answer #2, though I had to edit out the URL.
No, titles of full-length movies are italicized. Only titles of short films go in quotation marks. Similarly, book titles are italicized, while poem or short story titles are put in quotation marks.
Some will tell you that movie and book titles can be underlined, but that is really archaic. It's an outdated practice dating back to the days of typewriters. Nobody underlines titles anymore.
This question has been answered elsewhere, see: http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_do_you_reference_a_movie_APA_style
Depending on how long the movie is, if its short (15 minutes or less) you write the name in parentheses "" if it is a long movie you under line it
Underline it, but if typed, Underline and do not italicise it.
In the beginning of the essay for example you can say: In the book _____ by _____....
The correct way to write a movie title is to italicize it or underline it, as you would a book title.
On the computer it is in italics but when you are writing it you underline it quotes are for a specific scene in the movie
If you are writing by hand, then yes you underline it, but if you are typing, you need to italicize it.
yes or italicize it
On the title page, centered on the paper, you include the name of your university, the full title of your paper, the course/class information, your name and date, and any other information that your professor may require. http://depts.gallaudet.edu/englishworks/writing/turabianguide.html
Ghostbusters, Dan Aykroyd as Ray Stantz http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0087332/quotes
On the computer it is in italics but when you are writing it you underline it quotes are for a specific scene in the movie
Yes, when writing the title of a movie in a paper, you should italicize it instead of using quotations marks. This follows the standard formatting guidelines for titles of major works in writing.
no you do not
No, it is underlined, just like a book title.
No, we do not put the title in quotations.
One way to write movie titles in a sentence is by putting quotes around the movie title. You can also under the movie title.
When writing a paper for school, the subject of the paper is the topic that your are writing about. The title is the name of the paper, that will give the reader an idea about what the paper is about.
In quotes. Title of book is italicized or underlined.
You need to Underline it if you are typing it, if you are writing it, it needs to be in quotes.
Swordfish → http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0244244/quotes
The way I was taught in high school that helped me to remember when to use quotations and when to underline was: if you could hang the thing in question on a string with a clothespin, the quotes were the clothespin. If it was too heavy for that it needed to be put on a shelf(underlined). Examples: A magazine article "(Article Title)"A scholarly paper "(Paper title here)"A book (Book Title here)-------------------
Either type it, or write it by hand