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Primary Motive is a 1992 American political thriller film written and directed by Daniel Adams.
Jul 24, 1992 · Primary Motive: Directed by Daniel Adams. With Judd Nelson, Richard Jordan, Sally Kirkland, Justine Bateman. In this political thriller, an ambitious press secretary discovers that the opposing political candidate has feathered the nest of his campaigns with terrible lies.
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- Thriller
- Daniel Adams
- 1992-07-24
- Achievement motives: They refer to a drive towards some standards of excellence. People with high-level achievement motives prefer tasks that would promise success and are moderately difficult.
- Affiliation motives: Man cannot exist in isolation. The need to be with other people is known as affiliation need. This need is revealed through one’s attraction to others through friendship, sociability or group membership.
- Aggression motives: Intense frustrations after high expectations, verbal and nonverbal insults, fear and anxiety can trigger aggression. Television and cinema depicting violence can make youngsters model themselves to aggressive behaviour.
- Power motives: Social power is defined as the ability of an individual to produce intended effect on the behaviour or emotions of other people. Persons with power motives will be concerned with having impact, influence and reputation.
Taut political thriller with Nelson as Andy Blumenthal, a press secretary who finds that an opposing candidate's campaign is covered by a web of lies. Blumenthal exposes the lies, but the candidate denies them and pulls further ahead in the polls.
Primary Motive. A rookie press secretary (Judd Nelson) and his girlfriend (Justine Bateman) target their Boston candidate's crooked opponent (Richard Jordan) for...
- Daniel Adams
- Drama
- Judd Nelson
Primary Motive is a 1992 American political thriller film written and directed by Daniel Adams.
Sep 8, 2017 · As “the primary human motive” (MacIntyre, 2002a, p. 61), emotion operates as an amplifier, which provides energetic intensity to all human behavior, including language learning. This chapter explains major theories of emotion drawn from positive psychology, social psychology, social constructivism, social constructionism, and existential ...