About Title Source

A shopper wants to know…
How to Properly Denote the Title and Source of a Film?
How do I denote the source and title of a film?
For example, if I am writing a summary of the movie Finding Nemo and it was released in 2008 and the source of the film was CartoonNetwork, how do I denote it? What goes in italics?
CanopyTentStore.com Staff Says:
Put in brackets (quoted from Nemo-italics- 200xx movie, produced by xxx)
only proper names need be in italics

A shopper wants to know…
How would I do a parenthetical citation, with no author, but has the same exact title as another source?
I need to do a research paper for school, and I of course need parenthetical citations. I have 2 sources with the same exact title, and with no author. How would I use the MLA format to properly cite each of the sources in my paper?
Thanks!
CanopyTentStore.com Staff Says:
If this is an online source, you do the title, then the website title or database title.
(“The Life of Ducks,” Ducks.com) where ducks.com should be in italics
You can use http://www.weswave.com/webdoc.php to cite this

A shopper wants to know…
How do you do a Internal Citation when there is no author? Can I just put in the title of the source & page #?
How do you do a Internal Citation when there is no author? Can I just put in the title of the source & page number?
Like this: There are some very rare species of roses that are blue. (What is a Rose? 114)
???????
CanopyTentStore.com Staff Says:
Do you mean like the author is unknown?
If there is no author, then just do what you put down.

A shopper wants to know…
How to MLA cite a source with a question mark in title?
I’m trying to cite a periodical source and the title of the article is, “Is Caffeine a Health Hazard?” How do I cite this?:
Best, Ben. Is Caffeine a Health Hazard?.
etc.
Do I use a period at the end?
CanopyTentStore.com Staff Says:
You include the question mark just as you did, as part of the title. Pretend it’s a “3″ at first. Remember to handle the title properly (underlined, in quotation marks, or whatever is appropriate).
Courtesy of Y!Answers