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A handout with movie questions that are to be answered after and while watching the excellent animated version (I only show Part 2 & 3) of The Canterbury Tales (it was shown on HBO, and is available on Video (here in the U.S.) and DVD [only from the U.K.]). I have revised the worksheet this year to include animations from part 3 as well. There is also an attachment for revised questions that also reference John Gardner's Grendel.
When I teach the Romantics, I use this wonderful, underrated movie as a bridge between the Enlightenment (Age of Reason) and the Romantic Era. When you see the movie, it almost feels at though that was the director's intention: the Romantic and imaginative Baron versus the forces of reason and reality that battle, and nearly kill him. There are movie questions for three days of viewing in class, as well as an extra credit assignment involving multiple artistic depictions of the same scene from the story of Baron Munchausen, that asks students to comment on those depictions and their relationship to "imagination."
The movie Forbidden Planet works incredibly well as a companion-movie when teaching The Tempest. The ideas, themes (a
This movie, The Sweet Hereafter, based on an excellent book -- ties much of what I do in my class during the year together. It also uses a central metaphor of "The Pied Piper of Hamlin," to bring together many of its own themes. These questions are different than most of the ones found on this site -- they are more open ended and are intended to have the students take notes that will then be put together after the film is finished.
Even as recently as four years ago - there was more time that we had in the classroom to devote to teaching, and I was able to show not only the complete Kenneth Branagh version of Henry V, but I was able to show 45 minutes of the Lawrence Olivier version as well. There are a number of reasons for showing the Olivier version: it gives the students a great perspective on how different productions of the same materical can be, the opening of his film and its transition from drama to film are not only classic - they echo the prologue, and they echo so much of what I try to show my students as a teacher.
I was lucky enough to see this film at its premeire at an NCTE meeting that was held in Chicago. Al Pacino was there - and he was introduced by the late Chicago film critic Gene Siskel. The standing ovation that he received at the end of the movie - was well deserved and I think that my students' (and my own) appreciation for Looking for Richard has just grown in the following years. It really does encapsulate the ideas of the Folger Library and Peggy O'Brien in a wonderful, engaging way. It is also a great movie to show students before they put on their own Shakespeare scenes - to give them an idea of coming to an understanding of the text - through performance. I have listed this under Macbeth as we show this movie when students are first getting together to practice their Macbeth scenes.
When I first saw this film I remember how well it fit in with the Summer Seminar that I was taking at NYU on the Renaissance. Then when I got back home I realized how well it fit in with everything that we did in my senior World Literature class. I use these movie questions and show the film after we have done a brief unit on Dante (see these handouts), and after we have spent a day talking about the poems of Pablo Neruda. The students do get such a big kick out of seeing these ideas brought together. There are of course references to everything that we've read - and these can easily be adapted for your own class room. There is an attached version that does not have The House on Mango Street mentioned but does have A Long, Long Time Ago referenced.
This is the second part of the Il Postino movie questioins - and I have tried to revise them to reflect what we have been studying throughout the year - but to also bring in a higher level of critical thinking as well. There is so much in this movie that reflects what we do during the year: literally - we precede the viewing of the film with Pablo Neruda - and before that Dante. But perhaps most importantly, the ideas of metaphors to explain what we find incomprehensible in our lives. Also the fact that we are surrounded by a beauty that we don't often even realize is there (think "A Christmas Memory") and all we have to do is look around us.
I introduce my Romeo and Juliet unit by briefly introducing the history of the Globe Theatre, then teach the sonnet, tragedy vs. comedy, and then the film before I ever have them open the play. I show the first 2/3 of the film (I stop at the "morning after" scene when Romeo is about to leave Juliet's bedroom). My intent here is to introduce my students to the language, the plot, the characters, the clothing and behavior of the times before they enter into the play. I have used this methodology for the past 4 years and it works beautfully as it is the first time my students really are exposed to Shakespeare in any depth. I use the attached film study guide as the students are viewing the movie. Though it is not specifically in chronological order of the movie, it is divided into sectors - The Beginning, The Actors,Scene Analysis, etc.
After we finished reading In Our Time by Ernest Hemingway, I realized this year that we needed a movie to show along with it. I narrowed it down to 4 films and finally decided on Robert Altman's Nashville. This film about the intertwining lives of characters during a week or so in Nashville, Tennessee - fits in perfectly with Hemingway's collection of like-wise intertwined stories and characters. The more we watched, the more the students a
After reading Nicole Krauss's The History of Love for a second time - I needed to find a movie to show to my class to go with her novel. I always see movies as an added opportunity to foster connections and critical thinking so it's important to me to find a film that is close - but not to close to what we're reading. After narrowing it down to three movies - I decided on the German film, Wings of Desire. I will confess that I was apprehensive that the movies slow pace and abstract ideas would be too much for my students - but boy was I wrong. The students not only did well with these questions, but most of them had a real affection for the film as well.
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