For this week’s assignment you will choose ONE film that is a known motion picture that you enjoy and deals with an aspect(s) of Multicultural issues. The film can be a current/recent film or a film that is from a different era of the last 60-70 years. It can be a Drama, Tragedy, Historical Narrative, or a Comedy if the comedy that looks to make a point and comment about culture and society.
This film should have something to say about societal, cultural, political, racial, religious or relational issues that we may be dealing with today or have dealt with as a nation. The thrust and emphasis of the story for your film should surround a topic that we have been wrestling with so far in this course. Issues may include African American issues, education, Asian American issues, poverty, immigration, racial history in America, assimilation, films that deal with the rise and individuals of the LGBTQ movement or films that deal with social change, political change, ethnic or racial problems, historical looks at our past and the wrongs we may have done and what we learn now. Choose a film YOU want to watch and can be passionate about.
There 20 Questions. This is worth 100 pts.
Please reflect on our previous lesson #5 where we discussed Play (Hodge) analysis for your midterm assignment.
As your watching the film, answer the questions below to the best of your ability. Your answers should explain how well you understand the story, the plot, its structure, the characters and the relevant action of the story/film. Please spend time with your answers. These questions require some thought. You must express how you believe your conclusions to these questions impact the action of the story and the characters.
TITLE OF FILM: _______________________________________
Given Circumstances:
1. Geographical location, including climate:
2. Date; year, season, time of day:
3. Economic environment (What is the ECONOMY like for the Characters? How does it affect them?)
4. Political environment (Who is IN- CHARGE in the relationships? Who or what has the power?)
5. Social environment (what are the characters SOCIAL NORMS? How/who do they CONDUCT themselves with? How does that affect the story)
6. Religious environment (what effect does RELIGION/ FAITH or the LACK OF RELIGION/FAITH play and affect your story?)
Play Structure
7. Who is the Protagonist and what does he or she ultimately want or hopes to achieve by the end of the story? (Their “Super Objective”?)
8. Who is the Antagonist and what does he or she ultimately want or hopes to achieve by the end of the story? (Their “Super Objective”?)
9. List the Inciting Event (the event before the story starts that sets up the action.)
10. List the Stasis (how does the world of the story open and exist?)
11. List the Intrusion (that moment or event that provokes the present action into motion // breaks the stasis)
12. List events in the story of the Rising Action. (The dramatic events leading to climax)
13. List the major Crisis moment(s) 6-8 examples
14. List the Climax
15. List the Resolution // The Return to Stasis ( the way the world is now)
CONCLUSIONS: (Please flesh out your conclusions and explain how your conclusions affect the overall idea and intent of the film-makers.)
1. How does the clash of desire, will, and objective between the Protagonist and the Antagonists help provide the dramatic conflict for the story and shape the overall idea of the film and the film makers intent?
2. In your opinion, what is the major social, political, cultural or relational issue that this film is speaking to and why? What do you believe is the overriding point or theme of your film and what you believe the filmmakers are trying to convey about that issue?
3. How does this film help to shape your own overall outlook at Multicultural issues and the problems we face as a society? Do you believe that this film can help with the issue(s) and conversations about what the film speaks to? Why or why not?
Looking forward to your choices and what you have to say about Multiculturalism in Theatre and Film as we navigate the middle part of our