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Period 3 Creative Writing Assignments

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Five Plot Points
 
 
 
 

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Create a character that has an attitude.
 

Create an idea and pour your character into it

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create a character and let the story emerge out of it.

Groundhog Day structure

 Groundhog script
 

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Work on Character Biography today. It must be at least 500+ words.  Pretend you are the character or a therapist writing about the character's life from birth til present.
Link to Rocky I script
 
 
 
 

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Dialogue Resource

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Create your log line, and the Act I outline. See attachment.
 
Same Thing Only Different: Ten types of movies by Blake Snyder

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You logline is due at the end of class today. See attachment for help.

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Five Questions

Who What  When Where and Why

Read the following by Charles Kipps, film writer and producer:

I have an idea…

I hear this all the time. It could be an idea for a television series or a film. And it may be a wonderful idea with a fascinating logline. There’s one problem with an idea, however. It needs to be fleshed out. As Shakespeare might put it: Ay, there’s the rub.

The truth is, execution is far more important than simply an idea when it comes to film and television. An idea is a seed, not a mature, fruit-bearing plant. But just as it is difficult to successfully cultivate a garden, creating all the elements necessary to bring an idea to fruition also is a challenge.

I have an idea for a movie.

Okay, what is it?

A UFO lands in somebody’s yard.

Right. And then what?

No response. Just a blank stare.

When asked to elaborate on an idea enthusiastically and earnestly offered (with a great flourish and intensity and waving of hands for emphasis) most people are suddenly deflated and stunned into silence. Either that or they babble forth with a disjointed string of non sequiturs that make little sense in terms of story.

So how do you turn your idea into something coherent and ready for primetime?

The Five Ws.

Anyone who has ever written for a newspaper knows the Five Ws well. Editors use the Five Ws as a mantra. Readers can inherently sense it if the Five Ws are missing.

Not a clue what the Five Ws are? Don’t worry. You’re about to find out.

While working as a journalist early in my career I often was forced to deal with the Five Ws — five questions that serve as the universal basis for a good news article.

Who? What? When? Where? Why?

When I began writing television, film, and books, I realized that these same journalistic principles of story construction could be modified slightly when it comes to developing fiction. So now, when I have an idea, the first question I pose is:



Who is it about?

For me, characters drive the story, not the other way around. You need a protagonist, of course. Or maybe more than one protagonist. For example, a team of Detectives in a police procedural. Who your characters are and how many of them you create is up to you. If it’s helpful to follow the template suggested by many story seminars (reluctant hero, mentor, etc.) then by all means do so. However, I don’t necessarily think you need to adhere to any particular dogma when creating characters. If your hero is not reluctant, so be it. And if your hero achieves his goal without the benefit of a mentor guiding him along the way, good for him. Life doesn’t go by any rules so why must a set of characters?

The first thing I want to know when developing characters is what motivates them. How old are they? Are they married? What do they want out of life? How might their wants and desires affect the plot’s turning points? What are their back stories? What events occurred in their lives before their appearance on the page or on screen begins? How did these events mold their personalities? Assembling a brief bio of each character, major and minor, is critical at this stage. Once created, these characters will help you write the story. They’ll do the heavy lifting. All you need to do is follow them on their journey.

What happened?

Whatever happened, it happened to the characters that you have brought to life. A UFO landed in somebody’s yard? You can anticipate the next logical step of the story because the characters are going to react in a manner consistent with who they are. A neighborhood resident would view the close encounter more hysterically than a NASA scientist, who would exhibit curiosity. How would a cop handle the situation? Or a soldier? Is your character an adult or teenager? Does your character run from the UFO? Try to communicate with it? Shoot at it? The story will begin to unfold as the characters do what you might expect of them. And your original idea will gain momentum as the characters navigate the maze that threads through the beginning, the treacherous middle, and the end of your story.

When did it happen?

Since all eras have their own laws, attitudes, and social mores, characters are, to a large degree, products of the time in which they reside. Whether your story is a period piece, contemporary, or takes place a thousand years from now, the choice will have an impact on what your characters think and feel. The past will require some research to ensure authenticity. You live in the present so you can draw from your own experience. The future doesn’t yet exist so you must summon your imagination.

Where did it happen?

I often use New York as a locale because, to me, New York is a character, albeit a non-human one. The streets, the skyscrapers, the energy, are difficult to duplicate elsewhere. Peoria is quite different from Manhattan, Italy is worlds away from China. Middle Eastern women wear burkas, women in LA wear… well, whatever they want. Where your character lives or works or travels is of prime importance in that the arena can shape the plot in unexpected ways as characters explore their environment. A Fedex deliveryman making his rounds in the suburbs? Likely mundane. A Fedex deliveryman in Moscow? That’s another story. So where did your UFO land? In New Jersey, under an intense media spotlight? Or in North Korea behind a veil of secrecy?

Why did it happen?

Everything that transpires in a story happens because of an incident that propels the characters and thus the plot. In Argo, diplomats escape the Canadian Embassy in Iran. Life of Pi pivots on a shipwreck. A UFO lands in somebody’s yard? It started out as just an idea. Only now you know how it turns out.

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Fairy tale based on a real event.

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The 2nd draft of your short story is due today. It needs to over 500 words. Follow the rubric to earn an A.  We will also be working on Ordeal by Cheque

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Digital Portfolio will be today. If your are absent, I will teach this during PAWS next week and I will give you an extension.

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Oral History due today. Write one-two pages in the first person based on the interview.

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Take the grit test  If absent, write down a summary of the Ted Talk and your grit score.  Due on Tuesday/Weds. 
 
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Write a valentine/lyric poem to someone and give it to them on 2/14.  I will give you time on Monday to create this in class.
Period 3- In addition, you will find a favorite love poem to share on 2/14. I suggests that you search on poem.hunter.com -love poems.

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The Most Dangerous Game
We will read this in class.

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Today your poem on America will be due at the end of class. See the attachment for more info. 

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We will be viewing most of the film Dead Poet's Society and studying the important themes. See the attached study guide for help.

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Test review. Which is the best?

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This week you have a few choices:
1. Write an elegy- a sad poem much like "O Captain, My Captain"
2. Write a poem with the theme of Carpe Diem-Seize the Day
3. Write about a "romantic" setting. This description should have a creepy, threatening, or ominous mod.

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Your poem book is due today. 5 or more poems with artwork.

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Your film needs to be done by today for the Academy Awards!

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Narrative Poem due today. This could be a narrative, epic or mock epic.  +20 lines.

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Movie Script due today.

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We will discuss the attachment in class.

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What is your story? Who are you and how to you see the world around you?

PTA REFLECTIONS: PTA Reflections is a nationally acclaimed student recognition program to encourage artistic creativity in the classroom and at home. Students of all grades and abilities may participate and explore the arts based on the 2016-2017 theme: What Is Your Story?  The arts—and the National PTA Reflections program—support student success and serve as a valuable tool for building strong partnerships in your school community. Celebrate arts learning in your school community with Reflections. National PTA Reflections welcomes all grades and abilities to explore and be involved in the arts. Annually, thousands of students will reflect on a common theme and create original works of art in the categories of dance choreography, film production, literature, music composition, photography and visual arts.  The due date is November 7, 2016.  Click here for forms and information.  Please contact Kathy Vigil at [email protected] for additional information.

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Preview the vocabulary. See page 353 "The Tell Tale Heart"

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Click on link to see the script of  E.T. movie scriptE.T.

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Life Goal Project due today.
10 pictures and a letter looking back on you life explaining each event. This should be eleven paragraphs- 400+ words.

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6 word memoir due today.

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Random Autobiography and your narrative are due today.

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Abstract Concrete Poem due today.

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Write a first draft of a narrative on either a time you were scared, in trouble, in pain, in joy.... Approx. 500 words.

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Color Poem due today. We will do most of this in class.

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By the end of class, you should have your color poem done.  You will be given 30 minutes to work on this.