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ENG 225 Week 5 Final Paper Film Critique


ENG 225 Week 5 Final Paper Film Critique


Focus of the Final Film Critique


Throughout this course, you have been compiling a blog and writing essays that analyze various elements of film such as theme, cinematic techniques, and genre. It is now time to combine those elements into a comprehensive analysis of one movie.


You will be completing this assignment in two stages: for the first stage (1500 to 1800 words), you will analyze an entire movie; in the second stage (300 to 600 words), you will reflect on how you analyzed the movie as well as how your ability to analyze film in general has evolved.


You are encouraged to incorporate writing from your Week Two Assignment and your Week Three Assignment if (a) you have reflected on the instructor’s feedback, (b) you have revised the relevant parts of the essays accordingly, and (c) the essays discuss the same film that you discuss here.


Stage 1: Analysis


For this stage, you will be analyzing a movie selected from the AFI's 10 Top 10 list. The film you choose can be one that you have previously analyzed in this course. The analysis portion of your paper should be 1500 to 1800 words in length. You should analyze the film through the lens of one of the broad theories you have learned about in class (auteur theory, genre theory, formalist theory). Your analysis must address four main areas (contextual information, story / plot, aesthetic


choices, and social/personal impact) and how these areas work together to develop the theme of the movie. As you


construct your analysis, assume that your reader is not familiar with this film. Use your analysis to explain why your reader why they should watch this film.


In addition to the film you are analyzing, you must use three scholarly sources to support your arguments. List these sources on your references page and provide in-text citations for quoted, paraphrased, or summarized content in the body of your paper. Cite your sources according to APA style as outlined in the Ashford Writing Center.


Your analysis must address these four components:

1.  Title
2.  Director, cinematographer, major actors/actresses. Be sure to describe their roles in the overall design process.
3.  Year of release
4.  Type of film (blockbuster, indie, documentary, etc.)
5.  Genre
6. Story/Plot – In this area, you should offer a brief summary of the film, and then show how it was deployed in the narrative structure of the film. Explain the difference between the film’s story and its plot. This area can be addressed as a separate paragraph, or can be threaded throughout your analysis of the film.
7.  Mise en scène (lighting, sound, composition of frame, costuming)
8.  Editing (cuts and transitions, shots used, angles)
9.  What impact did this film have on society (politically or culturally, positive or negative)? The impact can be as major as inspiring political or social changes or as minor as inspiring the production of toys or lunchboxes.
10.  How did society affect this film (i.e., what currents in society led to the creation of the film)?

ENG 225 Week 5 Final Paper Film Critique



http://www.fres-courses.com/product/eng-225-week-5-final-paper-film-critique

ENG 225 Week 5 Final Paper Film Critique


Focus of the Final Film Critique


Throughout this course, you have been compiling a blog and writing essays that analyze various elements of film such as theme, cinematic techniques, and genre. It is now time to combine those elements into a comprehensive analysis of one movie.


You will be completing this assignment in two stages: for the first stage (1500 to 1800 words), you will analyze an entire movie; in the second stage (300 to 600 words), you will reflect on how you analyzed the movie as well as how your ability to analyze film in general has evolved.


You are encouraged to incorporate writing from your Week Two Assignment and your Week Three Assignment if (a) you have reflected on the instructor’s feedback, (b) you have revised the relevant parts of the essays accordingly, and (c) the essays discuss the same film that you discuss here.


Stage 1: Analysis


For this stage, you will be analyzing a movie selected from the AFI's 10 Top 10 list. The film you choose can be one that you have previously analyzed in this course. The analysis portion of your paper should be 1500 to 1800 words in length. You should analyze the film through the lens of one of the broad theories you have learned about in class (auteur theory, genre theory, formalist theory). Your analysis must address four main areas (contextual information, story / plot, aesthetic


choices, and social/personal impact) and how these areas work together to develop the theme of the movie. As you


construct your analysis, assume that your reader is not familiar with this film. Use your analysis to explain why your reader why they should watch this film.


In addition to the film you are analyzing, you must use three scholarly sources to support your arguments. List these sources on your references page and provide in-text citations for quoted, paraphrased, or summarized content in the body of your paper. Cite your sources according to APA style as outlined in the Ashford Writing Center.


Your analysis must address these four components:

1.  Title
2.  Director, cinematographer, major actors/actresses. Be sure to describe their roles in the overall design process.
3.  Year of release
4.  Type of film (blockbuster, indie, documentary, etc.)
5.  Genre
6. Story/Plot – In this area, you should offer a brief summary of the film, and then show how it was deployed in the narrative structure of the film. Explain the difference between the film’s story and its plot. This area can be addressed as a separate paragraph, or can be threaded throughout your analysis of the film.
7.  Mise en scène (lighting, sound, composition of frame, costuming)
8.  Editing (cuts and transitions, shots used, angles)
9.  What impact did this film have on society (politically or culturally, positive or negative)? The impact can be as major as inspiring political or social changes or as minor as inspiring the production of toys or lunchboxes.
10.  How did society affect this film (i.e., what currents in society led to the creation of the film)?

ENG 225 Week 5 Final Paper Film Critique



http://www.fres-courses.com/product/eng-225-week-5-final-paper-film-critique

ENG 225 Week 5 Final Paper Film Critique


Focus of the Final Film Critique


Throughout this course, you have been compiling a blog and writing essays that analyze various elements of film such as theme, cinematic techniques, and genre. It is now time to combine those elements into a comprehensive analysis of one movie.


You will be completing this assignment in two stages: for the first stage (1500 to 1800 words), you will analyze an entire movie; in the second stage (300 to 600 words), you will reflect on how you analyzed the movie as well as how your ability to analyze film in general has evolved.


You are encouraged to incorporate writing from your Week Two Assignment and your Week Three Assignment if (a) you have reflected on the instructor’s feedback, (b) you have revised the relevant parts of the essays accordingly, and (c) the essays discuss the same film that you discuss here.


Stage 1: Analysis


For this stage, you will be analyzing a movie selected from the AFI's 10 Top 10 list. The film you choose can be one that you have previously analyzed in this course. The analysis portion of your paper should be 1500 to 1800 words in length. You should analyze the film through the lens of one of the broad theories you have learned about in class (auteur theory, genre theory, formalist theory). Your analysis must address four main areas (contextual information, story / plot, aesthetic


choices, and social/personal impact) and how these areas work together to develop the theme of the movie. As you


construct your analysis, assume that your reader is not familiar with this film. Use your analysis to explain why your reader why they should watch this film.


In addition to the film you are analyzing, you must use three scholarly sources to support your arguments. List these sources on your references page and provide in-text citations for quoted, paraphrased, or summarized content in the body of your paper. Cite your sources according to APA style as outlined in the Ashford Writing Center.


Your analysis must address these four components:

1.  Title
2.  Director, cinematographer, major actors/actresses. Be sure to describe their roles in the overall design process.
3.  Year of release
4.  Type of film (blockbuster, indie, documentary, etc.)
5.  Genre
6. Story/Plot – In this area, you should offer a brief summary of the film, and then show how it was deployed in the narrative structure of the film. Explain the difference between the film’s story and its plot. This area can be addressed as a separate paragraph, or can be threaded throughout your analysis of the film.
7.  Mise en scène (lighting, sound, composition of frame, costuming)
8.  Editing (cuts and transitions, shots used, angles)
9.  What impact did this film have on society (politically or culturally, positive or negative)? The impact can be as major as inspiring political or social changes or as minor as inspiring the production of toys or lunchboxes.
10.  How did society affect this film (i.e., what currents in society led to the creation of the film)?