Monday, April 30, 2012
Thursday, April 19, 2012
Hunger Games Adaptation
Some challenges a filmmaker would have in adapting The Hunger Games to the big screen would be recreating the setting, preparing the actors to be in top physical condition, and the animation of futuristic creatures. The setting would be very hard to recreate because places such as the Seam and the Capitol do not exist. A filmmaker would have to completely create it and based solely off the description in the book. The actors, once casted, would still need prep work before filming. In the Hunger Games, each character has specific talents and abilities so the actors would have to go through serious training. For example, Jennifer Lawrence had to do lots of training to be as good with a bow and arrow as the Katniss is. Also the actors playing “career” tributes, or characters like Thresh would have to gain lots of muscle in order to fit the look of their character. Many of the characters practically starved to death during the games. Making the characters appear very skinny and bony would be a hard task as well. There are also many made up creatures in the book. This would require good animations to fit them into the scene and make them look as natural and realistic as possible.
The most important scenes to keep in the adaptation would be when Katniss volunteers to be tribute and then Peeta is chosen, when Peeta declares his love for Katniss, when they join forces in the games, and the suicide attempt. These scenes if removed would completely change the plot. Two parts that could be cut would be the character the red- headed Avox and when the many meals they had before the games. These don’t have any effect on the plot and didn’t help develop the characters too much either.
Thursday, April 5, 2012
Book 1 Project- 11/22/63
11/22/63 by Stephen King needs something
big, something bold, something eye- catching to gain a wider audience and help
fans extend their interaction with this book.
And I have just the perfect thing! Throughout Jake’s travels back in the
1950s and 60s he visits various cities and towns. These locations play a key role
in the story and have immense impacts on Jake’s life. King provided many rich,
lavish details about these places, painting pictures in the reader’s mind. What
if these images in people’s minds could be brought to life? We should create a
tour that would take people through several of the cities that Jake journeys to
in his wild adventure into the past.
Cities important
to the story: Derry, Jodie, and Dallas, would be those we recreate. We would
also recreate the “rabbit hole” and make it the entrance to the cities, giving
people the sense that they are actually going through a time machine and into a
whole other world. Jake’s iconic Sunliner will also be featured. In each city
the buildings, shops, and houses that were key to the story will be recreated.
We not only want to capture the physical essence of the cities but the
emotional as well. That is why we will have a staff that will act as the
important characters in the book. They will act like the characters and use
dialogue from the book. All of these aspects will combine to make the people feel
as if they went through time with Jake.
The first city
people will tour once they step through the “rabbit hole” is Derry since the
cities will be arranged in the order in which they appeared in the book. Derry
will be an attention grabber because in the book Jake’s time in Derry was quite
suspenseful and everywhere he went he had to have his guard up. When he first entered
the city, he wasn’t too fond of it. “This was the town where Harry Dunning had
grown up, and I hated it from the first. No concrete reason; I just did. The
down town shopping area, situated at the bottom of three steep hills, felt
pitlike and claustrophobic. My cherry- red Ford seemed like the brightest thing
on the street, a distracting (and unwelcome, judging by most glances it was
attracting) splash of color amid the black Plymouths, brown Chevrolets, and
grimy delivery trucks. Running through the center of town was a canal filled almost
to the top of its moss- splotched concrete retaining walls with black water.”
(King 121). This location is where Jake really was changed. Some of the places
built in the city will be 379 Kossuth Street, The Center Street Market, The
Lamplighter, and the Longview Cemetery. The featured characters would be Frank
Dunning and his family, Beverly Marsh, Ritchie Tozier, Chaz Frati and Bill
Turcotte.
The next city on
the tour will be Jodie. This will be the big attraction because just as that
small town touched Jake in ways he could never have imagined, I think it
touched every reader in their own way too. This is where Jake was truly happy in
the past, it’s where he felt he truly belonged.
He described it as home saying, “And Jodie was
good—good for me. In Derry I was an outsider, but Jodie was home. Here’s home:
the smell of the sage and the way the hills flush orange with Indian blanket in
the summer. The faint taste of tobacco on Sadie’s tongue and the squeak of the
oiled wood floorboards in my homeroom.”(King 398). We want the people to feel
Jake’s strong emotions here. We will do this through the presence of DCHS, Mercedes
Street Fort Worth, and Bee Tree Lane. As
well as the characters Sadie Dunhill, Deke Simmons, Miz Ellie, Lee Harvey Oswald,
Marina Oswald, June Oswald, George de Mohrenschildt, Mike Coslaw, Bobbi Jill, and
John Clayton.


Fans of the book will love this
opportunity to really dive into the book even more and this will attract new
readers because, even if you have not read the book, the tour would be a
fascinating adventure for any person at any age!
Wednesday, April 4, 2012
What is a book?
A book is a like a good friend. It’s that person you can turn to when your stuck between a rock and a hard place, who knows just how to make you smile, who you can have the time of your life with no matter what you’re doing, whose sentences you can finish, that person whose family is your second family. A book is wise and witty, ambitious and boundless, dynamic and stimulating, a book is enchanting.
I agree with Meno that there’s something special about books because they force us to interact with the text and imagine the story unlike TV and plays where that is already done for us. As for Sales opinion on an e- reader vs. an actual book, I am torn and unsure. I do love the feeling of picking up a book, cracking open the pages and letting myself slowly slip away into the book. Also the e- readers just seem cold and lifeless to me. But I haven’t used a Kindle or Nook before, so I don’t know if I’m in a position where I can make a fair statement of which I think is better. I do see the e- readers as being quite convenient for travel. With the e-readers you can take an entire library with you wherever you go. And it must be quite nice if you’re reading a big, hefty book because it’s so sleek and condensed. So I think I would want a mix of both. Have my mobile library for when I go places and travel, but still be able to return back home to my library of books lined on the book shelf. And be cable to smell the pages of freshly printed books on bright white paper as well as that old, musty smell from books printed long ago on now yellowing pages with the corners breaking off from too many hands folding the corners down.
Whether it’s on Nook or in a hardback I think Meno’s words will still ring true. And either way you’re reading the book I believe there are new friendships waiting to blossom as well as old ones we never forget because a book is like a good friend and it’s the personality of our friends that we love, not their outward appearance.
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