Dr. Perdigao

HUM 2085: Film Adaptation

Summer 2013

Final Exam Review

Tuesday, July 2nd

Part I-II.

In these sections, you will fill in the blanks and identify concepts and names in short responses. You will have to know who the major writers,directors, and characters are as well as key concepts, themes, symbols, and dates. Consider what has been outlined in the readings and in lectures—those will likely appear on the exam. A comprehensive list is included below:

Close-up

Extreme close-up

Long shot/full shot

Medium shot

Medium close-up

Establishing shot

Two-shot

Three-shot

Shot/reverse shot

Over-the-shoulder shot

High-angle shot (or God’s eye shot or bird’s eye shot)

Low-angle shot

Objective shot

Subjective camera

Point-of-view (POV) shot

Pan

Swish pan

Zoom

Montage

Parallel cutting/crosscutting/intercutting

Fade-out

Fade-in

Dissolve

Form dissolve

Wipe

Masking shot/iris shot

Irising in

Irising out

Mise-en-scène

Framing

Canted shot

Deep focus

Shallow focus

Rack focus

Reflexivity

Subtext

Intertextuality

J. M. Barrie

Peter Pan

1904

Peter and Wendy

1911

Sylvia Llewelyn Davies

George, Jack, Peter Llewelyn Davies

Michael and Nicholas (Nico) Llewelyn Davies

David Barrie

Age 13

“Nothing that happens after we are 12 matters very much.”

“All children, except one, grow up.”

Darling

Nana

Wendy

John

Michael

Shadow

“Two is the beginning of the end”

“Cinderella”

Metafiction

Mother

Captain James Hook

Smedley

“good form”

Crocodile

Clock

Tiger Lily

Tinker Bell

Lost Boys

Anti-fairy tale

Marc Forster

Finding Neverland

2004

Maria Tatar

“Why Fairy Tales Matter”

Metamorphosis

Rise

Recovery

J. R. R. Tolkien

fantasy, recovery, escape, and consolation

Snow White and the Huntsman

Rupert Sanders

2012

Thorn

Strength of a rose

Snow White

Huntsman

William

Ravenna

Beauty

Power

Restore life

Milk bath

Crows

Tar

The Sanctuary

Stag

Joan of Arc

Queen

The Brothers Grimm

Jacob and Wilhelm

“Snow White”

Evil stepmother

Wish-fulfillment

White as snow, red as blood, black as window frame

Needle

Age 7

Magic Mirror

Seven dwarfs

Stay-lace

Comb

Apple

Glass coffin

Prince

“The Three Little Men in the Woods”

Strawberries

Gold pieces

Toads

Duck

“Snow White and Rose Red”

Rosebushes

Bear

Gnome

Transformation

“The Juniper Tree”

Wish-fulfillment

Red as blood, white as snow

Son

Apple

Decapitation

Gold chain, red shoes, millstone

Once Upon a Time

ABC

“Fruit of the Poisonous Tree”

Storybrooke, Maine

Emma Swan

Henry Mills

Regina Mills/Evil Queen

David/Prince Charming

Mary Margaret/Snow

Mr. Gold/Rumpelstiltskin

Evidence

Playground

Book

Daily Mirror

Sidney Glass/Genie/Magic Mirror

Mirror

“Red-Handed”

Ruby

Peter

Granny

Age 13

“Little Red Riding Hood”

Little Red Riding Hood

Mother

Grandmother

Wolf

Flowers

Huntsman

“Hansel and Gretel”

Pebbles

Breadcrumbs

Oven

“Little Brother and Little Sister”

Tiger

Wolf

Fawn

Ghost

“The Children Living in a Time of Famine”

“true” news story

Grimm

NBC

“Pilot”

“Sweet Dreams”

Eurythmics

Marilyn Manson

Runner

Little Girl

Juliet

Hummel figurine

Mailman

Monroe

Red hoodie

Aunt Marie

Librarian

Trailer

Key

Grimm

Blutbad

Jeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont

“Beauty and the Beast”

1756

Merchant

6 children

3 daughters

Rose

Library

Looking glass

3 months

1 week

Virtue

Wit, beauty

Statues

“The Fisherman and His Wife”

Flounder

Cottage

Castle

King

Emperor

Pope

God

“The Robber Bridegroom”

Finger

“Fitcher’s Bird”

Egg

Key

Skull

Basket

Gold

Alex Flinn

Beastly

2007

Mr. Anderson

BeastNYC

SILENTMAID

Froggie

Grizzlyguy

“Not *that* Snow White”

Transformation

Kyle Kingsbury

Adrian

Lindy/Linda

Will

Pilot

Magda

Sloane

Kendra

Mirror

Orchid

White rose

Rob Kingsbury

Newscaster

Greenhouse

The Hunchback of Notre-Dame

The Phantom of the Opera

Dracula

The Invisible Man

The Princess Bride

Shakespeare’s sonnets

“The Singing, Soaring Lark”

Lion

Dove

Dragon

Sun

Dress

Egg

Daniel Barnz

Beastly

2011

Zola

Peru

Tattoos

Piercings

“Cinderella”

Tree

Lentils

3 days

Toe

Heel

“Rapunzel”

“Briar Rose”

13 Wise Women

Spindle

100 years

Darren Aronofsky

Black Swan

2010

Nina

Lily

Beth

Thomas

The Swan Queen

The Dying Swan

The Queen

The Black Swan

Swan Lake

Tchaikovsky

Odette

Odile

King Ludwig II

“Swan King”

“The Stolen Veil”

Innocence/experience

Good/evil

Innocent maid and evil rival

Jealous mother

Mirror

True bride and false bride

Doppelganger

Prologue

Jewelry box

Ballerina

Broken

Feathers

Red eyes

Black

White

Grey

Beauty

Aging

“I was perfect.”

Fall

Death

Self-destruction

Marissa Meyer

Cinder

2012

New Beijing

Dystopia

Science fiction

Letumosis

World War IV

Linh

Cinder

Peony

Pearl

Adri

Iko

Kai

Queen Levana

Sybil

Nainsi

Torin

Lunars

Magic

Mirror

Cyborg

36.28%

Age 11

Mechanic

Sleeping Beauty

Dr. Erland

Foot

Automobile

Orange/Pumpkin

Glamour

Gloves

Princess Winter

Princess Selene

Guillermo del Toro

Pan’s Labyrinth

2006

Spain

1944

Ofelia

Carmen

Captain Vidal

Princess Moanna

Faun

Book of the Crossroads

Pocket watch

Antibiotics

Mercedes

Gold key

Toad

3 tasks

Moon

7 circular gardens

Pale Man

Grapes

Dagger

Pedro

Mandrake root

Alice in Wonderland

Dress

The Wizard of Oz

Red shoes

“Little Red Riding Hood”

“Hansel and Gretel”

Part III.

In this section, you will be given a series of screen shots. For each screen shot, you must identify the title of the film or television episode, identify what is significant about the shot in cinematographic terms—for example, the type of shot, angle of the shot, mise-en-scène, lighting—and explain the significance of the shot in relation to the film’s theme(s) or character construction.

Part IV.

In this section, you will construct an argument about Cinder and/or Pan’s Labyrinth, placing the work(s) in the contexts of the course and the larger tradition of fairy tales.