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.