1.
a. Raymond.
b. Mr. Mooney.
c. Susanna.
d. Sanford.
e. Dr. Bruner.
f. Charlie.
2.
a. in
b. on, in.
c. at.
d. in, on.
e. at.
f. at.
g. on.
h. in.
i. on.
j. on.
3.
g-b-e-d-h-a-f-c.
4.
a. 2
b. 2
c. 1
d. 2
e. 1
5.
a. hated changed for liked.
b. laugh changed for scream.
c. money changed for time.
d. baseball changed for cards.
e. Los Angeles changed for Las Vegas.
f. bad changed for good.
6.
a. Dr. Bruner.
b. Charlie.
c. Dr. Marston.
d. Dr. Bruner.
e. Raymond
f. Charlie.
g. Charlie.
h. Dr. Bruner.
Monday, September 26, 2011
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
The Village. Summary.
THE VILLAGE
The movie starts out at a funeral of a child in a small village. The death date on the tombstone establishes the date as 1897. As the story progresses, it is revealed the villagers live in fear of nameless creatures in the woods that surround the village. They have built a barrier of oil lanterns and watch towers that are constantly manned to keep watch for "Those We Don't Speak Of", who are mentioned numerous times early in the film. It is explained that the villagers have a long-standing truce with the monsters; the villagers do not go into their woods, and the creatures do not enter their village. Even so, the villagers are shown executing a well-rehearsed alarm, in which they rush home, lock their doors, and hide in their cellars. Also, the dead, skinned bodies of small animals start to appear around the village.
After the funeral, Lucius Hunt asks the village elders for permission to pass through the woods to get medical supplies from "the towns." His request is denied and, later, he is admonished by his mother, Alice, for wanting to go to the towns, which the villagers describe as "wicked places where wicked people live." It is revealed in that scene that the Elders seem to keep dark secrets of their own in the form of black boxes, the contents of which they keep hidden from their own offspring. After Lucius makes a short venture into the woods, the creatures leave warnings around the village in the form of splashes of red paint (referred by the villagers only as "the bad color") on all the villagers' doors.
Meanwhile, Ivy Elizabeth Walker, the blind daughter of the chief Elder, Edward Walker, informs Lucius that she has strong feelings for him, and he returns her affections. They arrange to be married, but things go horribly wrong when Noah Percy, a young man with apparent developmental problems who is in love with Ivy, stabs Lucius with a knife that he kept hidden away in his pocket.
Edward goes against the wishes of the other Elders, agreeing to allow Ivy to pass through the forest and seek out medicine for Lucius. Before she leaves, the first plot twist is revealed when Edward explains the secret of the creatures – they are "farce" - bogeymen created by the Elders to keep the children from entering the woods in an attempt to keep them from leaving the village. Edward does mention, however, that "Those We Don't Speak Of" were based upon legends that he had heard at one time, of "real creatures" living in the woods. Ivy seems only partly convinced by this explanation, inquiring whether the skinned animals were "also farce."
While Ivy is traveling through the forest, one of the beasts suddenly attacks her. She tricks it into falling into a deep hole to its death. It is then that the second plot twist is revealed — the creature is actually Noah in a costume that he had found under the floor of the room where he was kept locked from others. It is implied in that scene that it was Noah who had been skinning the animals all along.
Ivy eventually finds her way to the far edge of the woods, where she encounters a high, ivy-covered wall. After she climbs over the wall the final plot twist is revealed: the story is set in the present day. A park ranger driving a Land Rover with the words "Walker Wildlife Preserve" on the side spots Ivy and is shocked to hear that she has come out of the woods. He then learns that Ivy's last name is "Walker."
The head ranger named "Jay" in the ranger station seen reflected in a glass door, fills in several plot points; the Walker estate pays to maintain the ranger corps, the rangers make sure no one goes into the wildlife preserve to "disturb the animal(s)", the Walker estate "paid off" the government to keep the entire wildlife preserve a "no-fly zone". Once the village was created, it appears the original "Elders" rolled the clock back to the late 19th century to what they thought was a simpler, more peaceful time.
The ranger retrieves medicine from a ranger station and Ivy returns to the village. This sequence is intercut with brief segments showing the Elders opening their black boxes, which are revealed to contain mementos from their lives in the actual outside world, including one or more items related to their past traumas. The film ends with a scene in a cabin where all the Elders are sitting around Lucius' bed. In that scene Edward points out that Noah's death will allow them to continue deceiving the rest of the villagers that there are "creatures" in the woods and all the Elders take a vote to continue living in the village. The film ends with Ivy arriving and saying "I'm back, Lucius."
Characters. Provide a short description of each one of them.
1. Lucius Hunt
2. Elizabeth Walker
3. Noah Percy
4. Edward Walker
5. Alice Hunt
6. August Nicholson
7. Mrs. Clack
8. Vivian Percy
9. Victor
10. Tabitha Walker
11. Kitty Walker
12. Christop Crane
13. Beatrice
14. Finton Coin
15. Jamison
16. Kevin, the young security guard
17. Jay, “guard at desk”
The Village. Questionnaire.
1.Who dies at the beginning?
2.What did Lucius want to do?
3.Why was red a “bad color”?
4.What happened to Lucius father?
5.What happened to the animals?
6.Why did Kitty cry?
7.Who did Lucius love?
8.What did Noah do? Why?
9.When is the story set?
10.What did Ivy ask to his father?
11.What did the villagers refer to “those we don’t speak of?”
12.What happened to Edward Walker’s father? How?
13.What does Walker show his daughter?
14.What was Walker’s oath?
15.How were “the towns” described?
16.Why did Ivy throw away the color stones once she was alone?
17.Who was “the creature” attacking Ivy? What happened to it?
18.What was in the black box Walker opened?
19.Did Ivy find help? Explain.
20.Why did create the village?
Pre Test: Freshman Classes.
Vocabulary
1 Wheels ____ Not wearing anything on your feet.
2.Poor ____ Film about life in the west of the USA.
3. Barefoot ____ Circular objects under a car,bicycle, etc.
4. Gold ____ Precious yellow metal for making jewellery, coins.
5. Wagon ____ Vehicle with four wheels usually pulled by horses.
6. Western ____ Person who doesn’t have money for a comfortable life.
Match the verb with its past form.
1.- Drink _____ Came
2.- Fly _____ Wrote
3.- Go _____ Swam
4.- Come _____ Took
5.- Drive _____ Drank
6.- Write _____ Drove
7.- Steal _____ Went
8.- Swim _____ Got
9.- Get _____ Stole
10.- Take _____ Flew
1.- Think _____ Won
2.- Understand _____ Ate
3.- Win _____ Swam
4.- Read _____ Chose
5.- Speak _____ Had
6.- Eat _____ Read
7.- Sleep _____ Thought
8.- Choose _____ Spoke
9.- Have _____ Slept
10.- Swim _____ Understood
1.- Begin _____ Broke
2.- Break _____ Fell
3.- Buy _____ Felt
4.- Do _____ Sang
5.- Fall _____ Wrote
6.- Leave _____ Began
7.- Feel _____ Left
8.- Write _____ Bought
9.- Sing _____ Said
10.- Say _____ Did
1.- Think _____ Won
2.- Fell _____ Made
3.- Win _____ Buy
4.- Make _____ Find
5.- Found _____ Go
6.- Fight _____ Catch
7.- Went _____ Thought
8.- Bought _____ Fought
9.- Caught _____ Take
10.- Took _____ Fall
1.- Teach _____ Won
2.- Fell _____ Bought
3.- Become _____ Took
4.- Make _____ Sold
5.- Found _____ Went
6.- Think _____ Made
7.- Do _____ Taught
8.- Break _____ Fought
9.- Came _____ Thought
10.- Went _____ Found
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)