Scene Analysis Directions, Rubric, and Tips ENG2102 - Spring 2021
Deadlines Proposal due: Tuesday, January 19 Discussion post due: Tuesday, January 19 Discussion replies due: Thursday, January 21 Rough draft due: Tuesday, February 1 Final paper due: Thursday, February 11 Submission checklist due: Thursday, February 11 Topic Requirements Choose one of these movies—either Bonnie and Clyde (1967), The Help (2011), Hugo (2011), or Total Recall (1990)—and find the related analytical article below on Academic Search Complete. Your paper must analyze a scene from the movie through the lens (or perspective) of that article, and you must choose a scene NOT already discussed in the article. I recommend you use a scene (or part of a scene) from 2-6 minutes long. You must include supporting details from the chosen scene and include the required number of quotations (see below) from the movie, the analytical article, and 2 reviews of the movie. Example papers are posted under Modules in Canvas. Analytical Article Choices • “Celebrity, Cinema, History: Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker, Bonnie and Clyde, The Highwaymen” by Ian
Dennis • “Black Women’s Memories and The Help” by Valerie Smith • “Georges Melies and the Mystery of the Automaton in Martin Scorcese’s Hugo” by Kurt Cline • “Totally Recalling Arnold: Sex and Violence in the New Bad Future” by Fred Glass Submission Requirements □ Your paper must be at least 1400 words (suggested max of 1800 words). A paper less than 1400 words will
receive a grade of zero. □ Highlight or underline all quotations from the movie, the analytical article and the 2 reviews. □ Submit your paper to Turnitin.com. □ Complete the Submission Checklist on Canvas. Content Requirements and Tips I will use a rubric that evaluates the six areas below, ranking each one as either Excellent, Competent, Marginal, or Below Expectations. A paper that is below expectations in one or more areas may not earn a passing grade. Each area is introduced with a general summary and is followed by important tips and requirements. 1) Introduction and Focus Your paper’s focus is on topic, sufficiently limited, and unified. The introduction effectively identifies the key elements of the paper (movie, scene, and analytical article) and properly quotes the thesis of the analytical article. Your thesis is positioned emphatically at the end of the intro and effectively sums up your main argument.
□ Your thesis should be analytical (not factual). Basically, your thesis should sum up what your analysis proves about the chosen scene and clearly relate to the thesis statement of the analytical article.
□ Do not quote in your thesis, except if you need to emphasize a key phrase from your analytical article. □ Reference your analytical article by identifying the author(s) by full name, giving the full article title and
subtitle (if any), and quoting the article’s thesis statement. 2) Organization Your paper’s organization progresses logically, appropriately dividing into 2-3 body sections, and incorporates effective topic sentences and transitions.
□ Analyze some aspect of the chosen scene in each body paragraph. You may include brief references to other scenes from the movie (or other movies) when relevant and useful.
2
□ Each body paragraph should begin with a topic sentence that sums up what you prove in that paragraph, identifying the unique subtopic that this paragraph explores.
□ Do not quote from a source or summarize the movie in your topic sentences. □ Each section should consist of 1 or more paragraphs. Avoid paragraphs longer than a page. □ You don’t have to organize details chronologically. Perhaps divide into types of symbols or themes. □ Include a conclusion, but do not count it as one of the body sections.
3) Supporting Evidence Your paper has sufficient and relevant supporting evidence from the analytical article, 2 movie reviews, and the movie itself following the quoting parameters below. Appropriate theoretic and insightful quotations from sources are chosen. Use of additional sources is prohibited.
□ General summary of the movie or scene is not needed. But description of supporting details that relate to your thesis are needed.
□ Discuss aspects of the scene (props, symbols, dialogue, etc.) that support your thesis, especially easily overlooked and obscure details viewers are likely to miss.
□ You do not need to analyze specific film techniques, unless they are relevant to your argument. □ Avoid using quotations from sources that simply summarize the movie. Instead, choose quotes that provide
insightful comments about the movie. □ Quoting limits:
o Include 4-7 quotes from the analytical article. o Include 1-2 quotes each from 2 reviews of the movie. o Include 2-4 quotes from the movie.
4) Analysis Your paper demonstrates an understanding of the analytical article by analyzing specific details of the chosen scene, with more analysis than quoting and description. The analysis effectively relates each supporting detail to the thesis and explains the significance of all passages quoted or referenced.