CA2012 S TORYTELLING FOR C OMMUNICATION M AKEUP A SSIGNMENT 1.
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Transcript of CA2012 S TORYTELLING FOR C OMMUNICATION M AKEUP A SSIGNMENT 1.
Assignment 01: Character Development
(maximum points for the late assignment = 2.5)
Instruction: Pick up a picture for being your ‘protagonist’. Describe the character in the Character Bio sheet format. Fill up the information in detail, and state the genre.
CA2012 STORYTELLING FOR COMMUNICATION
ASSIGNEMENT 01
Name_
Gender_
Age_
Height & Weight_
Appearance/Body structure_
Profession_
Education_
Intelligence_
Ethnic background_
Character Bio sheet
Childhood_
Environment_
Health_
Dreams_
Need/Purpose_
Care_
Fear_
Flaws_
Idiosyncrasies_
How others view the character_
CA2012 STORYTELLING FOR COMMUNICATION
CREATING CHARACTERS
Picture:Genre:
Assignment 02: Screenwriting
(maximum points for the late assignment = 2.5 )
_ Write a screenplay based on the story provided.(only the first page)
CA2012 STORYTELLING FOR COMMUNICATION
ASSIGNEMENT 02
Nine o’clock in the evening, in the ice cream parlour where I worked. There were only two customers, even though one hour earlier the place was so full I was unable to provide good service to anyone.
A young woman appeared in front of the parlour, opened the glass door and entered. She was wearing a white long- sleeved blouse and a long white skirt. Her gleaming black hair flowed down to mid-back. I hastened to walk up to her.
‘Good evening. In house or to take away,’ I asked her and then smiled.Her well shaped mouth smiled back. ‘I’ll eat here.’ Her complexion was light,
her nose pointed; her big round eyes bared a hint of sadness.I stepped aside to let her by. She chose the table next to the ice cream display
window at the back, away from the table where the two customers were sitting at the front of the shop.
‘A strawberry sundae,’ she ordered.I jotted down her order. ‘What would you like to drink?’‘Just a glass of water.’After bringing her the glass of water, I retreated behind the counter where ice
creams were prepared. I took a tall glass out of the glass container. There was a small chip at the bottom of this glass, which would had been discarded if the chip was on the rim or on the side, where customers could notice it easily. Most customers didn’t eat ice cream down to the very bottom so they didn’t know that this glass was chipped. As they didn’t know they were happy with the glass. So long as ice cream hid the chip they’d be happy with the glass and there was no reason to discard it.
I put a spoonful of strawberries at the bottom of the glass. After that I poured
two scoops of vanilla ice cream I toppled with more strawberries, squeezed a blob of
whipped cream on top, added a sweet-tasting red cherry and completed it with a fan
shaped wafer stuck into the cream.
I looked at the young woman from the corner of my eyes. She was looking
outside through the shop window. She must be sixteen or seventeen. I’d never seen
her before.
I smiled at her before putting down the spoon and the ‘strawberry sundae’ on her
table then I stepped away. It didn’t do to observe a customer while she ate her ice
cream, but I couldn’t help sneaking glances at her. She looked like a teen- age movie
star whose name escaped me at the moment.
The young woman used her left hand to pick up the spoon and scoop out some
ice cream. As she did so, the glass tilted as if about to topple over. She hurriedly
straightened it with her right hand. But hold it! It was only now I noticed her right
hand.
She didn’t have a hand. Her arm was amputated at the wrist. She used the stump
to keep the glass upright.
I was afraid of her looking at me so I hastened to look away. I thought she must
be embarrassed and didn’t want anyone to see her maimed arm. I tried not to look but
then couldn’t help casting glances at her several times.
The pretty, proper-looking, white- clad young woman with flowing hair used her
left hand to scoop ice cream and the stump of her right arm to prevent the glass from
toppling over, a painful attitude and a sight I found depressing.
When she had finished the ice cream and drunk half of the glass of water, she
turned towards me and nodded. I walked up to her.
‘How much,’ she asked.
‘Fifty-five baht,’ I answered. I tried to force my eyes not to drift to her right arm
which was now covered by the long sleeve of her white blouse.
When she had settled the bill, I walked with her to the front of the shop to open
the door for her. She smiled and said, ‘The ice cream was very good, but something
isn’t quite right.’
‘What is it,’ I hastened to ask, thinking she must had caught me stealing glances
at her.
‘It’s the glass … There’s a chip at the bottom of the glass.’
Then she briskly walked out of the shop.
The Bottom of the Ice Cream Glass
Written by Samut Nuamsetti
Translated by Marcel Barang
Screenplay – Margin settings
CA2012 STORYTELLING FOR COMMUNICATION
SCRIPTWRITING
Page number
SLUGLINE: 1.5” to 7.5”
Action description: 1.5” to 7.5”
CHARACTER NAME: 3.5”
Parenthetical: 3.0” to 5.5”
Dialogue: 2.5” to 5.5”
Transition: 6.0”
Assignment 03: Storyboarding
(maximum points for the late assignment = 2.5 )
_ Make a storyboard based on the story provided (the first eight shots only).
CA2012 STORYTELLING FOR COMMUNICATION
Director
_ Aspect ratio
_ Pictures
_ Arrows
_ Scene/Shot no.
_ Action description
_ Camera framing
_ Camera angle
_ Camera movement
_ Visual effects
_ Dialogue
_ Sound effects
_ Background music
_ Transition
CA2012 STORYTELLING FOR COMMUNICATION
FINAL PROJECTStoryboard (1.5%)Storyboard (1.5%)
Storyboarding
CA2012 STORYTELLING FOR COMMUNICATION
MAKING MOVIES
_ Aspect ratio
_ Pictures
_ Arrows
_ Scene/Shot no.
_ Action description
_ Camera framing
_ Camera angle
_ Camera movement
_ Visual effects
_ Dialogue
_ Sound effects
_ Background music
_ Transition
Storyboarding
CA2012 STORYTELLING FOR COMMUNICATION
MAKING MOVIES
_ Aspect ratio
_ Pictures
_ Arrows
_ Scene/Shot no.
_ Action description
_ Camera framing
_ Camera angle
_ Camera movement
_ Visual effects
_ Dialogue
_ Sound effects
_ Background music
_ Transition
Storyboarding
CA2012 STORYTELLING FOR COMMUNICATION
MAKING MOVIES
_ Aspect ratio
_ Pictures
_ Arrows
_ Scene/Shot no.
_ Action description
_ Camera framing
_ Camera angle
_ Camera movement
_ Visual effects
_ Dialogue
_ Sound effects
_ Background music
_ Transition
Assignment 04: Screenplay development
(maximum points for the late assignment = 5)
_ Write a screenplay adapted from the comic provided.
CA2012 STORYTELLING FOR COMMUNICATION
ASSIGNEMENT 03
Grading criteria
Format 5 marks
Creativity 5 marks
Total 10 marks
CA2012 STORYTELLING FOR COMMUNICATION
ASSIGNEMENT 04
- 0.25 for each minor mistake
- 0.5 for each major mistake
- 1 or more if it shows that you don’t how what screenplays are.