The 10 best teen drama movies focus on young adults facing troublesome challenges and situations. The movie roles revolve around teens, but the plots have mature content. There is no sugar coating in teen dramas and some of these movies will bring you to tears. The best teen drama movies have adult themes that can be enjoyed by both teenagers and adults.
Wednesday, 28 September 2011
Tuesday, 27 September 2011
Film Brief
Brief:
Film starts with the camera cutting to different places around a girls room. The room is pink, and filled with cuddly toys, giving off a generally quite girly feel to the film. The camera then cuts to show us a teenage girl, asleep in her bed. The girl looks around 18 years old much older than first insinuated. The girl awakens from her sleep, rubbing her eyes as she stirs. The camera follows her arm as she reaches over to pick up her glasses from the bedside table. As she picks the glasses up, the camera cuts to her point of view, which is blurry as she still hasn't got her glasses on. As she continues to place her glasses onto her face the blurry vision from the camera soon becomes into focus. The camera shows the girl getting up from her bed and busying herself around her room. The girl then sits down to do some work, her desk is covered with revision guides. Once the girl has finished, she pulls her laptop towards her and turns it on. The laptop loads to a revision homepage, the girl ignoring this loads facebook. The girl receives a message and frantically replies. The camera then cuts to girl trying to figure out what to wear, there are various jump cuts of her picking out an outfit. Once we see the girl decide on her outfit, we see a shot of the girls feet as she picks out a pair of heels and places them on her feet.The camera tilts to reveal the girl looking glamorous. The girl walks out towards a car, climbing into the drivers seat and starting the engine. While driving towards the party the girl has her headphones in the camera cuts to see the girls face as she sings along to the song playing on her ipod. The camera shows her car pulling up outside a house as she comes to a halt. The camera then cuts to the opened door of the girls car as she climbs out and walks towards to house. The girl looks up as she hears the door unlock and open to reveal the girl who invited her to the party holding a glass and leaning against the door. The camera pans from the girls point of view to show the rest of the group, she doesn't recognise many people, so stays glued to the girl who invited her as she follows her into the room, and getting introduced to other people. The film cuts to the girl standing in the kitchen rested against the counter, she is looking towards the girl who invited her as she stands at the fridge, she offers her a drink, but the girl refuses, insisting that she is driving so she will stick to the pop. The girl insists, and tells her that she can stay over if she drinks and doesn't want to risk it driving home. The girl gives in and accepts a drink, she walks to pick up a glass and pours her drink into it, taking a sip. The film then jumps to the girl stood around with a group of boys and girls, who start talking about drugs, and how they can make this night go out with a bang. The girl starts to become uncomfortable, so tells the group that she is going to the toilet, leaving her glass on the table next to her. We see the girl stood in the bathroom looking at herself in the mirror, she doesn't look happy, she feels like she is being pressured into doing something she will later regret. The scene then changes to see the girls glass placed on the table and a hand coming onto the screen and dropping what looks like a pill into her glass. The girl then reappears and grabs her drink off of the table, taking a sip. We see the girl finish her drink before the film pace picks up letting us see the girl letting go and dancing, doing shots with various people at the party before she eventually passes out. The camera cuts to reveal a pair of feet on a bed, that slowly reveals the legs of a body who has ripped rights, we then move further up the bed to see the young girl laid on the bed alone with her hair and make-up completely ruined, he clothes in tatters. The young girl sits up and looks around the room with a confused look on her face, before looking at her clothes, she looks forward at the mirror to see her reflection before she starts to softly cry. She turns to get off the bed noticing the bedside table that has her car keys on, she picks up the keys and notices that there is a note underneath that says 'Gr8 time last night, but i'm sure you'll keep it to yourself, won't you? X' the girl takes a gulp before bolting out of the room, ignoring the bodies left around on the floor from the party the night before and heads for the door towards her car. She climbs into her car and drives off in tears, the realisation of last nights event finally hitting her.
Film starts with the camera cutting to different places around a girls room. The room is pink, and filled with cuddly toys, giving off a generally quite girly feel to the film. The camera then cuts to show us a teenage girl, asleep in her bed. The girl looks around 18 years old much older than first insinuated. The girl awakens from her sleep, rubbing her eyes as she stirs. The camera follows her arm as she reaches over to pick up her glasses from the bedside table. As she picks the glasses up, the camera cuts to her point of view, which is blurry as she still hasn't got her glasses on. As she continues to place her glasses onto her face the blurry vision from the camera soon becomes into focus. The camera shows the girl getting up from her bed and busying herself around her room. The girl then sits down to do some work, her desk is covered with revision guides. Once the girl has finished, she pulls her laptop towards her and turns it on. The laptop loads to a revision homepage, the girl ignoring this loads facebook. The girl receives a message and frantically replies. The camera then cuts to girl trying to figure out what to wear, there are various jump cuts of her picking out an outfit. Once we see the girl decide on her outfit, we see a shot of the girls feet as she picks out a pair of heels and places them on her feet.The camera tilts to reveal the girl looking glamorous. The girl walks out towards a car, climbing into the drivers seat and starting the engine. While driving towards the party the girl has her headphones in the camera cuts to see the girls face as she sings along to the song playing on her ipod. The camera shows her car pulling up outside a house as she comes to a halt. The camera then cuts to the opened door of the girls car as she climbs out and walks towards to house. The girl looks up as she hears the door unlock and open to reveal the girl who invited her to the party holding a glass and leaning against the door. The camera pans from the girls point of view to show the rest of the group, she doesn't recognise many people, so stays glued to the girl who invited her as she follows her into the room, and getting introduced to other people. The film cuts to the girl standing in the kitchen rested against the counter, she is looking towards the girl who invited her as she stands at the fridge, she offers her a drink, but the girl refuses, insisting that she is driving so she will stick to the pop. The girl insists, and tells her that she can stay over if she drinks and doesn't want to risk it driving home. The girl gives in and accepts a drink, she walks to pick up a glass and pours her drink into it, taking a sip. The film then jumps to the girl stood around with a group of boys and girls, who start talking about drugs, and how they can make this night go out with a bang. The girl starts to become uncomfortable, so tells the group that she is going to the toilet, leaving her glass on the table next to her. We see the girl stood in the bathroom looking at herself in the mirror, she doesn't look happy, she feels like she is being pressured into doing something she will later regret. The scene then changes to see the girls glass placed on the table and a hand coming onto the screen and dropping what looks like a pill into her glass. The girl then reappears and grabs her drink off of the table, taking a sip. We see the girl finish her drink before the film pace picks up letting us see the girl letting go and dancing, doing shots with various people at the party before she eventually passes out. The camera cuts to reveal a pair of feet on a bed, that slowly reveals the legs of a body who has ripped rights, we then move further up the bed to see the young girl laid on the bed alone with her hair and make-up completely ruined, he clothes in tatters. The young girl sits up and looks around the room with a confused look on her face, before looking at her clothes, she looks forward at the mirror to see her reflection before she starts to softly cry. She turns to get off the bed noticing the bedside table that has her car keys on, she picks up the keys and notices that there is a note underneath that says 'Gr8 time last night, but i'm sure you'll keep it to yourself, won't you? X' the girl takes a gulp before bolting out of the room, ignoring the bodies left around on the floor from the party the night before and heads for the door towards her car. She climbs into her car and drives off in tears, the realisation of last nights event finally hitting her.
Title Sequence Research
300-
This is the title sequence for the action/historical film 30 based on a graphic novel. The title sequence very much suits the film and gives you an insight to the type of film it is,by incorporating weapons, armour and splashes of blood around the screen. Also, the sound affects of people screaming and making noises as if they are in pain sound very affective over the fast pace, lively music.
Se7en-
The titles for this film which are in a handwriting font look very mysteri
ous as they flicker over books and what look like diary extracts as well as various drawings/pictures, it then comes clear that the title sequence is some sort of crime/mystery due to the various pie
ces of information that are getting put together by someone. The music is seems eery which very much matches the mysterious feel of the titles, in my opinion it very much makes you want to carry on watching to reveal the mystery of the film.
Catch me if you can-
This film is basically about a man running away. The titles cleverly include different modes of transport such as airplanes and taxi's to illustrate this. The music has a fast pace and a continuos beat to it which then speeds up, which gives the affect of running out of time. The genre of this film is a crime/comedy which very much suits the titles, as the titles are cartoon this gives an indication that the film could be a comedy, and the fact there is people in suits and hats with brief cases tells us that these people could be some sort of detectives.
To kill a mockingbird-
I think that the fact the titles are black and white was a good decision as sometime the titles look quite busy with lots of things going on, which makes you focus on what is happening, rather than the colours. The music gives a sense of calmness and the bold black titles stand out well from the busy background. The main character in the film is a lawyer who I believe is the hands in the titles, the drawings of the mockingbird are by his child which is an important part in the film. The genre of the film which is a mystery/crime is apparent in the titles due to the odd various objects creating a sense of mystery.
Genre: Drama
"Drama Films are serious presentations or stories with settings or life situations that portray realistic characters in conflict with either themselves, others, or forces of nature. A dramatic film shows us human beings at their best, their worst, and everything in-between. Each of the types of subject-matter themes have various kinds of dramatic plots. Dramatic films are probably the largest film genre because they include a broad spectrum of films. See also crime films,melodramas, epics (historical dramas), biopics (biographical), or romantic genres - just some of the other genres that have developed from the dramatic genre.
Dramatic themes often include current issues, societal ills, and problems, concerns or injustices, such as racial prejudice, religious intolerance (such as anti-Semitism), drug addiction, poverty, political unrest, the corruption of power, alcoholism, class divisions, sexual inequality, mental illness, corrupt societal institutions, violence toward women or other explosive issues of the times. These films have successfully drawn attention to the issues by taking advantage of the topical interest of the subject. Although dramatic films have often dealt frankly and realistically with social problems, the tendency has been for Hollywood, especially during earlier times of censorship, to exonerate society and institutions and to blame problems on an individual, who more often than not, would be punished for his/her transgressions."
Social Problem Dramas
Social dramas or "message films" expressed powerful lessons, such as the harsh conditions of Southern prison systems in Hell's Highway (1932) and I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang (1932), the plight of wandering groups of young boys on freight cars during the Depression in William Wellman's Wild Boys of the Road (1933), or the lawlessness of mob rule in Fritz Lang's Fury (1936), or the resourcefulness of lifer prisoner and bird expert Robert Stroud (Burt Lancaster) in John Frankenheimer's Birdman of Alcatraz (1961), or the tale of a framed, unjustly imprisoned journalist (James Cagney) in Each Dawn I Die (1939). In Yield to the Night (1956), Diana Dors relived her life and crime as she awaited her execution. A tough, uncompromising look at New York waterfront corruption was found in the classic American film, director Elia Kazan's. On the Waterfront (1954) with Marlon Brando as a longshoreman who testified to the Waterfront Crimes Commission. The film drew criticism with the accusation that it appeared to justify Kazan's informant role before the HUAC.
Problems of the poor and dispossessed have often been the themes of the great films, including The Good Earth (1937) with Chinese peasants facing famine, storms, and locusts, and John Ford's. The Grapes of Wrath (1940) about an indomitable, Depression-Era Okie family - the Joads - who survived a tragic journey from Oklahoma to California. Martin Scorsese's disturbing and violent. Taxi Driver (1976) told of the despairing life of a lone New York taxi cab driver amidst nighttime urban sprawl. Issues and conflicts within a suburban family were showcased in director Sam Mendes' Best Picture-winning American Beauty (1999), as were problems with addiction in Steven Soderbergh's Traffic (2000).
Modern Day Examples
Precious (2009)
In 1987, obese, illiterate, 16-year-old Claireece P. "Precious" Jones (Gabourey Sidibe) lives in the New York City ghetto of Harlem with her dysfunctional and abusive mother, Mary (Mo'Nique). She has been impregnated twice by her father, Carl (Rodney "Bear" Jackson), and suffers long-term physical, sexual, and mental abuse from her unemployed mother. The family resides in a Section 8 tenement and subsists on welfare. Her first child, known as "Mongo", which is short for Mongoloid, has Down syndrome and is being cared for by Precious' grandmother, though Mary forces the family to pretend Mongo lives with her and Precious so she can receive extra money from the government.
Following the discovery of Precious' second pregnancy, she is suspended from school. Her junior high school principal arranges to have her attend an alternative school, which she hopes can help Precious change her life's direction. Precious finds a way out of her traumatic daily existence through imagination and fantasy. In her mind, there is another world where she is loved and appreciated.
Inspired by her new teacher, Blu Rain (Paula Patton), Precious begins learning to read. Precious meets sporadically with a social worker named Miss Weiss (Mariah Carey), who learns about incest in the household when Precious lets slip who fathered her children. Precious gives birth to her second child and names him Abdul. While at the hospital, she meets John McFadden (Lenny Kravitz), a nursing assistant who shows kindness to her. After Mary (her mother) deliberately drops three-day-old Abdul and hits Precious, Precious fights back long enough to get her son and flees her home permanently. Shortly after leaving the house, Precious stops at a window of a church and watches the choir inside sing a Christmas song. She begins to imagine herself and her dream boyfriend singing a more upbeat version of the Christmas song. Later on, Precious breaks into her school classroom to get out of the cold and is discovered the following morning by Miss Rain. The teacher finds assistance for Precious, who begins raising her son in a halfway house while she continues academically.
Her mother comes back into her life to inform Precious that her father has died of AIDS. Later, Precious learns that she is HIV positive, but Abdul is not. Feeling dejected, Precious meets Miss Weiss at her office and steals her case file. Precious recounts the details of the file to her fellow students and has a new lease on life. Mary and Precious see each other for the last time in Miss Weiss' office, where Weiss questions Mary about her abuse of Precious, and uncovers specific physical and sexual traumas Precious encountered, starting when she was three. Mary begs Miss Weiss to help get Precious back, but she refuses upon finding out the extent of the abuse. The film ends with Precious still resolved to improve her life for herself and her children. She severs ties with her mother and plans to complete a General Educational Development (GED) test to receive a high school diploma equivalent.
This is England (2006)
Shaun (Thomas Turgoose), a 12 year-old schoolboy, gets into a fight at school after someone makes an offensive joke about his father, who died in the Falklands War. On his way home Shaun runs into a group of young skinheads led by Woody (Joe Gilgun), who feels sympathy for Shaun and invites him to join the group. They accept Shaun as a member and he finds a big brother in Woody, while developing a romance with Smell (Rosamund Hanson), an older girl who dresses in a punky new wave style.
Combo (Stephen Graham), an older skinhead, returns to the group after a prison sentence. He expresses English nationalist and racist views, and attempts to enforce his leadership over the other skinheads. This leads the group to split. Shaun stays in Combo's group instead of the apolitical skinheads led by Woody. Combo is impressed by and identifies with Shaun, who in turn sees Combo as a mentor figure. Shaun goes with Combo's group to a National Front meeting. After group member Pukey (Jack O'Connell) expresses doubt over the group's racist and nationalistic politics, Combo threatens and abandons him. The gang then engages in racist antagonism of, among others, local shopkeeper Mr. Sandhu, a Pakistani man who had previously banned Shaun from his shop.
Combo becomes depressed after Woody's girlfriend Lol, whom Combo has loved since they had drunken sex years before, rejects him. To console himself, Combo buys cannabis from Milky (Andrew Shim), a member of Woody's group, and the only black skinhead. At a party with Shaun and the other members of Combo's group, Combo and Milky bond while intoxicated. Milky tells Combo about his many relatives and invites him for a meal. Combo becomes agitated at Milky and his race, before snapping and violently beating him unconscious and attacking the other nationalists there. An emotionally regretful Combo then realises what he has done and seeks Shaun's help to get Milky to hospital. Afterwards, Shaun's mother tells him Milky will be all right. Shaun goes down to the shore and tosses a flag of St. George's Cross, a gift from Combo, into the sea and looks into the camera as the movie cuts to black.
London to Brighton (2006)
The film opens with a woman and child, Kelly and Joanne, bursting into a London toilet. Joanne is crying and Kelly has a black eye. Eventually Kelly gets them on a train to Brighton, and it is clear they are running from someone.
Joanne is an eleven-year-old runaway who is procured by a reluctant Kelly into having sex with an old violent mobster with a taste for underage girls. Kelly's pimp, Derek, bullies her into complying, but it all goes horribly wrong, and the old mobster is killed, presumably by one of the girls. The older man's son, Stuart, then forces Derek to find the girls. The film follows the duo's flight from London in the wake of what has happened.
Arriving initially in Brighton, Kelly visits her friend Karen and tries to earn enough money through prostituting herself to help Joanne afford the train to Devon, where the child's grandmother lives. The two are eventually tracked down by her pimp and his associate and taken to meet Stuart at a secluded field. Upon arrival, Kelly's pimp and associate are made to dig two graves, presumably for the girls. However, Stuart decides that the girls are the victims in this episode and decides instead to kill Kelly's pimp and associate. The film ends with Kelly and Joanne arriving at Joanne's grandma's house in Devon. Kelly watches from a distance as the girl and the grandmother hug, then turns away.
Irreversible (2002)
A young woman named Alex is reading An Experiment with Time by John William Dunne in a park, surrounded by playing children. Beethoven's 7th Symphony is heard in the background. The camera spins around faster and faster until it blacks out into a strobe effect, accompanied by a pulsing, roaring sound. A rapidly-spinning image of the cosmos can be dimly perceived. A title card reads: "Time destroys everything" — a phrase uttered in the film's first scene.
Marcus and Alex now lie in bed after sex. Alex reveals she might be pregnant, and Marcus is pleased with the possibility. They prepare to go to a party, and Marcus leaves to buy wine. Alex takes a shower, then uses a home pregnancy test that confirms she is pregnant. She is elated. She sits on the bed clothed, her hand on her belly. A poster for Stanley Kubrick's 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey, with the tagline "The Ultimate Trip", is above the headboard.
Some time passes. Alex and two male friends, Marcus and Pierre, at a party. Alex is annoyed by Marcus' unrestrained use of drugs and alcohol and his flirtatious behavior with other women, and consequently decides to leave the party. Marcus and Pierre go with her. At a nearby Paris Métro station and aboard a subway train, the trio discuss sex in a metro station. Pierre refers to the fact that Alex and Marcus are no longer in a relationship.
On her way home, Alex sees a man (le Tenia, or "the Tapeworm") beating a transsexual prostitute named Concha in a pedestrian underpass. Alex attempts to flee, but le Tenia catches her and threatens her with a knife. Le Tenia pins Alex to the ground and rapes Alex vaginally and anally for several minutes of screentime. Le Tenia then brutally beats her.
A short period of time passes. The audience learns Alex is in a coma. Marcus and Pierre go looking for the man who raped Alex. Questioning several prostitutes (off-screen), they talk to a street thug named Mourad and his friend Layde. The two gangsters promise to help them find the rapist, whom Mouard claims is le Tenia, if they get paid.
Marcus and Pierre track down Concha, the rapist's last victim. At first, she refuses to talk to them. After Marcus threatens to slash her with a piece of broken glass, she identifies le Tenia as the rapist and says he can be found at a gay BDSM nightclub called The Rectum.
Marcus and Pierre go to The Rectum. Marcus finds le Tenia and assaults him. But le Tenia wrestles Marcus to the ground, breaks Marcus' arm, and then attempts to rape Marcus on the club floor. Pierre grabs a fire extinguisher and kills le Tenia by crushing his skull. Police arrest Pierre and put him in handcuffs. An ambulance arrives, and Marcus is put on a stretcher and taken from the club. Outside, a group of men shout homophobic insults at them. The audience learns that the murdered man was not le Tenia after all. Rather, the man standing next to him in the club was the real le Tenia.
Across the street in a small apartment, two men are talking about sex. One of them is "the Butcher", the protagonist of Noé's previous film, I Stand Alone. In a drunken monologue, the Butcher reveals that he was arrested for having sex with his daughter. Their philosophical musings shift to the subject of the commotion in the streets outside. Without looking out the window, they derisively attribute the commotion to the patrons of The Rectum.
Our Film
Our 5 minute film is a social problem drama, focused on the problem of the peer pressure into drinking and taking drugs to fit in with the majority and rape, which turns out to be planned and a really destressing time for fiona (geek).
Dramatic themes often include current issues, societal ills, and problems, concerns or injustices, such as racial prejudice, religious intolerance (such as anti-Semitism), drug addiction, poverty, political unrest, the corruption of power, alcoholism, class divisions, sexual inequality, mental illness, corrupt societal institutions, violence toward women or other explosive issues of the times. These films have successfully drawn attention to the issues by taking advantage of the topical interest of the subject. Although dramatic films have often dealt frankly and realistically with social problems, the tendency has been for Hollywood, especially during earlier times of censorship, to exonerate society and institutions and to blame problems on an individual, who more often than not, would be punished for his/her transgressions."
Social Problem Dramas
Social dramas or "message films" expressed powerful lessons, such as the harsh conditions of Southern prison systems in Hell's Highway (1932) and I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang (1932), the plight of wandering groups of young boys on freight cars during the Depression in William Wellman's Wild Boys of the Road (1933), or the lawlessness of mob rule in Fritz Lang's Fury (1936), or the resourcefulness of lifer prisoner and bird expert Robert Stroud (Burt Lancaster) in John Frankenheimer's Birdman of Alcatraz (1961), or the tale of a framed, unjustly imprisoned journalist (James Cagney) in Each Dawn I Die (1939). In Yield to the Night (1956), Diana Dors relived her life and crime as she awaited her execution. A tough, uncompromising look at New York waterfront corruption was found in the classic American film, director Elia Kazan's. On the Waterfront (1954) with Marlon Brando as a longshoreman who testified to the Waterfront Crimes Commission. The film drew criticism with the accusation that it appeared to justify Kazan's informant role before the HUAC.
Problems of the poor and dispossessed have often been the themes of the great films, including The Good Earth (1937) with Chinese peasants facing famine, storms, and locusts, and John Ford's. The Grapes of Wrath (1940) about an indomitable, Depression-Era Okie family - the Joads - who survived a tragic journey from Oklahoma to California. Martin Scorsese's disturbing and violent. Taxi Driver (1976) told of the despairing life of a lone New York taxi cab driver amidst nighttime urban sprawl. Issues and conflicts within a suburban family were showcased in director Sam Mendes' Best Picture-winning American Beauty (1999), as were problems with addiction in Steven Soderbergh's Traffic (2000).
Modern Day Examples
Precious (2009)
In 1987, obese, illiterate, 16-year-old Claireece P. "Precious" Jones (Gabourey Sidibe) lives in the New York City ghetto of Harlem with her dysfunctional and abusive mother, Mary (Mo'Nique). She has been impregnated twice by her father, Carl (Rodney "Bear" Jackson), and suffers long-term physical, sexual, and mental abuse from her unemployed mother. The family resides in a Section 8 tenement and subsists on welfare. Her first child, known as "Mongo", which is short for Mongoloid, has Down syndrome and is being cared for by Precious' grandmother, though Mary forces the family to pretend Mongo lives with her and Precious so she can receive extra money from the government.
Following the discovery of Precious' second pregnancy, she is suspended from school. Her junior high school principal arranges to have her attend an alternative school, which she hopes can help Precious change her life's direction. Precious finds a way out of her traumatic daily existence through imagination and fantasy. In her mind, there is another world where she is loved and appreciated.
Inspired by her new teacher, Blu Rain (Paula Patton), Precious begins learning to read. Precious meets sporadically with a social worker named Miss Weiss (Mariah Carey), who learns about incest in the household when Precious lets slip who fathered her children. Precious gives birth to her second child and names him Abdul. While at the hospital, she meets John McFadden (Lenny Kravitz), a nursing assistant who shows kindness to her. After Mary (her mother) deliberately drops three-day-old Abdul and hits Precious, Precious fights back long enough to get her son and flees her home permanently. Shortly after leaving the house, Precious stops at a window of a church and watches the choir inside sing a Christmas song. She begins to imagine herself and her dream boyfriend singing a more upbeat version of the Christmas song. Later on, Precious breaks into her school classroom to get out of the cold and is discovered the following morning by Miss Rain. The teacher finds assistance for Precious, who begins raising her son in a halfway house while she continues academically.
Her mother comes back into her life to inform Precious that her father has died of AIDS. Later, Precious learns that she is HIV positive, but Abdul is not. Feeling dejected, Precious meets Miss Weiss at her office and steals her case file. Precious recounts the details of the file to her fellow students and has a new lease on life. Mary and Precious see each other for the last time in Miss Weiss' office, where Weiss questions Mary about her abuse of Precious, and uncovers specific physical and sexual traumas Precious encountered, starting when she was three. Mary begs Miss Weiss to help get Precious back, but she refuses upon finding out the extent of the abuse. The film ends with Precious still resolved to improve her life for herself and her children. She severs ties with her mother and plans to complete a General Educational Development (GED) test to receive a high school diploma equivalent.
This is England (2006)
Shaun (Thomas Turgoose), a 12 year-old schoolboy, gets into a fight at school after someone makes an offensive joke about his father, who died in the Falklands War. On his way home Shaun runs into a group of young skinheads led by Woody (Joe Gilgun), who feels sympathy for Shaun and invites him to join the group. They accept Shaun as a member and he finds a big brother in Woody, while developing a romance with Smell (Rosamund Hanson), an older girl who dresses in a punky new wave style.
Combo (Stephen Graham), an older skinhead, returns to the group after a prison sentence. He expresses English nationalist and racist views, and attempts to enforce his leadership over the other skinheads. This leads the group to split. Shaun stays in Combo's group instead of the apolitical skinheads led by Woody. Combo is impressed by and identifies with Shaun, who in turn sees Combo as a mentor figure. Shaun goes with Combo's group to a National Front meeting. After group member Pukey (Jack O'Connell) expresses doubt over the group's racist and nationalistic politics, Combo threatens and abandons him. The gang then engages in racist antagonism of, among others, local shopkeeper Mr. Sandhu, a Pakistani man who had previously banned Shaun from his shop.
Combo becomes depressed after Woody's girlfriend Lol, whom Combo has loved since they had drunken sex years before, rejects him. To console himself, Combo buys cannabis from Milky (Andrew Shim), a member of Woody's group, and the only black skinhead. At a party with Shaun and the other members of Combo's group, Combo and Milky bond while intoxicated. Milky tells Combo about his many relatives and invites him for a meal. Combo becomes agitated at Milky and his race, before snapping and violently beating him unconscious and attacking the other nationalists there. An emotionally regretful Combo then realises what he has done and seeks Shaun's help to get Milky to hospital. Afterwards, Shaun's mother tells him Milky will be all right. Shaun goes down to the shore and tosses a flag of St. George's Cross, a gift from Combo, into the sea and looks into the camera as the movie cuts to black.
London to Brighton (2006)
The film opens with a woman and child, Kelly and Joanne, bursting into a London toilet. Joanne is crying and Kelly has a black eye. Eventually Kelly gets them on a train to Brighton, and it is clear they are running from someone.
Joanne is an eleven-year-old runaway who is procured by a reluctant Kelly into having sex with an old violent mobster with a taste for underage girls. Kelly's pimp, Derek, bullies her into complying, but it all goes horribly wrong, and the old mobster is killed, presumably by one of the girls. The older man's son, Stuart, then forces Derek to find the girls. The film follows the duo's flight from London in the wake of what has happened.
Arriving initially in Brighton, Kelly visits her friend Karen and tries to earn enough money through prostituting herself to help Joanne afford the train to Devon, where the child's grandmother lives. The two are eventually tracked down by her pimp and his associate and taken to meet Stuart at a secluded field. Upon arrival, Kelly's pimp and associate are made to dig two graves, presumably for the girls. However, Stuart decides that the girls are the victims in this episode and decides instead to kill Kelly's pimp and associate. The film ends with Kelly and Joanne arriving at Joanne's grandma's house in Devon. Kelly watches from a distance as the girl and the grandmother hug, then turns away.
Irreversible (2002)
A young woman named Alex is reading An Experiment with Time by John William Dunne in a park, surrounded by playing children. Beethoven's 7th Symphony is heard in the background. The camera spins around faster and faster until it blacks out into a strobe effect, accompanied by a pulsing, roaring sound. A rapidly-spinning image of the cosmos can be dimly perceived. A title card reads: "Time destroys everything" — a phrase uttered in the film's first scene.
Marcus and Alex now lie in bed after sex. Alex reveals she might be pregnant, and Marcus is pleased with the possibility. They prepare to go to a party, and Marcus leaves to buy wine. Alex takes a shower, then uses a home pregnancy test that confirms she is pregnant. She is elated. She sits on the bed clothed, her hand on her belly. A poster for Stanley Kubrick's 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey, with the tagline "The Ultimate Trip", is above the headboard.
Some time passes. Alex and two male friends, Marcus and Pierre, at a party. Alex is annoyed by Marcus' unrestrained use of drugs and alcohol and his flirtatious behavior with other women, and consequently decides to leave the party. Marcus and Pierre go with her. At a nearby Paris Métro station and aboard a subway train, the trio discuss sex in a metro station. Pierre refers to the fact that Alex and Marcus are no longer in a relationship.
On her way home, Alex sees a man (le Tenia, or "the Tapeworm") beating a transsexual prostitute named Concha in a pedestrian underpass. Alex attempts to flee, but le Tenia catches her and threatens her with a knife. Le Tenia pins Alex to the ground and rapes Alex vaginally and anally for several minutes of screentime. Le Tenia then brutally beats her.
A short period of time passes. The audience learns Alex is in a coma. Marcus and Pierre go looking for the man who raped Alex. Questioning several prostitutes (off-screen), they talk to a street thug named Mourad and his friend Layde. The two gangsters promise to help them find the rapist, whom Mouard claims is le Tenia, if they get paid.
Marcus and Pierre track down Concha, the rapist's last victim. At first, she refuses to talk to them. After Marcus threatens to slash her with a piece of broken glass, she identifies le Tenia as the rapist and says he can be found at a gay BDSM nightclub called The Rectum.
Marcus and Pierre go to The Rectum. Marcus finds le Tenia and assaults him. But le Tenia wrestles Marcus to the ground, breaks Marcus' arm, and then attempts to rape Marcus on the club floor. Pierre grabs a fire extinguisher and kills le Tenia by crushing his skull. Police arrest Pierre and put him in handcuffs. An ambulance arrives, and Marcus is put on a stretcher and taken from the club. Outside, a group of men shout homophobic insults at them. The audience learns that the murdered man was not le Tenia after all. Rather, the man standing next to him in the club was the real le Tenia.
Across the street in a small apartment, two men are talking about sex. One of them is "the Butcher", the protagonist of Noé's previous film, I Stand Alone. In a drunken monologue, the Butcher reveals that he was arrested for having sex with his daughter. Their philosophical musings shift to the subject of the commotion in the streets outside. Without looking out the window, they derisively attribute the commotion to the patrons of The Rectum.
Our Film
Our 5 minute film is a social problem drama, focused on the problem of the peer pressure into drinking and taking drugs to fit in with the majority and rape, which turns out to be planned and a really destressing time for fiona (geek).
Character Profiles: Chris and Kieran
Name: Kieran
Age: 18
Appearance: Tall, brown hair, slightly muscular
Hobbies: Football, X-Box, Skateboarding
Character Purpose: To introduce drugs into our story
Name: Chris
Age: 18
Appearance: Tall, brown hair
Hobbies: Football, Karate, Gym
Character Purpose: The rapist in our story
Age: 18
Appearance: Tall, brown hair, slightly muscular
Hobbies: Football, X-Box, Skateboarding
Character Purpose: To introduce drugs into our story
Name: Chris
Age: 18
Appearance: Tall, brown hair
Hobbies: Football, Karate, Gym
Character Purpose: The rapist in our story
Monday, 26 September 2011
Costume Design: Alice
Alice is the host of the party; she is really good friends with emily and the two main boys in the film, she is massively popular and a big person within the story, it would have been a privilege to be invited to her party. At the party she wears a long floaty white and red flowered maxi dress with wedges and her hair down and curly.
Costume Design: Fiona(morning)
Fiona is the main character in the Film, she is the geek who in the end, it implies she gets raped. In the film, we see Fiona get up in the morning; we use this scene to get across the point that she's a geek and is the outcast. In the morning she is wearing Pink animal patterned pyjamas with her hair in pigtails.
Character Profile: Emily
Name: Emily
Age: 18
Appearance: Ginger hair, dark eye make up
Occupation: College student
Hobbies: Shopping, Cinema, Partying
Character Traits: Very lively, outgoing and individual
Character Purpose: To put peer pressure on Fiona with Alice
Age: 18
Appearance: Ginger hair, dark eye make up
Occupation: College student
Hobbies: Shopping, Cinema, Partying
Character Traits: Very lively, outgoing and individual
Character Purpose: To put peer pressure on Fiona with Alice
Character Profile: Alice
Name: Alice
Age: 18
Appearance: Very fashionable and girly and wears a lot of make up
Occupation: College student
Hobbies: Shopping, Dancing, Singing
Character traits: Very outgoing, lively and popular
Character purpose: Alice initiates the plot of the story by inviting Fiona to her party
Age: 18
Appearance: Very fashionable and girly and wears a lot of make up
Occupation: College student
Hobbies: Shopping, Dancing, Singing
Character traits: Very outgoing, lively and popular
Character purpose: Alice initiates the plot of the story by inviting Fiona to her party
Character Profile: Fiona
Name: Fiona
Age: 18
Appearance: Typical 'geek', wears glasses, little make up, plain clothes and her hair in plaits
Occupation: College student
Hobbies: Studying, Reading, Horse Riding
Character Traits: Very smart, but timid and shy
Character Purpose: She is the main character in which the story's events unfold around
Age: 18
Appearance: Typical 'geek', wears glasses, little make up, plain clothes and her hair in plaits
Occupation: College student
Hobbies: Studying, Reading, Horse Riding
Character Traits: Very smart, but timid and shy
Character Purpose: She is the main character in which the story's events unfold around
Costume Design: Fiona(party)
Fiona is invited to attend Alices Party over Facebook invite. In order to make the transformation from a geek to not; Fiona is really dressed up and looks pretty(we got this idea from Katy Perry's Music Video- Friday) She wears a short denim dress with a bow on and black wedges. With her hair down and big!
Thursday, 22 September 2011
Costume Design: Emily
Emily is a friend of the party host and the two main boys in the Film; she is quite popular and very stylish, at the party she wears: A white stripy top, with a purple high waist skirt and a belt, with black brogue heels. She wears hair extensions and a lot of make-up.
Due to changes in casting, This isn't what 'emily' will be wearing, Emily is now being played by Holly instead she'll be wearing a short red velvet dress, with black heels.
Wednesday, 21 September 2011
Secondary Idea: Inspiration from others
After looking at my other group members' ideas, I've come up with another idea that incorporates ideas from all three of the ones initially thought of.
- While titles play there are shots around a girl's room that is pink, filled with cuddly toys and generally quite girly and bright which would make an audience believe that the room belonged to a young girl.
- There is then a cut to a teenage girl who is 18 and in her second year of college as she wakes up while in bed.
- She reaches over to her bedside table to get her glasses, and as she picks them up there is a shot from her point of view which is blurry, and as she places the glasses on her face everything comes into focus.
- The girl then gets up and goes about doing some jobs in her room such as making the bed and arranging her teddies before sitting down to do some work, either something such as chemistry or maths which are typically considered 'nerdy' subjects to study, giving the audience the impression that the girl herself is a nerd.
- The girl then finishes off her work and logs onto her computer, her homepage being set to a revision website. She then opens a tab and goes onto facebook and receives a message on chat, from a girl at her college who is considered a 'popular' girl, inviting her to a party at her house that night. Thrilled, the girl accepts and then goes to get ready and try on outfits.
- While getting ready, there is a voiceover from the girl telling the audience about how her last year of college has been quite tough as she's generally felt like an outcast and hasn't really made any friends, so to be invited to a party and potentially be in with a popular group of people is an exciting thing for her.
- After jump cuts of the girl getting ready, we see a shot of the girl's feet as she puts some heels on and the camera slowly tilts up to reveal the girl looking glamorous and different in a party dress with her hair and make up done and without glasses.
- The girl then gets into her car and heads off to the party. While in the car, there's a scene of the girl getting overexcited and singing along to a song (maybe Cyndi Lauper's 'Girls just wanna have fun') in a way that will amuse the audience.
- When the girl arrives at the house, she knocks on the door and is greeted by the girl who invited her to the party. When she gets inside, she looks around and recognises a few faces but generally doesn't know anyone, so she sticks with the girl she does know while going to talk to other people.
- The girl gets offered an alcoholic drink by the girl hosting the party but she declines as she's driving home later, but after the girl persuades her to stay the night she starts to drink.
- Later in the night while the girl's with a group of both boys and girls, they start talking about doing drugs and the girl gets uncomfortable. After being pressured by the group, the girl leaves and goes up to the toilet, leaving a drink of hers on a table. There are then shots between the girl in the toilet looking at herself in the mirror, and between the girl's drink on the table and someone slipping a pill into it.
- As the girl gets back and finishes her drink, things seem to pick up quickly and the girl starts partying and dancing and doing shots with the group, before eventually passing and and being caught by a pair of arms.
- We then cut to some feet on a bed, and the camera slowly moves up from the feet and up the legs of a body whose tights are ripped and tattered, and we slowly see that it's the girl from earlier laid in bed on her own with her hair and make up ruined and her clothes in tatters.
- The girl looks around the room confused and looks at her clothes in disbelief. As she sits up in the bed there is a mirror at the end of it and she starts to cry gently as she sees her reflection.
- As she looks around the room, she notices her card keys on the bedside table. As she goes to collect them, she finds a note saying, "Gr8 time last night, but I'm sure you'll keep it to yourself, won't you? X" which contrasts with the state she's been left in to create a sick, vindictive atmosphere due to the deception in the question and the 'X' which has been left in a manipulative manner.
- As she girl realises the implications of the note, her eyes well up and she bolts out of the house and into her car before driving off in tears.
- While titles play there are shots around a girl's room that is pink, filled with cuddly toys and generally quite girly and bright which would make an audience believe that the room belonged to a young girl.
- There is then a cut to a teenage girl who is 18 and in her second year of college as she wakes up while in bed.
- She reaches over to her bedside table to get her glasses, and as she picks them up there is a shot from her point of view which is blurry, and as she places the glasses on her face everything comes into focus.
- The girl then gets up and goes about doing some jobs in her room such as making the bed and arranging her teddies before sitting down to do some work, either something such as chemistry or maths which are typically considered 'nerdy' subjects to study, giving the audience the impression that the girl herself is a nerd.
- The girl then finishes off her work and logs onto her computer, her homepage being set to a revision website. She then opens a tab and goes onto facebook and receives a message on chat, from a girl at her college who is considered a 'popular' girl, inviting her to a party at her house that night. Thrilled, the girl accepts and then goes to get ready and try on outfits.
- While getting ready, there is a voiceover from the girl telling the audience about how her last year of college has been quite tough as she's generally felt like an outcast and hasn't really made any friends, so to be invited to a party and potentially be in with a popular group of people is an exciting thing for her.
- After jump cuts of the girl getting ready, we see a shot of the girl's feet as she puts some heels on and the camera slowly tilts up to reveal the girl looking glamorous and different in a party dress with her hair and make up done and without glasses.
- The girl then gets into her car and heads off to the party. While in the car, there's a scene of the girl getting overexcited and singing along to a song (maybe Cyndi Lauper's 'Girls just wanna have fun') in a way that will amuse the audience.
- When the girl arrives at the house, she knocks on the door and is greeted by the girl who invited her to the party. When she gets inside, she looks around and recognises a few faces but generally doesn't know anyone, so she sticks with the girl she does know while going to talk to other people.
- The girl gets offered an alcoholic drink by the girl hosting the party but she declines as she's driving home later, but after the girl persuades her to stay the night she starts to drink.
- Later in the night while the girl's with a group of both boys and girls, they start talking about doing drugs and the girl gets uncomfortable. After being pressured by the group, the girl leaves and goes up to the toilet, leaving a drink of hers on a table. There are then shots between the girl in the toilet looking at herself in the mirror, and between the girl's drink on the table and someone slipping a pill into it.
- As the girl gets back and finishes her drink, things seem to pick up quickly and the girl starts partying and dancing and doing shots with the group, before eventually passing and and being caught by a pair of arms.
- We then cut to some feet on a bed, and the camera slowly moves up from the feet and up the legs of a body whose tights are ripped and tattered, and we slowly see that it's the girl from earlier laid in bed on her own with her hair and make up ruined and her clothes in tatters.
- The girl looks around the room confused and looks at her clothes in disbelief. As she sits up in the bed there is a mirror at the end of it and she starts to cry gently as she sees her reflection.
- As she looks around the room, she notices her card keys on the bedside table. As she goes to collect them, she finds a note saying, "Gr8 time last night, but I'm sure you'll keep it to yourself, won't you? X" which contrasts with the state she's been left in to create a sick, vindictive atmosphere due to the deception in the question and the 'X' which has been left in a manipulative manner.
- As she girl realises the implications of the note, her eyes well up and she bolts out of the house and into her car before driving off in tears.
Tuesday, 20 September 2011
Initial Ideas
Initial Ideas
Initially i thought of doing a film on current issues in society and the effects of these issues: obesity, anorexia, drugs, homelessness, cyber bullying, peer pressure. I looked onto youtube to try and get some inspiration and i came across a video about two girls that meet unconditionally and become close friends straight away without even getting to know each other slowly, the girl turns out to be something that she didn't seem to be, i liked this idea and tried to develop it in my own way.
To link it with current issues in society i thought it would be a good idea to go along side peer pressure and abuse in a relationship. i thought of the advert shown of television about abuse in a relationship.
My Idea
- A girl just splits up with her boyfriend, she is distraught; tears running down her face.
- Flashback to their first date.
- Girl is really happy & She goes into the toilets and texts her friend about the date.
- 3 weeks later, girl and boy are in girls bedroom.
- Girl is being forced into 'doing things' she doesn't want to.
- Boy is insulting the girl, telling her she isn't anything; making her feel insecure.
- Flashback to month before their first date, a group of boys are on Facebook; planning to use the girl because of her vulnerability.
- Flashback to girl in her bedroom distraught, she gets a text off her Ex saying 'you were never going to be enough, it was just a game'
- The girl gets extremely angry and uploads a video.
- Cut to the boy in his room, he gets a text saying 'two can play at that game, check out my Facebook'
- Boy watches a video of him abusing and insulting the girl; captioned 'this is what _____ is really like'
- Cut to boys reaction. zoom into his eyes.
Initial Ideas
I based the initial idea of the film below on my own observations, I volunteer at a high school, and noticed that bullying is still a big problem, which is only made a bigger problem through cyber bullying. I focused my idea on how cyber bullying is not only used to hurt people on-line, but how it leads people to believe that the person on the other end is their friend, when some of the time, they are luring you into something. Below is the brief synopsis for my film idea. Brief Synopsis Starts with a young girl sat in her room, using her laptop. She’s looking on the internet, when a notification pops up on Facebook. The young girl quickly clicks on the tab, her face turning from a frown to a smile. She has an invite to a party happening that night. The girl quickly replies saying that she’ll be there, and takes down the address. She shuts down her laptop and runs to the bathroom to take a shower. Cuts to the girl leaving her house hours later, dressed and ready for a party, she gets in her car and sets of to the party. Shows you the girl driving to the party all excited, narrative of her talking about how excited she is to have been invited to this party. Glad that she has finally made it into the group, and that people are noticing her. She pulls up at the party, looks pretty empty from the outside. Gets out of her car and goes to knock on the door, the door is answered by another girl, also dressed up and smiling. Allows the young girl to enter the house, she see’s that it’s full of people that she doesn’t know, but carries on walking in anyway. Girl starts drinking, but isn’t drinking alcohol as she is driving. She goes upstairs leaving her drink on the side, uncovered. We see a hand enter the screen, pouring some form of powder into the glass, before leaving the screen again. The powder mixes into the drink, the girl arriving back picking up her glass and taking a sip. Doesn’t have an effect at first, shot starts to distort, making things shake around the room as it spins around the girl, everyone is looking at her, and just before she falls a boy comes up behind her and catches her. Girl wakes up, doesn’t know where she is, finds herself trapped in a room, before she looks down and notices that her clothes are ripped. See’s a note on the table beside her, “Tell anyone and your dead”, with her car keys placed next to it. There is also a change of clothes on the edge of the bed, folded up neatly; the girl looks at her clothes, then back at the ones on the bed, before grabbing them and changing. She grabs her keys, runs out of the door and into her car, crying as she starts the engine and drives away, without taking a second look back.
Initial Story Idea
- The subtitles will play on screen over a series of jump cuts of a girl getting ready, e.g. showering, dressing, doing her make up etc.
- As the girl is getting ready there will be a close up of a jar with a label saying 'holiday savings' on it with that in focus and the girl visible in the background out of focus. This will signify the importance of this for throughout the rest of the story.
- When the girl has finished getting ready we see the girl hesitating before taking money out of the jar and then looking guilty as she does, and while this happens there is a voiceover of the girl explaining her situation of how she only has a few months to get together some money for a holiday with all her friends or else she can't go and how she's been applying for countless job and continuously hearing nothing back.
- As the voiceover continues the girl comes down the stairs to find yet more letters for her with more rejected job applications.
- The girl then gets her breakfast and logs onto her computer to look for more jobs to apply for when she gets a message on facebook.
- The girl then has a chat on facebook with a friend about a party that night and as the messages come through there is a voiceover of the girl's voice and her friend's voice as the voiceovers correspond with the conversation.
- There are then jump cuts of the girl getting ready for the night, e.g. doing her hair, trying on outfits, etc.
- When the girl is ready she then gets into her car and drives to the party.
- When she arrives at the house her friend comes to the door and takes her in. The house is dark and loud with voices and music. The girl then leaves her bag and coat on a table and starts partying with her friends.
- There are then jump cuts of the girl and her friends talking, drinking, dancing, etc. and then they end on the girl throwing up and passing out on a sofa while the image slowly fades out and the music distorts and also fades out.
- A shot then fades in as a phone is ringing and the camera pans from the phone to the girl as she reaches over and answers it. There is the manager of a shop on the other end of the phone offering her a job interview that day and the girl, ecstatic, accepts it.
- The girl then gathers her stuff to get ready to drive to the interview and her friends persuade her to not go as she's still drunk and shouldn't be driving, but she protests as she needs the job and goes anyway.
- As she's driving to the interview you see shots of her in the car but you also see shots of a woman walking down the road. We see an interview list in her hand and the time and name of the girl in the story, identifying this woman as the manager of the shop the girl has an interview for.
- The girl then gets distracted by her phone ringing in her bag on the passenger seat and reaches over to try and get it. As she's distracted, there's a series of shots between the girl and the shop manager until the manager steps out into the road unknowingly and the girl hits her accidentally.
- The girl gets out of her car to see the person, sees blood on her, panics and drives off.
- While the girl's at her interview it gets knocked back as the manager is late back from her lunch break. While sat in a room with a member of the shop the shop member gets a phone call about the manager having been run over, and as she hears the news, the girl looks around the room, sees a picture of the woman she's just run over with the title 'shop manager' written underneath it and you see the horror on her face as she realises who she's run over.
- As the girl is getting ready there will be a close up of a jar with a label saying 'holiday savings' on it with that in focus and the girl visible in the background out of focus. This will signify the importance of this for throughout the rest of the story.
- When the girl has finished getting ready we see the girl hesitating before taking money out of the jar and then looking guilty as she does, and while this happens there is a voiceover of the girl explaining her situation of how she only has a few months to get together some money for a holiday with all her friends or else she can't go and how she's been applying for countless job and continuously hearing nothing back.
- As the voiceover continues the girl comes down the stairs to find yet more letters for her with more rejected job applications.
- The girl then gets her breakfast and logs onto her computer to look for more jobs to apply for when she gets a message on facebook.
- The girl then has a chat on facebook with a friend about a party that night and as the messages come through there is a voiceover of the girl's voice and her friend's voice as the voiceovers correspond with the conversation.
- There are then jump cuts of the girl getting ready for the night, e.g. doing her hair, trying on outfits, etc.
- When the girl is ready she then gets into her car and drives to the party.
- When she arrives at the house her friend comes to the door and takes her in. The house is dark and loud with voices and music. The girl then leaves her bag and coat on a table and starts partying with her friends.
- There are then jump cuts of the girl and her friends talking, drinking, dancing, etc. and then they end on the girl throwing up and passing out on a sofa while the image slowly fades out and the music distorts and also fades out.
- A shot then fades in as a phone is ringing and the camera pans from the phone to the girl as she reaches over and answers it. There is the manager of a shop on the other end of the phone offering her a job interview that day and the girl, ecstatic, accepts it.
- The girl then gathers her stuff to get ready to drive to the interview and her friends persuade her to not go as she's still drunk and shouldn't be driving, but she protests as she needs the job and goes anyway.
- As she's driving to the interview you see shots of her in the car but you also see shots of a woman walking down the road. We see an interview list in her hand and the time and name of the girl in the story, identifying this woman as the manager of the shop the girl has an interview for.
- The girl then gets distracted by her phone ringing in her bag on the passenger seat and reaches over to try and get it. As she's distracted, there's a series of shots between the girl and the shop manager until the manager steps out into the road unknowingly and the girl hits her accidentally.
- The girl gets out of her car to see the person, sees blood on her, panics and drives off.
- While the girl's at her interview it gets knocked back as the manager is late back from her lunch break. While sat in a room with a member of the shop the shop member gets a phone call about the manager having been run over, and as she hears the news, the girl looks around the room, sees a picture of the woman she's just run over with the title 'shop manager' written underneath it and you see the horror on her face as she realises who she's run over.
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