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Purchase Through a Screen Darkly.
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QUESTIONS FOR
MOVIE DISCUSSION GROUPS
Consider these to be prompts to get things moving, or suggestions for
expanding a conversation into new territory.
This is by no means a
comprehensive list of post-viewing questions. They represent avenues of
conversation that I have found rewarding and even surprising when audiences
have been willing to stay for a while, share their experiences, and gain
from hearing the perspectives of others.
Purpose:
- What purpose was the film
intended to serve? Do you feel that it fulfilled its purpose?
- Does it entertain? Does it
deliver what a general audience would expect of this sort of film, or does
it challenge them with something unexpected? Does it accomplish more than
mere entertainment?
- Did it seem focused on
delivering a particular message or lesson?
- Did it seem designed to
persuade audiences on certain issues, or was it open to interpretation?
Themes:
- What was the film about?
- How is the film about
that? Where do we first sense that theme developing? What methods are
employed to emphasize this theme? What lines seem most important? What
images? Does anything in the film stand out as a metaphor related to the
theme?
- Do you find that the film
offers anything on these themes that you personally have not considered
before? Does the film resonate with you as true, or as misleading? Does it
convey anything that might influence the way you think about its subject?
Quality:
- Consider the technical
excellence of the film in aspects such as these:
- Screenplay
- Acting
- Editing
- Cinematography
- Direction
- Production value
- Soundtrack
- Effects
- What aspects of this
production were its strengths? Weaknesses?
The Film’s World:
- Does this film take place in a
world you recognize? Or does it ask us to accept a distorted view of
reality?
(For example: Pirates of the Caribbean and its sequels ask
us to accept that this story takes place in the land of make-believe, full
of magic, zany humor, and outrageous superhuman stunts. As when we watch
Looney Toons, we have to suspend our disbelief and enjoy the adventure the
way we enjoyed fairy tales when we were children. While this is “an
exaggerated reality,” its exaggerations draw our attention to shows of
virtue, betrayal, heroism, cowardice, and to the consequences of various
choices. This makes the films both entertaining and pleasingly meaningful
— for most.)
- If anything is exaggerated, or
if the style suggests a different kind of world — a nightmare, a dream, a
cartoon, a fantasy — what was the purpose of crafting the film in this
way? Does it draw our attention to any realities in our own world? Or do
you find the distortions unfair and misleading?
Spirituality:
- Does this film offer any
spiritual insights?
- Is the audience led to assume
that the world in the film adheres to any higher laws or moral order? Is
there any suggestion of a higher power? What is the film's idea of "right"
and "wrong"?
- What do the characters value?
How do they demonstrate this? Where do their values lead them?
- Do any of the characters
exhibit any kind of personal faith? If so, how does that manifest itself
in their choices and behavior?
- What does the film suggest is
meaningful in life?
- What assumptions does it ask
us to make about the world?
- Does the film bring any
particular scriptures to mind? Does the film illustrate, or conflict with,
what Christ reveals to us?
Story:
- What were the choices made by
the characters, and what were the consequences of those choices?
- What has changed by the end of
the film?
- What does the film illustrate
for us?
Source material:
- If the film is based on
history, is it fairly accurate and trustworthy, or have the filmmakers
embellished the truth or ignored important details? Does this matter?
- If the film is based on a
previous film, a play, a novel, or some other work of art, how does it
compare to the original? What are the strengths and weaknesses of its
interpretation? Does it reflect the themes and perspective of the original
work, or does it alter that? Is the artist enhancing and upholding the
focus of the original work, or introducing his own views into the work?
Filmmaker:
- Does the director have a
particularly distinct style? Would you recognize his work in other films?
- What does the director’s style
reveal about him?
- Think of a few other directors
you’re familiar with — how might the film have been different if one of
them had directed it?
- Are there other filmmakers who
have explored this film’s themes or ideas? Put alongside each other, would
the films offer conflicting or complimentary ideas?
Your experience:
- Did you find the film
worthwhile?
- Did the film surprise you with
anything unusual in its story, style, technique, or implications?
- How did it make you feel?
- What does it make you think
about?
- What will you most remember?
- Does anything in the film make
you think of your own experiences? Did anything resonate with you or
remind you of some detail in your own history?
- Did anything particularly
bother you about the film? Do you object to any of the artists' choices?
(This is a different question from "Did anything in the film trouble you?"
I am deeply troubled by the violence of the Nazis in Saving Private
Ryan, but I have no complaint against the filmmakers.)
- Do you have any questions for
other viewers about their experience?
- If you could ask the
filmmakers a question about the work, what would you ask them?
- Has the film influenced your
understanding or caused you to think about anything in a new way?
- Would you want to see it
again? If so, why? If not, why not?
- Would you be interested in
seeing more work by this director, this screenwriter, or these actors? If
so, why? If not, why not?
Further exploration:
- If you were to watch it again,
what might you concentrate on the second time through? How might the
experience be different on a second viewing, now you know the entirety of
the work? Do you suspect a second viewing would be worthwhile?
- What other works of art might
be worth considering in relationship with this film? What books, music,
poetry, visual art, or other films explore the same theme?
Considering the audience:
- What kind of audience would
you say is appropriate for this film? Is it appropriate for teenagers?
Young children? Should children be allowed to watch the film without an
adult present? How might parents discuss this film with their children in
order to make it more rewarding for them?
- How might a Christian’s
response to this film differ from an unbeliever’s?
- How might an American respond
to it differently than a viewer in another culture?
- How might women, men, young
people, and older people see the film differently?
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- How might this film affect
viewers as they return to their everyday activity? Will it inspire more
hope and faith, or more despair? Will it encourage viewers to have
courage, or will it enflame their fears? Will it inspire responsibility or
recklessness?
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