Tag Archives: movies

Harry Potter 2

(Poem 239 for 2024 – I am writing a poem a day)

Sneaky, sneaky little red-head
naughty girl, how did I not notice
you before with your guilty looks
and furtive glances as you wrote
with Tom in your evil journal?
As many times as I’ve watched
this movie, I’ve never noticed
the full-grown adult man who
slipped the diary into your books,
and started you down the dark
path that nearly cost you your life.

Rebekah Marshall @Home Studio on 9/5/24 @ 8:00pm – 239th poem of the year (After watching it at Cinemark with Celinda & Charlotte on 8/26/24 for Back to Hogwarts Week)

Columbus, Chris, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Rupert Grint, Warner Bros., 2002.

Kingdom

(Poem 140 for 2024 – I am writing a poem a day)

An eagle egg cradled against
the heart incubates a hunter,
and nurtures a lifelong bond.
Only those who know the song
to call the great birds will be
saved with Noa from the flood.
It seems a world where all
species somehow coexist
would be best for everyone.
Why must someone always
strive to dominate others
rather than share space?
Caesar gave his life to bring
his clan to the promised land
where “ape shall not kill ape.”
According to the tenets he
espoused, everyone should
show generosity and compassion.
Raka of the Order of Caesar
led by example when he
offered food to the Nova.
Life lost is his recompense,
and Mae safeguarding her own
rather than caring for all.

@Home Studio – 140th poem of the year

Ball, Wes, director. Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes. 20th Century Studios, 2024.

Dawn

(Poem 125 for 2024 – I am writing a poem a day)

There always seems to be someone who hates,
whose resentment fills their soul until nothing
else can fit and the surrounding world must pay.
Everyone who endures suffering must decide
whether to heal or hurt, a weighty choice, for it
affects the fate of your trajectory henceforward.
In matters of the heart, as in matters of state,
humanity should remain centered in our judgment,
and the resulting actions must be measured
carefully to create the least harm to all involved.  

@The Writing Barn: Buddha Hall (after watching Dawn of the Planet of the Apes at Greg’s house with Greg and his family, Debbie, Celinda, and David on 5/4/24) – 125th poem of the year

Reeves, Matt, et al. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes 20th Century Fox, 2014.

Rise

(Poem 124 for 2024 – I am writing a poem a day)

Anyone who has ever parented a surly teen or
held a baby and felt their entire dependence as
your responsibility can relate to the poignant family
dynamic scenes in Rise of the Planet of the Apes.
Caesar’s coming of age trauma hurts us mothers
and fathers because we watch our own babies
suffer the slings and arrows of this world unprotected.
No matter our desire to rescue them from the pain
of growth, the journey is theirs and theirs alone.
If only the world could be a softer place for our
children, but alas, we must limp along and support
each other, for “alone…weak. Together…strong.”

@The Writing Barn: Buddha Hall (after watching Rise of the Planet of the Apes at Greg’s house with Greg and his family, Debbie, Celinda, and David on 5/4/24) – 124th poem of the year

Rupert Wyatt, et al., Rise of the Planet of the Apes, Beverly Hills, CA, 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment, 2011.

Spaceship Drive-In

(Poem 85 for 2024 – I am writing a poem a day)

AI Generated image I prompted on Gencraft.com https://gencraft.ai/p/1zA0kp

Everyone’s headed to the spaceship drive-in
for an intergalactic action film that’s fun for all.
There’ll be grays and goblins and little green men
flatwoods, skyfish, and even a reptilian.

The shiphops stay busy on opening night
zipping back and forth to bring snacks port side—
rocket fizzing popcorn, chocolate mint moon pie,
orders of Martian marshmallows left and right.

Tall whites and other Nordics get a little loud,
igniting their thrusters and honking their horns,
shooting coil guns upward, making a smoke cloud,
their rowdy mischief annoying the older crowd.

Lovers hold all the hands and some are lip to lip,
but others actually want to watch this latest release.
Some moviegoers flew many lightyears round trip,
while others are here just to show off their new ship.

Whatever the reason for coming here to see
this movie at the drive-in on planet Jupiterion,
everyone will have some fun this night of revelry.
It will be a good time, on this we all agree.

@Home Studio – 85th poem of the year

Dune – Chani

(Poem 57 for 2024 – I am writing a poem a day)

“This is only the beginning.” – Chani Dune: Part One

My heart is a Coriolis storm,
for I fear losing this us we have.
I am no bene gesserit, so have
no Other memory, only Our
memory, those made in my
yali, where I welcomed you as
my own–deep in the cool, safe
darkness of our ancient Usul sietch.
Your Chakobsa halting, sounding
more like a child than the warrior
you have proven to be, but your
Galach utterances in your most
vulnerable moments made me
ache to know more of you.
I do not understand your prescience,
though I have not believed in tales
since I was a wali, barely able to
lift my weapon, still swayed by
Zensunni stories of Lisan al Gaib.
I love you, though you are no
Fremen, never can be; you are my
Mahdi. Can’t that be enough?
Hear my heart flutter like the
beat of thopter wings, while yours
is steady as a thumper calling
Shai-Hulud, eager for you to fly
to me and sink your maker hooks
deep into my skin, steer me across
the golden seas of Arrakis, your
love the spice that flows through
my veins, your touch the palm lock
to the center of my universe.
Be my Kwisatz Haderach, only mine.
I remember the first time we shared a
stilltent on the open erg and kept
each other warm late into the night.
We talked until the hour of assassins,
and I fell into a deep sleep in your arms.
I dreamed I was with child and had just
caught a desert hare to roast for dinner.
The child in my belly kicked hungrily
and I laughed at his impatience.
I looked down into a pool of clear
water and saw my own reflection.
Sparkling water rings ornamented my
hair, gifts from you at our betrothal.
When I awoke, you had left the tent
and a sense of foreboding filled my heart.
I found you staring at the sky toward
Krelln, a dune hawk soaring in its light.
You watched as it set its sights on a
muad’dib, fascinated by the movements
of the tiny mouse as it pretended
nonchalance toward the predator.
You seemed relieved when, at the last
possible second, it dived into a hidden
burrow, avoiding a deadly fate;
your sigh awakened something in me.
Stay by my side, my love, far from
the water of life, which is no life.
Grow old with me and weather
each hulasikali wala until the day
deathstills return our water to our
people, for this is the only true paradise.


@Home Studio – 57th poem of the year – after watching Dune: Part Two opening night at Galaxy Theater.


Herbert, Frank. Dune. Hodder Paperback, 2006.

Villeneuve, Denis. Dune: Part One. Warner Bros. Pictures, Oct. 22, 2021.

Villeneuve, Denis. Dune: Part Two. Warner Bros. Pictures, March 1, 2024.

Wikipedia contributors. “Glossary of Dune (franchise) terminology.” Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 28 Feb. 2024. Web. 3 Mar. 2024.

Bene Gesserit – Secretive and powerful matriarchal order whose members possess extraordinary physical and mental powers.

Chakobsa – Language of the Fremen of Arrakis, inspired by the Caucasian hunting language of the same name.

Coriolis storm – Sandstorms on Arrakis in which “winds across the open flatlands are amplified by the planet’s own revolutionary motion to reach speeds up to 700 kilometers per hour.”

Deathstill – Fremen device used to extract all moisture from a living or dead human or creature. This is traditionally done to reclaim precious water from the dead, who no longer require it; (Huanui-nau)

Dune hawk – a type of Desert hawk native to Arrakis. Also a type of Flyer or Ornithopter.

Erg – a broad, flat area of desert covered with wind-swept sand with little or no vegetative cover.

Fremen – “Native” inhabitants of Arrakis.

Galach – Universal language of the Dune universe.

Hour of Assassins – the first hour before dawn.

Hulasikali Wala – fremen name for the Coriolis storm.

KrellnFirst moon – the major satellite of Arrakis.

Kwisatz Haderach – “The Shortening of the Way” or “The one who can be two places simultaneously”. Bene Gesserit label applied to “the unknown for which they sought a genetic solution: a male Bene Gesserit whose organic mental powers would bridge space and time.”

Lisan al Gaib — (Arabic: لسان الغيب) The Fremen term for an off-world prophet or messiah. It is “The Voice from the Outer World” and is outlined in Fremen messianic legends heavily influenced by the Bene Gesserit’s Missionaria Protectiva. It is also translated as the “Giver of Water”.

Mahdi – “In the Fremen messianic legend, ‘The One Who Will Lead Us to Paradise;'” applied to Paul Atreides by the Fremen when they determine that he is their messiah. The term Mahdi is the same as that used in Islam for a messianic figure who will appear shortly before the Day of Judgment in Islamic eschatology.

Muad’Dib – “The adapted kangaroo mouse of Arrakis, a creature associated in the Fremen earth-spirit mythology with a design visible on the planet’s second moon. This creature is admired by Fremen for its ability to survive in the open desert.”[3] In Dune, Paul Atreides takes “Muad’Dib” as his Fremen name, which takes on greater significance when he is perceived as a messiah.

Ornithopter (or ‘Thopter) – “Aircraft capable of sustained wing-beat flight in the manner of birds;” one of the primary modes of transportation on the desert planet Arrakis.

Other Memory – The combined ego and memories of all female ancestors, which a Bene Gesserit may be trained to access.

Palm lock – “Lock or seal which can be opened only by contact with the palm of the human hand to which it has been keyed.”

Prescience – Form of precognition, based in genetics but made possible by use of the drug melange.

Shai-Hulud – Fremen name for the sandworms of Arrakis. Sandworm – Giant sand-dwelling creatures native to Arrakis. Called Shai-Hulud by the Fremen and worshipped as deities

Sietch – Cave warren inhabited by a Fremen tribal community; in the Fremen language, “Place of assembly in time of danger.” The name was borrowed from the sich of Zaporozhian Cossacks.

Spice – Common name for melange, a highly-addictive drug essential to space travel, extended life, and therefore to the survival of the universe.

Stilltent – “Small, scalable enclosure of micro-sandwich fabric designed to reclaim as potable water the ambient moisture discharged within it by the breath of its occupants.”

Thumper – “Short stake with a spring-driven clapper at one end”, placed in the sand to ‘call’ sandworms, who are attracted to vibration and sound.

Usul – Fremen word, meaning “The strength at the base of the pillar.” This is the secret “sietch name” (known only to his tribe) given to Paul Atreides upon his joining the Fremen.

Wali – The name the Fremen give to an untried youth.

Water rings – Metal rings wore by Fremen women to indicate their household’s possessed water.

Water of Life – Toxic liquid exhalation of a drowning sandworm, used by Fremen Reverend Mothers in the spice agony.

Yali – “A Fremen’s personal quarters within the sietch.”

Zensunni – Ancient religious sect, ancestors of the Fremen.

1st week of summer school

Knightly Virtues –

This week in my summer school class, students who do not have online credit recovery to complete are being treated to lessons on chivalry from the likes of King Arthur, the daughter of Robin Hood, Heath Ledger, and The Mighty (two boys in one.) The less-than-stellar films that we are pulling lessons from are quite the crowd pleasers for teens:

King Arthur – the 2004 version with Keira Knightley and Clive Owen that does not get anything right about the legends, but is quite the cinematic treat with a handful of memorable loyal knights. My favorite character is one of Arthur’s knights played by James Gandolfini. He steals every scene he is in.

Princess of Thieves – the 2001 Disney movie with Keira Knightley and Stephen Moyer. It is truly terrible, but the teen girls like the little bit of unrequited romance and the fact that a female is a hero.

A Knight’s Tale – 2001 Heath Ledger is good fun and beloved by teenagers. They do not agree with me that Rufus Sewell is the hottest bad guy ever. They think he is gross. It must be an age thing.

The Mighty – (by far the best film in the bunch) is a 1998 Kieran Culkin, Sharon Stone film about a boy who is disabled and his unlikely friendship with Max who he goes on knightly adventures with. Side note – James Gandolfini makes an appearance as Max’s murderous father. The girls literally sob (tissues passed all around) at the end of this film.

We are off to a great start and the kids doing real work are motivated to hurry up and pass their courses they failed or needed to catch up on so they can join us in our literary/film fun! It is a great tool for speeding up the credit recovery process.

Plus, we’re making coats of arms, skits about generosity, writing essays about nobility, coloring awesome pictures, doing puzzles and word searches, and decorating everything with foamy letters, glitter, and whatever else makes teenage girls happy.