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Advice for Written Assignment: Critical Response Paper/Academic Film Review
The students are required to write two 700-word critical response papers on assigned course
readings or an academic film review of a documentary film shown in the class. The critical
response paper/academic film review must demonstrate an accurate understanding of the
readings and context, key terms and issues addressed in the lectures and discussion sessions.
The paper will be graded on content, factual accuracy, and critical analysis (approx. 60 %) and
form and style of academic writing (approx. 40 %).
➪ 2 x 20%, learning objective 1, 2 & 3, due to the end of Week 4 (September 30, 12:00
- AM) & Week 10 (November 11, 12:00 AM) respectively, to be submitted in
www.turnitin.com (details follow).
- Writing a Critical Response Paper
A critique is an analysis of and a commentary on another piece of writing. It generally focuses
on technique as well as on content. A critical response paper has two missions: to summarize a
source’s main ideas and to respond to the source’s main ideas with reactions based on your
synthesis.
Introduction
Typically, the opening is short (less than 10% of the word length), and you should name the
work being reviewed as well as the date it was created and the name of the author/creator
(bibliographical reference). List the main arguments or main purpose of the work. Have a
concluding sentence that signposts what your evaluation of the work will be. For instance, it
may indicate whether it is a positive, negative, or mixed evaluation.
Body (Summary)
Then, as a first step, actively read and thoughtfully seek answers to the following questions as
you go: What are the main points, ideas, or arguments of the work (book, article, play essay,
etc.)? How is the work organized? What evidence/support does the author give? What is the
primary purpose of the work?
Body (Analysis with interpretation and evaluation)
To help you generate content for your analysis, consider the following questions: Does the work
achieve its purpose? Fully or only partially? Was the purpose worthwhile to begin with? Or
was it too limited, trivial, broad, theoretical, etc.? Is any of the evidence weak or insufficient?
In what way? Conversely, is the evidence/support particularly effective or strong? Can I supply
further explanations to clarify or support any of the main points, ideas, and arguments? Are
there sections you don’t understand? Why? Was there any area where the author offered too
much or too little information? Is the organization of the work an important factor? Does its
organization help me understand it, hinder my understanding, or neither? Is anything about the
language or style noteworthy?
Evaluate the evidence: sufficient (enough evidence, examples), representative (large enough
pool/sample), relevant (accurate correlations)?
A critical evaluation does not merely highlight negative impressions. It should deconstruct the
work and identify both strengths and weaknesses. It should examine the work and evaluate its
success, in light of its purpose.
Body (Response)
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Base reaction on your own experience, prior knowledge, and opinions (if applicable). If you do
not have any prior knowledge, or idea of the subject discussed this part is not necessary.
Within the body, you may choose from three basic patterns of organization: write all the
summary paragraphs first, followed by the analysis portion; alternate between summary and
analysis paragraphs so that a critique of the summarized information follows each paragraph of
summary; or combine a summary and critique of each idea within each paragraph of the body.
Conclusion
Usually a very brief paragraph, which includes a statement indicating the overall evaluation of
the work and a summary of the key reasons, identified during the critical review. In some
circumstances, recommendations for improvement on the work may be appropriate.
Documentation/Reference list
Include all resources cited in your critique (if you look up words in dictionaries etc. you do not
need to list them).
In sum: How to Organize Your Critical Response Paper
- Introduction: ·
- Body (Summary, Analysis, Response)
- Conclusion
- Documentation/Reference List
(Based on https://write.siu.edu/_common/documents/handouts/writing-the-criticalresponse.pdf).
- Writing an Academic Film Review
We all have watched films and discuss films with our friends, writing a film review is, in
principle, not different from when we discuss a movie with a friend except that it should follow
the requirements of an academic paper. Many aspects of a book review are the same as those
required in a film review. In your film review, I am interested in your reaction to the film and
what you see in the film. There is not a set formula to follow when writing a film review; but
the genre does have certain common elements that most film reviews include.
Introduction
In the opening of your review, provide some basic information about the film. You may include
film’s name, year, director, screenwriter, and major actors. You can evaluate the film, the
central theme of the film, film genre, or timeframe of the film.
Plot Summary
Remember that many readers of film reviews have not yet seen the film. While you want to
provide some plot summary, keep this brief and avoid specific details that would spoil the
viewing for others.
Description
While the plot summary will give the reader a general sense of what the film is about, also
include a more detailed description of your particular cinematic experience watching the film.
This may consist of your impression of what the film looks, feels, and sounds like. In other
words, what stands out in your mind when you think about this particular film.
Analysis
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To explain your impression of the film, be specific about how the film utilizes formal
techniques and thematic content. How do the film’s formal techniques (such as
cinematography, lighting, sound, or narrative) affect the way the film looks, feels, and sounds
to you? How does the thematic content (such as history, race, gender, sexuality, class, or the
environment) affect your experience and interpretation?
An in-depth critique of the film plot and characters are essential to a great film review. Offer a
lot of detail about how the producers achieved goals regarding being evocative and captivating
the audience. The language used; the meter and the tone, the depth and speed of talking and
language style will also set a mood for a scene and change our perception of the situation and
the characters roles. Analyze the different persons interviewed and discuss in detail the main
character traits of each major role. Consider how characters possibly contrast each other and
what might be the intention behind that. Include physical and psychological aspects of each
character and discuss how these either enhanced or detracted from the performance.
Conclusion/Evaluation
The closing of your film review should remind the reader of your general thoughts and
impressions of the film. Provide a summary of your thoughts about the film and be sure to
explain why you feel this way. Some things you may want to include is information you gained
regarding any events or times in history or how the film changed your views about a particular
subject. Make sure to remind the reader of why the film is or is not worth seeing.
In sum: How to Organize Your Academic Film Review
- Introduction
- Plot Summary
- Description
- Analysis
- Conclusion/Evaluation
(Based on https://twp.duke.edu/sites/twp.duke.edu/files/file-attachments/film-review1.original.pdf
and
https://www.powerpapers.com/article/how_to_write_an_academic_film_review).
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