To Tell a Story

Sometimes it seems that the only thing I know how to do is tell a story. When I’m bored at work, I watch customers going about their business, and I make up stories about what their lives might be like. I imagine their pasts, design their futures. Where did they come from? Where are they going? Ever since I was young, I’ve loved to create stories. It didn’t take long for me to realize that I wanted to be a writer. Nothing has ever seemed more natural to me.  Now, I write all the time – to relieve stress, to stay stimulated, and most of all just to tell the stories that I need to tell.

Writing as stress relief or distraction from anxiety is a common practice for me. Much like when I’m reading, when I write I can get totally immersed in a story and forget what’s going on in the world around me. Sometimes I write directly about my concerns, just to get them out of my system, but more often I simply involve myself in whichever story has been most prominent in my mind. I might write random scenes about my favourite characters, I might work out plot plans and timelines for bigger projects, or I might just dive into a work in progress and carry on with a story. The important thing is that writing helps me forget about anything that’s been stressing me out or causing me to worry.

Writing is also great for keeping my mind stimulated when I’ve been bored. Whenever I’ve had too little to engage my brain, I can always clear out the dust by sitting down with a pencil or a blank Word document and starting to write. Often in these cases I’ll just jot down random bits of narration that have been running through my head, characters or scenes with no homes, stray thoughts that have been on my mind. Writing all the time also lets me vent creative urges – thus keeping me not only stimulated, but also generally happier. When I haven’t had any time to write, I get bored and restless. Writing can take as much or as little time as I want, while still being a great way to stay entertained.

More than anything else, though, I write to tell my stories. Since I was young, I’ve always had a plethora of characters running amok in my mind, each with their own adventures to be had. When I was really little, these characters and their stories manifested in the games I played with my friends or the personas I gave to my toys. As I began to grow older, teachers in school encouraged us to write stories, and suddenly I found that I was able to give my characters a whole new dimension of depth. As someone who’d always loved to read, it was incredible for me to learn that I could do with my own ideas what my favourite authors did all the time. Now, my stories are as real and precious to me as the real world, and there’s nothing that would make me happier than being able to share them with everyone.

In the end, whether it’s stress relief, mental stimulation, or just for the sheer joy of it, writing is one of the most important things I do with my life. I can’t imagine ever stopping – I don’t think I could live without it. With any luck, I’ll be able to spend my life telling stories. Writing is perhaps my most immense passion, and I am grateful every day to have it.

The Chemistry of Tears

“In his most recent novel, The Chemistry of Tears, Carey is concerned with nothing less than the fate of the earth. The story of a contemporary museum curator who is restoring an automaton – a clockwork silver swan – takes place in 2010, the year the BP oil spill threatened environmental disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. A parallel story takes place in the 19th century – as Henry Brandling struggles to get the swan made as a gift for his consumptive son.

“If you ask why are you interested in the 19th century, I would say, because we’re living in it,” Carey said in an interview with CBC News. “We’re living with the consequences of it. We argue with the 19th century capitalists, growth is good – we still talk like that…”‘   Susan Noakes  CBC link

Read the New York Times review HERE

Short Film Editing for ASM3M

We are coming to the editing part of the filming process. Please take turns editing the film. Your group will also be responsible for creating the following from your film footage:

1. movie trailer 1 minute (Short Film Rubric_ASM3M)

2. movie poster 8 1/2 x 11  72dpi (Movie poster Rubric)

3. press releasewith description of film’s story line, locations, director’s decisions and any details that the audience would be interested in including who is in the film, publicity photos of each actor, director and camera operator. Write a short BIO for each actor, director and camera operator – this may be fictional but has to be consistent with film and it’s objectives. Perhaps there is a story about an incident that happened on set during one day of filming. (Press Release Rubric)

Official Looper press release HERE

4. Post your movie trailer and poster here on this site. You will receive an invite to join this blog. Categorize your movie trailer as movie trailer and embed it from our VIMEO group. Categorize  your poster as movie poster with resolution at 72dpi. You can also post them together in one post. If you want to be ambitious, you may create your own blog dedicated to your movie.

Official Looper press release HERE