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Film Studies & Movie Analysis Elective Curriculum for High School | Semester 2 | SAVE 20%

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Description

Film Studies & Movie Analysis Elective Curriculum for High School | Semester 2 | SAVE 20%This Film Studies & Movie Analysis Elective Curriculum Semester 2 is a complete, standards aligned film analysis for entry level high school classes (and mixed readiness groups). This curriculum prioritizes clear scaffolds, broad appeal, and school friendly films that are easy to stream and find. Easy access to films (with subtitles): Core titles in this curriculum are available on the three major platforms most classrooms already use: Disney+,

This Film Studies & Movie Analysis Elective Curriculum Semester 2 is a complete, standards-aligned film-analysis for entry-level high school classes (and mixed-readiness groups). This curriculum prioritizes clear scaffolds, broad appeal, and school-friendly films that are easy to stream and find.

Easy access to films (with subtitles):

Core titles in this curriculum are available on the three major platforms most classrooms already use: Disney+, Netflix, and Amazon Prime Video. Subtitles/closed captions are excellent on all three services, supporting multilingual learners and accessibility. (See Film Availability reminder for more below) s of 2025, every featured film is streaming on one or more of these platforms; however, catalogs change, so teachers should verify availability before the lesson day and have a backup plan if a title rotates.)

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Semester 2 Outline:

Unit 5 — War Movies + Cinematography (Extension)

  • 1917 (R – 2019) — A survival mission told with an immersive “one-shot” style. Students examine how camera movement, sound, and production design create urgency; they discuss leadership under pressure and the accuracy of trench warfare.
  • Midway (PG-13 – 2019) — Intelligence, air–sea strategy, and decision-making. Students analyze codebreaking (Rochefort), preparedness debates, and how point-of-view edits shape our understanding of risk and outcome.
  • Unbroken (PG-13 – 2014) — Communication, resilience, and ethics under duress. Students track choices that keep people alive, evaluate leadership and peer influence, and interpret language that signals power and intimidation.
  • The Six Triple Eight (PG-13 – 2024) — Leadership, logistics, and morale. Students study how indexing systems and workflow solve the WWII mail backlog; they analyze scenes of racism/sexism, evidence-based advocacy, and figurative lines that reveal purpose and grief.

Unit 6 — Historical Biographies + Cinematography (Extension)

  • Hamilton (PG-13 – 2020) — Rhetoric, rivalry, and the power of writing. Students compare Burr and Hamilton, unpack cabinet debates, and connect mantras and staging to character development; they reference primary documents.
  • Hidden Figures (PG – 2016) — Access, recognition, and technical literacy. Students map obstacles to strategies and outcomes for Johnson, Vaughan, and Jackson; they argue how data and advocacy change policy.
  • Remember the Titans (PG – 2000) — Coaching styles, culture change, and team unity. Students compare Boone and Yoast, analyze symbolism and music, and extract practical lessons for breaking barriers in schools and communities.
  • McFarland, USA (PG – 2015) — Adaptation, community, and purpose. Students evaluate how a coach changes course, why success matters to this team, and what strong community support looks like.
  • Queen of Katwe (PG – 2016) — Mentorship, agency, and opportunity. Students debate competing adult perspectives, connect chess concepts to life choices, and analyze how travel and exposure reshape goals.

Unit 7 — Literary Classics + Theme (Extension)

  • Holes (PG – 2003) — Institutions and consequences at Camp Green Lake, the gap between “builds character” and practice, names and labels as social armor, justice and redemption in the Sam–Kate thread, symbolism that carries meaning (onions, rain), and friendship expressed through action.
  • Treasure Island (PG – 1950) — Law, status, and early judgment; suspense craft (the “black spot”); leadership and rumor in the run-up to mutiny; Long John Silver’s persuasive rhetoric; risk, strategy, and moral responsibility.
  • Of Mice and Men (PG-13 – 1992) — Friendship and dependence, power and prejudice on the ranch, foreshadowing that builds dread, blame and mercy after tragedy, and the ethics behind George’s final choice.
  • A Christmas Carol (PG – 2009) — Money, empathy, and social responsibility; competing philosophies of Christmas; lessons from Past/Present/Future; what authentic change looks like and how to “keep Christmas well” beyond a single holiday.

Unit 8 — Shakespeare in Movies + Theme (Extension)

  • 10 Things I Hate About You (PG-13 – 1999) — High-school labels and power, boundaries in authority at school and home, deception and consent in deal-making, what repair requires, and a clear map from The Taming of the Shrew to modern character and theme.
  • West Side Story (PG-13 – 2021) — Neighborhood change, belonging, and policing; vows of loyalty and their cost; choreography and lyrics as arguments; responsibility after the rumble; a closing image about grief and the possibility of change.
  • Hamlet (PG – 1990) — Grief and hesitation, line-level meaning in Shakespearean language, conscience vs. revenge, strategies to expose guilt, Gertrude’s role in the harm that follows, and character contrasts with Laertes.
  • The Lion King (G – 1994) — Competing leadership philosophies, the “Circle of Life” as an ethical frame, guilt and avoidance in a coming-of-age arc, and whether “Hakuna Matata” helps or hinders growth.
  • Macbeth (R – 2015) — Prophecy and ambition, persuasion between Macbeth and Lady Macbeth, guilt in image and language, equivocation and false security, and how illegitimate power corrodes people and the state.

What’s included (teacher-ready & customizable)

  • Planning & pacing for each quarter and unit (day-by-day breakdowns that align with movie guides and extension activities).
  • Movie Guides - Student Copy (SC) & Answer Key (AK) for every title with short-answer and evidence-based writing prompts.
  • Extension strands that spiral across the year and include student presentations:
  • Cinematography & Student Presentations — Students master six core elements—exposure, mise en scène, camera movement, camera angles, shot size, and color/lighting. In small teams they research sub-elements (e.g., aperture, rule of thirds, dolly vs. zoom, Dutch angle, ECU, key light), present with scene stills or sketches, and then apply the vocabulary to annotated moments from each week’s film. They close with a short write-up that explains how specific visual choices shape emotion, theme, and viewer attention.
  • Theme & Student Presentations — Students move beyond topic lists to write precise, declarative theme statements supported by scenes, symbols, and dialogue. They sort major vs. minor themes, refine word choice for nuance, and present a short “Name-that-Theme” talk where peers infer the film from evidence. The strand reinforces clear claims, succinct explanation, and on-the-spot discussion grounded in film details.
  • Assessments for each unit: Two Comparative Analyses and a Summative Assessment task:
    • Unit 5 — War Movies + Cinematography | Summative Preview: Students define four war-film categories (e.g., glorify/critique × realistic/unrealistic), place unit films on the matrix with scene-based evidence, and argue both the industry value of each category and which approach they find most effective.
    • Unit 6 — Historical Biographies + Cinematography | Summative Preview: Students build a chronological timeline of key events or lessons across the unit’s films, each with a concise explanation of significance, and briefly present or discuss choices with a partner.
    • Unit 7 — Literary Classics + Theme | Summative Preview: Students research multiple leadership styles and evaluate one character per film, matching styles to actions and outcomes with specific scene evidence.
    • Unit 8 — Shakespeare in Movies + Theme | Summative Preview: Students either map minor themes across the unit and write a short comparative analysis, or creatively translate an iconic moment for a target audience with a rationale; an optional intergenerational interview deepens perspective.

Standards alignment (ELA strands)

Every unit targets Common Core Anchor Standards across Reading, Writing, Speaking & Listening, and Language. Strand-by-strand coverage (R.1–R.9, W.1–W.9, SL.1–SL.3, L.4–L.5) with explicit standards called out on each Movie Guide and assessment.

Digital or Print—your choice

  • Digital workflow: Turn on Drive › Settings › “Convert uploads to Google Docs editor format,” then drag in the folder. Docs/Slides are ready for Classroom.
  • Print workflow: DOCX and PPTX files are classroom-ready; print slide decks via File → Print → Handouts → 2 per page.

Film Availability Reminder:

As of 2025, every featured film is streaming on one or more of these platforms; however, catalogs change, so teachers should verify availability before the lesson day and have a backup plan if a title rotates. Movie titles were selected that have a high chance of remaining on these platforms unlike some movies that are only available for a limited time. We include a simple spreadsheet that shows which of the 3 platforms (Disney+ / Netflix / Amazon Prime Video) every movie is currently (2025) streaming on.

Does K12MovieGuides offer two full Film Elective Curriculum Options?

Yes! Read below to find out which one is best for your needs?

Film Studies & Movie Analysis: a plug-and-play film curriculum that every class can access?

  • This is a lighter, more accessible companion to our original program—built for introductory learners and mixed-readiness classes. It uses mainstream, easy-to-stream films available on the big three platforms (Disney+ / Netflix / Amazon Prime Video) with strong subtitles for accessibility.
  • Audience: Grades 9–12 general ELA, newcomers, co-taught classes.
  • Content: School-friendly slate (mostly G–PG-13), with only two R-rated titles
  • Scope: 36 movie guides, one simple schedule (no alternates to juggle), streamlined comparative tasks.
  • Standards: Hits core CCSS strands while keeping cognitive load manageable.

Film as Literature & Cinematic Arts: a deep-dive, university-prep experience with canonical titles.

  • This is designed for college-level or highly skilled high school students who thrive on challenging texts and seminar-style analysis. It features more mature, gold-standard films widely recognized for film-study rigor.
  • Audience: Honors, AP bridge, dual-enrollment, advanced electives.
  • Content: Heavier themes and academic film language; titles chosen for canonical significance and depth.
  • Scope: 45 movie guides (vs. 36 in the other edition), with alternate schedules and assessments to support varied pacing and deeper comparative work.
  • Outcomes: Extended research, richer theory/application, and sustained argumentative writing—ideal for students aiming at college-level analysis.

How can I contact K12MovieGuides?

Feel free to email us anytime at [email protected]

 

Terms & Conditions of Use | Copyright | DMCA

You can:

Use this product for your own personal classroom forever

Ask your school or district to purchase this curriculum for you (or ask about school site and district wide licensing)

You cannot:

Upload this product anywhere that allows unsecured access to where other teachers use it freely

Send this product to other people including emailing, printing copies, or otherwise sharing digitally

Use this product for your personal commercial use

 

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Do I have to use all of the films included in each unit?

A: No, although it is recommended. When another film not included is more desirable for your students, it should be noted that teachers may need to prepare movie viewing questions and adjust any activities or assessments to reflect the content of the substituted film.

Q: Can Film Studies & Movie Analysis Curriculum be substituted to fulfill high school graduation requirements for an English Language Arts course?

A: Film Studies & Movie Analysis Curriculum was written with the purpose of supporting elective or enrichment selections at the high school level. Therefore, not all Common Core English Language Arts standards are explicitly introduced and spiraled as would be expected with a more traditional English course. However, K12Movieguides.com recommends working with your school or district if there is interest in using Film Studies & Movie Analysis Curriculum as a resource to supplement a core course. A Standards Alignment Guide has been provided in the “Get Started” materials for the entire year course for your reference and use.

Q: Can Film Studies & Movie Analysis Curriculum be used at the middle school level?

A: Yes. It is recommended that instructors consult with their site administrator or administrative team to determine the appropriateness of the themes and content included in each unit in relation to a middle school-age audience.

Q: What if my class can’t finish a film before the assessment window?

A: Use the guide’s pause-points to split the film across days and push any end-of-film essays by one class. For comparisons, allow clip-based evidence from previewed scenes only; do not require scenes students haven’t watched.

Q: Can I show clips instead of the full film?

A: Yes—especially for pacing or permissions. Choose clips that align with the existing question timestamps and keep the chronological flow. Document the clip start/stop times on the guide so students can cite accurately.

Q: How do I handle PG-13/R content and permissions?

A: Follow site policy. Provide a one-paragraph alternate task (same skills: theme/argument/craft) drawn from the same film’s trailer, stills, and script excerpts or from a school-approved alternate title for which you will need to create your own movie guide questions and alter the provided assessments.

Q: How do I support English Learners without diluting rigor?

A: Keep captions on; pre-teach 4–6 words; offer sentence starters (“One film-craft choice that strengthens the theme is…”) and allow oral responses recorded on a device for select prompts. Grade with the same rubric.

Q: What if different classes are using different streaming versions (ads, runtimes)?

A: Instruct students to cite scene description + approximate time (e.g., “Rumble under the highway, ~1:30”) so evidence stays verifiable even if timestamps drift.

Q: Can I swap film order inside a unit?

A: You can, but keep each unit’s Comparative Analysis pairings intact (Weeks 1–2 together; Weeks 3–4 together; Week 5 feeds the Summative). If you reorder, update pacing notes and any lead-in vocabulary.

Q: How should students use AI tools (if allowed by school policy)?

A: Permit AI for brainstorming or clarifying vocabulary only; prohibit AI-written evidence/analysis. Require in-class notes with timestamps to demonstrate original viewing-based thinking.

Q: How do I adapt for students with sensory sensitivities?

A: Offer volume-reduced seating, noise-reducing headphones (if allowed), or a transcript + stills alternative for intense scenes; grade the same skills with equivalent prompts.

Terms and Conditions © 2022 K12MovieGuides.com. All rights reserved. Purchase of this product allows the purchaser the right to reproduce the pages (digitally or in print) in limited quantities for the purchaser’s classroom only. Duplication or distribution for/to another individual, school, school district, private school, or any other business or education agency, or for commercial purposes, is strictly forbidden without written permission from the publisher, K12MovieGuides.com. Copying any part of this product and placing it on the Internet in any form (even a personal/classroom website) is strictly forbidden and is a violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). By posting this product freely on the internet, anyone can copy or download it and use it for free. Should a violation occur, the publisher will seek to enforce all rights available to it under the DMCA or other federal and state copyright laws.

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AlynReads
Houston, US
★★★★★ 4
Arthurian Fae Quest…say less.
Format: Kindle
A fae centered Arthurian tale unlike any I’ve read so far. The author did a great job at descriptive world building, with scenes easily playing out in my minds eye. There was plenty of action, suspense, and even a touch of horror. An enemies to lovers, slow burn romance, a quest, with plot twist and turns aplenty. There was a love triangle, which I’m not usually a fan of but, it played out well in this story line. The FMC, Morgan Pendragon, was so blatantly naïve, yet I typically expect as much in a ‘book one’ of a series, especially one that features a fairly sheltered princess. I was happy to read that in spite of this, she still showed a strong sense of morals, fire, and spine. Now our MMC? Kairos Draven, aka Void’s Edge. Oh, how I’m a sucker for a smoking’ hot grumpy warrior alpha with a witty mouth, and a strong sense of “touch her and die” attitude, so you know who held all my cards. That ending? Just made me swoon all the harder. Now add a battlecat that rivals the size of a horse…and well Ms. Briar Boleyn you have well and truly stolen my heart. I’m excited to see where the story goes from here, and follow along to see more of the characters growth. I went into this story fairly blind, and I think I enjoyed it all the more because of it. Once the story got going, it had me in an absolute chokehold and it was difficult to put down.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 12, 2024
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Ariel
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 3
Not a bad start
Format: Kindle
3 stars Thank you Netgalley and Briar Boleyn for the ARC! A camelot/king Arthur retelling with fae. I was hooked by the idea of this book immediately and was eager to jump into this world. • slow burn • enemies to lovers • who did this to you Morgan Pendragon watched her mother die by her father's hand when she was just eight years old, hiding under the bed. Morgan is believed to have the tainted blood of the fae in her veins and is cast aside so that her fathers illegitimate son, Arthur, can become the king. She's seen his cruel treatment of the fae firsthand, so when he sends her on a journey to find a fae weapon she seizes the opportunity to do more with her life. Along the way, she finds more than she could have imagined. I don't know a whole lot about King Arthur and Camelot but I had a lot of fun with this story! The plot has some similar tropes to popular romantasy books (From blood and ash) but there's enough originality here that it doesn't feel like I'm reading a copy. I liked how the fae were different in appearance than what is typical in most fantasy books I've read. In this book they have blue hair, violet skin and a wide range of other characteristics. I thought that the world building was easy to follow and I could easily immerse myself into this world. After reading the blurb I kept wondering when she was going to go on the journey to find Excalibur and it doesn't happen until around the 45% mark. The story is a bit slow at times but starts to pick up once they begin their journey to find Excalibur. The John Wick style Inn was a fun concept that I enjoyed reading about. There are a lot of similarities to this and FBAA and I would have liked to have it be a little more different, but I'm hoping book two will have the story turn into something of its own. Overall I enjoyed reading this story and I'm looking forward to reading book two especially after that ending.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 27, 2023
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Vikki Lynn
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 5
Unraveling Fate and Fae: A Captivating Journey in "Queen of Roses"
Format: Kindle
"Queen of Roses" by Briar Boleyn is a dark fantasy romance that masterfully combines elements of myth, magic, and romance with a captivating King Arthur retelling infused with a Fae twist. From its intricately woven plot to its compelling characters, this novel delivers an immersive reading experience that will leave readers eagerly anticipating the next installment. At its core, "Queen of Roses" is an enchanting tale of forbidden love and destiny, featuring an exceptionally slow-burn romance that ignites with the intensity of an enemies-to-lovers trope. Against a backdrop of magic and mythical creatures, the story unfolds with tension, banter, and forced proximity, drawing readers into a world filled with love, friendships, self-discovery, and betrayal. While the novel excels in world-building, character development, and plot intricacies, some readers may yearn for a bit more fire and spice in certain aspects of the narrative. However, the promise of future developments in the series offers hope for an even more dynamic and engaging story to come. I know I personally cannot wait to get into book 2. With a cliffhanger ending that leaves hearts racing and minds reeling, "Queen of Roses" succeeds in immersing readers from start to finish. Its dark and twisted fantasy elements are expertly balanced with moments of adventure, action, and unexpected twists, keeping readers on the edge of their seats until the very last page. As the story delves into complex themes and explores the depths of its characters' struggles and desires, it's important to note that "Queen of Roses" may contain triggering content. Readers are advised to check the trigger warnings before diving into this captivating tale. Overall, "Queen of Roses" is a must-read for fans of dark fantasy romance, offering a mesmerizing journey that will leave readers eagerly anticipating the next chapter in the series. With its lush prose, intricate storytelling, and unforgettable characters, this novel is sure to leave a lasting impression on all who venture into its enchanted world. I want to extend a heartfelt shoutout to the author for granting me the opportunity to dive into "Queen of Roses" through NetGalley. It has been an absolute pleasure to explore the captivating world and characters crafted with such skill and imagination. Thank you for entrusting me with this glimpse into your enchanting world.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 1, 2024
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Luna Fae
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 4
Right from the start, I was drawn in by the prologue!!!
Format: Paperback, Format: Paperback
Queen of Roses (Blood of a Fae #1) by Briar Boleyn Genre General Fiction ( Adult), Romance, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Dark Romance “More primordial than the stars. My name was on his lips as he promised unspeakable darkness to any who came between us.” Right from the start, I was drawn in by the prologue!!! I’m a big fan of “touch her, and you die” vibes, but I mean, what’s also not to love about a unique Arthurian retelling with gender twists, a treacherous royal court, a dangerous quest, magical Fae & mystical monsters, entwined with a bit of spice! Morgan, Princess of Pendrath and true heir to the throne has spent most of her life dimming her light to feel safe and to make others comfortable. She is treated as an outcast in the court and repressed by her family due to the blood of the Fae within her and forced to join the Temple of the Three as a priestess in training to one day replace Merlin. Her brother, King Arthur, who reminds me of Joffrey from Game of Thrones, later tells her that he has other plans and offers her a choice of the Temple or to marry her off for political gain, unless… that is, she can journey through the great unknown and return with a long-lost fae weapon with enchanted powers known as Excalibur. Her quest begins with a roguish crew that includes the mysterious, arrogant, and heart-tuggingly handsome Captain of the Royal Guard, Kairos Draven, whom she can’t decide if she wants to stab or indulge in pleasure with. Along the way are plenty of surprises, mystical creatures, and betrayal, all while Morgan uncovers more of the truth about herself and who she can trust. This book had intriguing storylines and lovable characters that kept me turning pages and wanting more. I can’t wait to see how it all unfolds and comes together in book 2, Court of Claws, which I just started reading!! Read if you’re into- Dark Fantasy/Romance Slow–Burn Question Everything Magic and Action Fae Arthurian Legend Stabby/Broken FFC Morally Gray MMC Forced Proximity Queen of Roses is perfect for Holly Black, Jennifer L. Armentrout, and Sarah J. Maas fans. Please check the trigger warnings page in the table of contents before reading this book.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 16, 2023
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Amanda Greathouse
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 3
3.5 stars, A little boring to say the least.
Format: Kindle
Wow so I'm not sure where to begin on this one. This was a very different take on the legend of Arthur and Excalibur. This is told from the point of view of Morgan the sister of Arthur. Honestly the first 50% of this book is world building and character building which unfortunately was super boring for me. Morgan to me was a female MC that had a hard time in believing in herself. Sometimes taking too long to understand exactly what was going on around her. Draven was also a different male MC, like I couldn't put my finger on him and what he was all about. It was not until the last 10% of the book did we get some answers on the mystery that is Draven. The other 50% of the book centered around this big journey with everyone having a different motive. We see a spark of magic around this time that had me excited but then we never expanded upon that and what it could mean for the female MC. I feel like I want to read the second book just to see where this goes, but the spice was probably a 2 out of 5. Side characters are ok, Lancelet was fun but I almost felt like I wanted more.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 13, 2023

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