Point of View
Irony
Plot
Literary Terms
Most Dangerous Game
100

This type of point of view uses "I, me, my" to indicate the story is narrated by one character

What is "first person point of view"?

100

This irony is synonymous with sarcasm

What is "verbal irony"?

100

The setting is compromised by two things

What is "time and place"?

100

The difference between the protagonist and the antagonist of a story.

What is "the protagonist is the lead character whereas the antagonist is the obstacle in the lead character's way"?

100

The protagonist of MDG is well-known for this

What is "big game hunting"?

200

A lot of movies and tv shows break the fourth wall and talk directly to the audience. In literature, this is considered a specific type of point of view

What is "second person point of view"?
200

Oftentimes, horror movies keep the audience so on their toes because they are aware before the characters on the screen are. This is a specific type of irony.

What is "dramatic irony"?

200

The height of the plotline

What is "the climax"?
200

Define a dynamic character (versus a static character).

What is "a dynamic character experiences change throughout the text whereas a static one does not"?
200

Rainsford survives the first night (of the game) in the jungle by mimicking this animal.

What is "a fox"? (Will also accept "a mouse")

300

In the short story, "Lamb to the Slaughter," the narrator uses this type of point of view

What is "third person limited point of view"?

300

Define this type of irony:

Derek Shepherd is a brain surgeon. He witnesses a car crash and helps save the passengers. As the ambulances leave with the injured, he is T-boned and taken to a hospital himself. The doctors skip a CT scan, and he dies of a brain bleed undetected and untreated. 

What is "situational irony"?

300

This moment in the plot-line introduces the characters, establishes the setting, and begins the conflict

What is "the exposition"?

300

The difference between mood and tone

What is "mood is the feeling created in the reader versus the tone is the writer's attitude towards the subject"?

300

Conflict: identify the type and explain how you know.

Man vs Man: General Zaroff versus Rainsford

400

Define third person omniscient point of view

What is "a narration in which the feelings and thoughts of all of the characters are understood"?

400

Identify a movie example of dramatic irony. Be specific to earn the points.

Answers may vary.(Horror movies, Mulan, Snow White, etc.)

400

In Beauty and the Beast, Belle and Adam live happily ever after.

What is "the resolution"?

400

Conflict is divided into internal versus external. Identify a type of external conflict and provide an example.

Person v Person, Person v Nature, Person v Supernatural, Person v Machine, Person v Society

(Examples may vary)

400
Identify one example of foreshadowing from MDG.

(Ship Trap Island and the crew's fears, the fact that he is a big game hunter who doesn't see value in the animals' fears, that Zaroff knows Rainsford is a big game hunter, Zaroff says that he has found a new animal to hunt)

500

Identify a movie or book for each of the following point of view: second person narration AND third person omniscient.

Second person: Deadpool, Fight Club, Ferris Bueller's Day Off

Third Person Omniscient: Desperate Housewives, The Princess Bride, The Chronicles of Narnia, The Avengers

500

Identify a Pixar / Disney movie that uses situational irony as part of its premise.

Answers may vary. (Ratatouille, Monsters Inc., Finding Nemo, Aladdin, etc.)

500

Pick a Disney / Pixar movie and identify the climax.

Answers may vary.

500

Identify the difference between direct and indirect characterization.

What is "direct characterization is when the writer explicitly tells about the character(s) versus indirect characterization is when the writer reveals information through thoughts, actions, relationships, and dialogue"?

500

Identify the theme

"Keep your friends close but your enemies closer" / "To understand someone, you must first walk in their shoes" / "All (human) life has value"