Lessons from the Screenplay | How Coraline Borrows from Ancient Forms of Storytelling @LessonsfromtheScreenplay | Uploaded October 2020 | Updated October 2024, 1 week ago.
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Coraline borrows elements from some of the most ancient forms of storytelling itself. In this video, we examine how Coraline uses an underlying fairy tale structure to shape the protagonist’s journey, dissect how the film also incorporates grotesque imagery and classic ghost story elements, and discover how utilizing all these ancient forms lends power to the story by reinforcing one of its central themes.
Video Produced by: Michael Tucker (twitter.com/michaeltuckerla)
Written by:
- Tricia Aurand (twitter.com/TriciaJeanA)
- Brian Bitner (twitter.com/BrianBitner)
- Alex Calleros (twitter.com/alex_calleros)
- Michael Tucker
Edited by: Alex Calleros
References:
[1] focusfeatures.com/article/henry_selick_in_conversation
[2] cinemablend.com/new/Exclusive-Interview-Coraline-Director-Henry-Selick-11864.html
[3] https://scholarship.rollins.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1083&context=mls
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Check out my kit, from screenwriting books to gear: kit.co/LFTS/screenwriting-books
LFTS Recommended Reading List: lessonsfromthescreenplay.com/reading-list
Thanks to Diego Rojas for composing original music for this video. Check out more of his work: soundcloud.com/diegorojasguitar
TwinSmart's Marxist Arrow is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Artist: twinmusicom.org
With the company Twin musicom licensed under the Creative Commons license Attribution (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Artist: twinmusicom.org
Imagery supplied by Getty Images.
Sign up for CuriosityStream and get Nebula for free: curiositystream.com/LFTS
Listen to our podcast on Coraline: apple.co/34rCWm5
Support this channel at: patreon.com/LFTScreenplay
Like LFTS on Facebook: facebook.com/lessonsfromthescreenplay
Follow me at: twitter.com/michaeltuckerla
LFTS Merch: standard.tv/collections/lfts
Coraline borrows elements from some of the most ancient forms of storytelling itself. In this video, we examine how Coraline uses an underlying fairy tale structure to shape the protagonist’s journey, dissect how the film also incorporates grotesque imagery and classic ghost story elements, and discover how utilizing all these ancient forms lends power to the story by reinforcing one of its central themes.
Video Produced by: Michael Tucker (twitter.com/michaeltuckerla)
Written by:
- Tricia Aurand (twitter.com/TriciaJeanA)
- Brian Bitner (twitter.com/BrianBitner)
- Alex Calleros (twitter.com/alex_calleros)
- Michael Tucker
Edited by: Alex Calleros
References:
[1] focusfeatures.com/article/henry_selick_in_conversation
[2] cinemablend.com/new/Exclusive-Interview-Coraline-Director-Henry-Selick-11864.html
[3] https://scholarship.rollins.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1083&context=mls
Become a channel member here on YouTube: youtube.com/channel/UCErSSa3CaP_GJxmFpdjG9Jw/join
Check out my kit, from screenwriting books to gear: kit.co/LFTS/screenwriting-books
LFTS Recommended Reading List: lessonsfromthescreenplay.com/reading-list
Thanks to Diego Rojas for composing original music for this video. Check out more of his work: soundcloud.com/diegorojasguitar
TwinSmart's Marxist Arrow is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Artist: twinmusicom.org
With the company Twin musicom licensed under the Creative Commons license Attribution (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Artist: twinmusicom.org
Imagery supplied by Getty Images.