Niko

"I have no special talent. I am only passionately curious" - Albert Einstein

Category: Humanities

Overruled! SGD#16

The short film is called ‘Overruled!’ SDG#16

 

As The Old World Crumbles: French Revolution Journal

This is the journal that I, Louis Chanel, have kept over the years of the French revolution. The decade where I have lost many people, and bits and pieces of my sanity. Through monarchies and republics, through life and through death, what I have experienced from the year 1789 to 1799 is present in these pages.

We had started this whole revolution with a monarchy ruled by a reckless spender, we ended this revolution with a republic. Though much has changed, things are still mainly the same. The poor is still poor, the rich are still rich, and those who are dead, will be lost forever. Life is better now than it was at the beginning of this revolution but I feel that I have lost too much for these changes to be worth it. If things were different than maybe I wouldn’t mind, but now I feel as though the only way I can be truly content is if I am reunited with those i’ve lost through death.

A translation for the non french speakers:

French- A vaincre sans peril,  a triomphe sans gloire.

English- to conquer without danger is to triumph without glory.

 

Tués les Rois (Killing Kings)

The French revolution will always be remembered throughout France and all of Europe, going down in History books all over the world. It was a bloody path, paved by guillotines and murder, from a corrupt monarchy to a republic. Starting in 1789, in Paris France, and extending all the way to 1799, the French revolution would be responsible for tens of thousands of deaths across France, some by guillotine, others by cannon fire. Starting with a dictator and ending with a dictator, it makes people wonder, was the French revolution worth it for the French or was it just a bloodbath from the lower class in order to get power? Find out for yourself by watching our video titles “The French Revolution in Plain English”

Credits:

Intro: voiced by johnson

Estates General and Paris commune: Wontaek

DoRoMac and Constitution of 1791: Alicia

1791-1793 (Kings execution): Done by Isabella Voiced by Niko

Reign of Terror: Done by Niko Voiced by Isabella

Napoleon: Johnson

Outro: Voiced by Niko

Editing done by Johnson.

Hand Drawn pieces: Drawn by Niko and Alicia

Important peoples faces: found on google

Artwork used in Wontaeks and Johnsons part: created by AI.

A Slaughter

 

This found poem shows the main conflict of the story Lamb to The Slaughter by Roald Dahl. In the poem, the name of the killer isn’t given, but in the original story her name is Mary Maloney, who is the wife of the man she killed. She is the protagonist of this story, and she is also the antagonist. The main conflict of the story is Mary killing her husband and trying to get away with it. The main type of conflict is person v person as she has killed her husband and actively trying to fool the police. The poem leans into Mary’s plan a little bit more, and how she got away with the murder. “Down the steps, the deep freeze, a leg of lamb.” shows our protagonist (Mary) going down to the deep freeze and getting a leg of lamb. While the lamb was supposed to be for dinner, she hit her husband over the head with it and killed him, after he asked for a divorce. “The violence, the noise, the small table” shows how Mary isn’t one to be this violent, and this act of violence disturbed herself as well as the peaceful atmosphere. “She went to the phone, the number of the police, she sobbed” in the original story, she goes to the store for an alibi, and then calls the police to prevent any suspicion of her being the killer. “she sobbed” shows how she is sorry for what she’s done, and regrets it a bit. ” she said you must be hungry, eat up the lamb thats in the oven.” Mary feeds the lamb to the police to get rid of her murder weapon, and it shows that she is has come to terms that she is the murderer, and tries to get away with no charges against her. “she began to giggle” this last line of the poem represents how Mary has come to terms with her husband and how she’s proud of getting rid of any suspicion that the police might have had on her.

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