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Film Studies & Movie Analysis Elective Curriculum for High School | Semester 1 | SAVE 20%

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Description

Film Studies & Movie Analysis Elective Curriculum for High School | Semester 1 | SAVE 20%This Film Studies & Movie Analysis Elective Curriculum Semester 1 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 1 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.)

Will this meet my needs?

Check out the full description below and if that isn’t enough get a 100% free course preview here!

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Semester 1 Outline:

Unit 1 — Dystopia & Environment + Loglines (Extension)

  • WALL·E (G – 2008) — Visual storytelling of dystopia; environmental motifs; how convenience and tech design shape human agency. Students analyze symbols (trash, greenery, the “plant”), cause and effect chains, and tone without heavy dialogue.
  • The Social Dilemma (PG-13 – 2020) — Design ethics and persuasive algorithms; attention economies; personal tech habits. Students test a 48-hour design/policy tweak and reflect on outcomes with evidence.
  • Before the Flood (PG – 2016) — Global climate drivers (energy, land use/deforestation, food systems) and policy levers. Students map a four-step cause and effect pathway and compare emphasis with other films.
  • David Attenborough: A Life on Our Planet (PG – 2020) — Witness narrative + solutions (rewilding, renewables, sustainable practices); students draft a simple systems map connecting tech choices to environmental impacts.

Unit 2 — The Underdog

  • Rudy (PG – 1993) — Grit, gatekeeping, and community support; students evaluate how constraints and allies shape an underdog’s path.
  • Greater (PG – 2016) — Work ethic vs. talent; mindset under loss and doubt; students trace decisions to outcomes with scene evidence.
  • Edward Scissorhands (PG-13 – 1990) — Identity, otherness, and belonging; reading tone, symbolism, and satire as they relate to “underdog” status.
  • The Karate Kid (PG – 1984) — Mentorship, discipline, and ethical competition; students analyze how training sequences develop character theme.
  • The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind (PG – 2019) — Ingenuity, resource scarcity, and community problem-solving; students connect obstacles → strategy → impact.

Unit 3 — Blockbusters (Oldies) + Three Acts & Plot Points (Extension)

  • Toy Story (G – 1995) — Jealousy, identity, and teamwork. Students track how rivalry becomes partnership and map act turns across the toy-room, gas station, and Sid’s house set pieces.
  • The Princess Bride (PG – 1987) — Genre satire and clear archetypes. Students examine how wit, duel scenes, and constant reversals reveal character goals and theme.
  • Jurassic Park (PG-13 – 1993) — Technology, control, and chaos. Students evaluate how suspense and spectacle support theme and broad four-quadrant appeal.
  • Aladdin (G – 1992) — Agency, honesty, and power. Students analyze how musical numbers deliver exposition, advance character arcs, and drive the major plot points.
  • Home Alone (PG – 1990) — Initiative and problem-solving. Students study comedic escalation, planning sequences, and payoff timing in the third act.

Unit 4 — Blockbusters (Modern) + Three Acts & Plot Points (Extension)

  • National Treasure (PG – 2004) — Research puzzles and civic myth. Students analyze heist beats, clue chains, and the ethics behind mission choices.
  • Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse (PG – 2023) — Identity, belonging, and the tension between fate and choice. Students explore “canon events,” visual storytelling, and an intentional cliffhanger structure.
  • Avatar (PG-13 – 2009) — Colonialism, empathy, and ecological ethics. Students trace hero’s-journey beats and study world-building as the audience hook.
  • Black Panther (PG-13 – 2018) — Leadership, legacy, and reform. Students analyze the antagonist’s argument, compare leadership styles, and consider how culture and production design sharpen theme.

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:
  • Loglines & Student Presentations — Students learn to compress a full story into a crisp 1–2 sentence pitch that names the protagonist, antagonist, setting, rising action, problem, and resolution. They reverse-engineer real examples (e.g., Jurassic Park, Home Alone), compare strong vs. weak versions (fixing missing elements in an Aladdin logline), and build reusable templates.
  • Three Acts & Plot Points & Student Presentations — Students diagram classic 3-Act structure (Hook, Plot Point 1, Midpoint, Plot Point 2/Epiphany, Climax, Aftermath), locate those beats in specific scenes, and use the model to compare “Oldies” and “Modern” blockbusters in short presentations and comparative writing.
  • Assessments for each unit: Two Comparative Analyses and a Summative Assessment task:
  • Unit 1 - Dystopia & Environment | Summative Preview: Students synthesize design choices and environmental drivers from the unit’s films, then present a short, evidence-based proposal that connects human agency, everyday habits, and near-future outcomes (with a simple systems view).
  • Unit 2 - The Underdog | Summative Preview: Students define and defend what makes an underdog and a hero, then connect film ideas to real life through a brief community interview and reflection on obstacles, support, and impact.
  • Unit 3 — Blockbusters (Oldies) + Three Acts & Plot Points | Summative Preview: Students evaluate how heroes and villains read across generations, argue which are most relatable today, and support a ranked list; or conduct a structured interview with an older adult and synthesize insights about how audience relatability shifts over time.
  • Unit 4 — Blockbusters (Modern) + Three Acts & Plot Points | Summative Preview: Students design a concise “global appeal” organizer that identifies elements modern blockbusters need for U.S. and international audiences, then chart several films against it with brief justifications

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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Computer
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 4
Easy to assemble, does the job, material is shiny nylon and shows creases, minor defects, sloppy
Size: 3 Panel 12FT W, Size: 3 Panel 12FT W
The Siebwin room divider is a good idea, and for the price, it mostly delivers on the intended functionality. I ordered the 12 foot, 3-panel version mainly to hide an unfinished basement storage area that had become an eyesore. It works well for that purpose and gives the space a cleaner appearance without spending the kind of money that more decorative dividers or custom partitions cost. If you need something temporary, portable, or mainly functional, this is a viable option. There are a few limitations that became obvious during setup and use. The first thing I noticed was that the weld quality on some of the metal poles is fairly sloppy. Once the cover is installed, you do not really see it, but up close, it does not look especially refined or professional. The blackout material also is not a matte canvas style fabric as I expected. It has more of a shiny nylon appearance, and the creases are fairly visible. Being that it’s more of a nylon, I’d be hesitant to try steaming it to remove the creases. However, the creases do not matter if you are using it in a basement, dorm, or shared room, but for photography, video work, or a professional office setting, the appearance could be disappointing. The fabric is thick enough, though. It blocks visibility well enough, but strong light behind it still shows through to some extent, nothing deal-breaking. Also, my fabric appeared to be slightly defective. The hook and loop strip on one of the bottom sections was off-center and couldn't be totally attached because it was lined up with one of the legs. I originally hoped to use this as a video backdrop, but I will probably end up replacing the fabric with a proper green screen or canvas material while continuing to use the frame itself. For now, it does a good job of covering my basement junk. Assembly was actually easier than I expected and took roughly 15 to 20 minutes. The longer vertical poles are tethered together similarly to tent poles, which made setup straightforward and fairly intuitive. The shorter horizontal pieces slide and snap together to the top and bottom of the vertical assembly. After each section is assembled, the divider panels connect together with metal plates and two knurled screws (at the top and bottom), so no tools are really required. A few screws were difficult to start because paint had gotten into the threads, but once they caught, they tightened down normally. The feet install with similar knurled fasteners and help keep the divider reasonably stable. One thing to watch for during setup is the fabric orientation. There is one arrow indicator in the middle of the fabric to indicate up. However, if you need another indicator, the smaller hook and loop strip goes on the bottom while the longer strip goes on top. I realized mine was upside down right before finishing and had to redo it. I wasn't difficult to redo, despite the defect in mine. The overall design is practical and easy to move around. I do like that the panels can fold and bend into different shapes depending on the space. The widened feet help stability, although when trying to stretch the fabric tight, I noticed the poles sometimes wanted to overlap slightly at the joints. Tightening everything helped somewhat, but it still happened occasionally. The divider feels adequate for normal indoor use, though I would not expect premium durability or luxury-level fit and finish at this price point. The entire device can also be easily disabled and stored in a tote if you need it completely out of the way. It comes with assembly instructions, but even if you didn’t have them, it’s easy to build without them (save a mistake or two). In terms of value, I think the Siebwin divider mostly matches its price. Around $100 gets you a large freestanding partition with decent usability and easy assembly, but there are compromises in materials, appearance, and refinement. The defects are also off-putting, but hopefully you won't have them. Higher-end room dividers can easily cost two or three times more, so some of the tradeoffs are expected. I also noticed cheaper alternatives online, but based on the quality here, I suspect those would probably have even more issues. For practical home use, temporary privacy, hiding storage areas, or separating shared spaces, this is a good option as long as expectations stay realistic.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 18, 2026
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Trendy Tales
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 3
Works well but takes up more space than expected
Size: 2 Panel 8FT W, Size: 2 Panel 8FT W
This room divider does the job for creating a little extra privacy and was easy enough to set up. The panels feel decent quality and the wider feet help keep it more stable than some cheaper screens I’ve tried. My only issue is that it takes up a bit more room than I expected, especially with the feet sticking out. It’s still portable and folds away nicely, but definitely measure your space first. Overall it works well for separating a room or blocking off an area temporarily. i wish it came in other colors
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Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2026
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Katrina Rhodes
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 5
Nice divider, serves it's purpose well!
Size: 3 Panel 12FT W
This room divider worked out very well for what I needed. I wanted a simple way to create a little more privacy and separation in a larger room without doing anything permanent, and this divider was an easy solution. The panels provide good coverage, and the black color gives it a clean, modern appearance that blends in nicely with different décor styles. Assembly was fairly straightforward, and once set up, the wider feet helped keep the divider stable on the floor. I was especially happy with how flexible the panels are to arrange. You can keep it mostly straight, angle it around furniture, or create a more enclosed private space depending on the layout you need. The material allows light to filter through slightly while still offering a noticeable sense of privacy. I’ve used it for separating a workspace area, but it would also work well in bedrooms, apartments, dorms, studios, or shared living spaces. Another plus is that it can be folded and moved without too much effort when you want to change the setup. Overall, this divider delivers a good balance of functionality, portability, and appearance. It’s a practical option for anyone needing temporary room separation without installing permanent walls or curtains.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2026
J
Jamie K.
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 5
Perfect for Adding Privacy to a Piano Studio
Size: 2 Panel 8FT W, Size: 2 Panel 8FT W
I Ordered the 2 Panel version which is way too big for my needs... that's on me. So keep in mind that the picture shows a fabric made for two panels only being used on one and hence it is not pulled tight; it would pull tight and not be so wrinkly if it was set up properly as two panels. The metal pools that make up the panels seem to be well made, stable, and of good quality. They were very easy to put together and they stand up tall with plenty of height. The appearance of it with the fabric on it isn't as elegant as it could be, but it still looks good enough. The material is plenty solid, not allowing light through it, and thereby making a solid barrier. I am using it to block the view out the studio door when a student is sitting at the piano to avoid distractions from the hallway. It will allow a student to enter the studio with our distracting the student who is at the piano.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 18, 2026
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Just Me
Boise, US
★★★★★ 5
Room Divider That Gives Instant “This Is a Separate Space Now” Energy
Size: 3 Panel 12FT W
The Siebwin 3 Panel Folding Privacy Screen is surprisingly effective at changing the feel of a room without requiring construction, commitment, or somebody yelling about load bearing walls. The 12 foot width gives a substantial amount of coverage, making it useful for creating privacy, dividing open areas, blocking visual clutter, or setting up temporary sections within larger rooms. This saved us a ton of time and money in our new studio and enabled us to create a kitchen and office in one room. The wider feet make a huge difference because flimsy room dividers that collapse every time someone exhales too aggressively are deeply annoying. This one feels more stable and grounded once positioned. The folding design makes it easy to move around or adjust depending on the space, and it folds down relatively compactly when not in use. It is basically the introvert curtain wall of dreams. The material has a clean, neutral look that blends well into different room styles without screaming “temporary office cubicle panic.” It works well for apartments, studios, shared spaces, dressing areas, or simply hiding the mountain of chaos you swear you are going to organize tomorrow. Practical, portable, and refreshingly easy to use without turning setup into a three hour emotional event.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 16, 2026

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