- Long shot – Car arriving – Low angle
- Mid shot – Vincent – Low angle
- Mid shot – Eugene – Low angle
- Mid shot – Vincent calling eugene – Level angle
- Mid shot – Eugene – Low angle
- Mid shot – Vincent – Low angle
- Close up – Gerome – Low angle
- Mid shot – Vincent – Level angle
- Long Shot – Gerome stairs – Low angle
- Mid shot – eugene – Low angle
- long shot – eugene – HIgh angle
- Long shot car – low anlge
- Long shot – Eugene – high angle
- Long shot – Eugene – Birds eye view
- Two shot – Irene and Anton – level angle
- Close up – Nice french double cuff silk shirt with Hand – Level angle
- Cose up – Feet – Level
- Long shot – Car – Level angle on car through trees
- Long shot – Stairs – Level angle
- long shot – car – Level angle
- Close up – hand – Low angle
- Close up – Eugene climbing Stairs – Level angle point of view shot
- Long shot – Car – Level angle
- Long shot – Stairs –
- Long shot – Carpark –
- Long shot – Stairs –
- Close up – Eugenes eyes
- Two shot – Irene and Anton –
- Mid shot – Top of stairs –
- Two shot – Irene and Anton –
- Close up – speaker –
- Two shot – Irene anton –
- Close up – speaker –
- Two shot – irene and anton –
- long shot –
- Long shot
- Mid shot
- Long shot – Eugene, irene and anton
- Mid shot – Irene
- Mid shot – Eugene
- Close up – Anton
- Mid shot – Irene
- Long shot – Irene, Eugene, Anton
- Mid shot – Anton
- Two shot – Irene and Eugene
- Long shot – Anton
- Close up – Irene
- Close up – Anton
- Mid shot – Anton
- Mid shot – Arm
Speech on Pro Life Abortion
Mother Teresa once said, the greatest destroyer of peace is abortion because if a mother can kill her own child, what is left for me to kill you and you to kill me? There is nothing between.
Now I can imagine many, if not all of you, have already made a decision whether you are for or against abortion the second I mention the word, but lets just recap what it actually is. You have two options for an abortion. Surgical abortion is an action that surgically kills the fetus while it is living in the mother’s womb and different methods could be used depending on the babies age.
Chemical abortion is an action that chemically kills a baby before or after it implants in the mother’s womb.
I understand totally banning abortion makes some people uncomfortable, and everyone has their own reasons such as culture or religion, rape, incest or fetal abnormality, and situations such as these, abortion is portrayed as the best option and if a lie is told enough times, people begin to believe it. Lets take a look into a couple of these examples and explain why abortion is not an option.
Rape and incest are both criminal acts and in NZ, we punish the criminal. We never punish the victim, or the victims children and we are told that if a pregnancy results from either rape or incest the ‘compassionate’ response is to offer the traumatized woman an abortion because “no woman should be forced to carry, give birth to, and care for, that monsters child”, right? But why increase her trauma of rape with the additional trauma of abortion? Rape is an act of violence and cruelty inflicted on a woman, and she is completely innocent and has done absolutely nothing wrong, and her knowing this may allow her to come to terms with it and she may rebuild her life again. On the other hand, Abortion is an act of violence that a mother inflicts on her own child. The mother becomes the attacker, and her knowing this may upset her long after she has dealt with the rape. Women – including those who were victims of rape – have reported years of physical, emotional and psychological difficulty after aborting their child. So to sum up, Abortion did not solve their problems; it just created new ones.
Parents expecting a child are overwhelmed with joy and when they are informed that their baby has a birth defect or abnormality they can often view the diagnosis almost as if it were an actual death, not as a physical death, but a death of hopes and dreams, visions of a normal childhood, playing games, going to school, growing up and starting families of their own just disappear in an instant. The parents then may become vulnerable to the suggestion of aborting the child – simply terminating the pregnancy and getting on with their lives, because after all, no child should be born to someone who doesn’t want them, right? The first problem is that medical opinions can be just that – opinions. There are cases in which parents who let their children to live and found out at birth that the so called ‘experts’ were completely incorrect. Imagine this: You have aborted you’re child, only to see it had nothing ‘wrong’ with it. You have destroyed a perfect baby. It is against the nature of parents to hurt their own children, and abortion is doing exactly that. When abortion is used to solve the problem of a disability, it is discrimination of the most severe kind. Kids are not discriminated against for their disability but they are killed because of it. If it’s okay to kill a person with a disability in the womb, could it someday be allowed to kill a disabled baby? Or a disabled adult? I don’t know about you, but my answer is clearly and absolutely no so why is there any question when the victim is a child in the womb? Unborn children diagnosed with disabilities deserve to be treated with the same love, kindness and respect as born people, with or without a disability.
According to statistics NZ, 53% of abortions are made at 10 weeks. Now I would like you to imagine yourself as a woman – I know, boys, not something you do everyday – and imagine you have found out you are pregnant at ten weeks, when the baby has its vital organs – including a strong heart beat, kidneys, intestines, brain, and liver are in place and functioning. `If you could take a look inside you’d spot tiny details, like tiny nails forming on fingers and toes, and hair beginning to grow on the skin. Your baby’s limbs can bend now. His or her hands are flexed at the wrist and meet over his heart, and his feet may be long enough to meet in front of his body. What do you do? Feel free to turn back to you’re gender. From the year 1981-2017, 510, 078 decisions have already been made, but those are the only ones written down and recorded in New Zealand. I’m not even going to start on the numbers outside of New Zealand.
So i’ll say it again. Who would agree here that it’s wrong to kill a human being? But it’s okay to kill an innocent child. All these amazing things we do in our lives, go to school to get an education, make some friends. To love. To cry. To feel. To live. Just to do things we take for granted is all taken away so quickly just because of one selfish decision.
As Ed Sheeran said in his touching song ‘small bump’,
You were just a small bump unborn
Just four months then torn from life
Maybe you were needed up there
But we’re still unaware as why.
Now the real question is, is abortion a choice?
Thank you.
Guns in schools
How would you feel if one of your friends or family were shot while they were trying to get an education? Think about how much this would affect you, and possibly your community. If guns in school were allowed in schools there wouldn’t be as many deaths. School shootings wouldn’t be actually prevented but they could potentially be lowered. We could protect each other if something ever happened. There are so many shootings every day we don’t even know about because they have become so common, all around the world, in america, europe and one day it could possibly be us. So what are we waiting for?
William Shakespeare’s Macbeth- Act 5, Scene 1.
Characters in order of appearance:
Doctor
Gentlewoman
Lady Macbeth
Time: Night
Summary:
In the king’s palace at Dunsinane a doctor and a gentlewoman talk about Lady Macbeth’s strange habit of sleepwalking. Suddenly, Lady Macbeth enters in a trance with a candle in her hand. She’s talking about the murders of Lady Macduff and Banquo, her actions display blood on her hands and claims that nothing will ever wash it off. She leaves, and the doctor and gentlewoman talk about how she’s gone crazy.
Important Quote:
“Out, damned spot; out, I say… Yet who would have thought the old man to have had so much blood in him?”
William Shakespeare’s Macbeth- Act 4, Scene 3.
Characters in order of appearance:
Malcolm
Macduff
Doctor
Ross
Time: Unknown
Summary:
Outside King Edward’s palace, Malcolm is with Macduff, telling him that he doesn’t trust him since he has left his family in Scotland and may be secretly working for Macbeth. To see if Macduff is trustworthy, Malcolm rambles on about his own vices. He admits that he wonders whether he is fit to be king, since he claims to be lustful, greedy, and violent. At first, Macduff politely disagrees with his future king, but eventually Macduff cannot keep himself from crying out, “O Scotland, Scotland!” Macduff’s loyalty to Scotland leads him to agree that Malcolm is not fit to govern Scotland and perhaps not even to live. In giving voice to his disparagement, Macduff has passed Malcolm’s ‘test of loyalty’. Malcolm then retracts the lies he has put forth about his supposed shortcomings and embraces Macduff as an ally. Ross enters and says he just came from Scotland, and tells Macduff that his wife and children are okay he says Malcolm should come back, listing the bad things that have happened ever since Macbeth has been king. Malcolm says that he will return with ten thousand soldiers lent him by the English king. Then, breaking down, Ross confesses to Macduff that Macbeth has murdered his wife and children. Macduff is crushed and Malcolm tells him to turn his grief to anger, and Macduff assures him that he will inflict revenge upon Macbeth.
William Shakespeare’s Macbeth- Act 4, Scene 2.
Characters in order of appearance:
Lady Macduff
Ross
Son
Messenger
First Murderer
Time: Morning
Summary:
At Fife in Macduff’s castle, Lady Macduff is lamenting to Ross that her husband has run away which kinda makes him look suspicious but Ross says he had his reasons. Lady Macduff then has a funny bit of banter with her young son about how his father is dead. He doesn’t believe her, and they go on to discuss whether or not she should buy a new husband at the market as well as what happens to traitors. The conversation comes to an abrupt end when a messenger enters advising her to flee with her children. Since she’s innocent, she sees no reason to leave. Then again, she thinks, this is Earth, where sometimes people are praised for doing evil things and punished for doing good things. So being innocent may not be a good reason to stay put. Unfortunately, in the time it takes her to figure this out, the murderers have arrived. One of the murderers says they’re looking for Macduff, who is a traitor. Macduff’s son retorts are stabbed and then dies, leaving the murderers to kill Lady Macduff.
William Shakespeare’s Macbeth- Act 4, Scene 1.
Characters in order of appearance:
First Witch
Second Witch
Third Witch
Hecate
Macbeth
Time: Night
Summary:
On a dark and stormy night, the three witches are together in a cave chanting spells around a boiling cauldron, they put in all sorts of nasty stuff, from lizard’s leg to the finger of a stillborn baby. Hecate enters, pleased with the witches’ more serious approach this time around. After Hecate exits, the Second With announces “something wicked this way comes.” Not surprisingly, Macbeth comes. He says he has some more questions about his future and he wants some answers from the weird sisters, now. The witches add some more ingredients to the cauldron, and then apparitions begin to appear, each addressing Macbeth. First, an armed head warns him to beware of Macduff. The second apparition is a bloody child who says that Macbeth won’t be harmed by anyone who was “of woman born.” (Everyone) Including Macduff. So really Macbeth figures he has nothing to fear. He welcomes this good but figures he might as well have Macduff killed anyway—you know, just to be sure. The third apparition is a child wearing a crown and holding a tree in his hand. The child promises that Macbeth won’t be conquered until Birnam Wood marches to Dunsinane. This seems about as unlikely as Macduff not being born of a woman. Given all of this, Macbeth feels safe that he won’t be conquered in the upcoming war. But again, to be on the safe side, he still asks if Banquo’s children will ever rule the kingdom. He is warned to ask no more questions. He demands to be answered anyway. Macbeth is not pleased when he’s shown a line of eight kings, the last of which holds a mirror that reflects on many more such kings. One of the kings in the mirror happens to be holding two orbs. (King James I of England / King James VI of Scotland traced his lineage back to Banquo and, at his coronation ceremony in England 1603 James held two orbs one representing England and one representing Scotland. ) Quite a coincidence, don’t you think? The apparitions disappear and the witches tease Macbeth for looking horrible when he saw his future destruction. The witches do another song and dance routine and they vanish. Enter Lennox to find a perplexed Macbeth. Lennox tells Macbeth the news that Macduff has definitely run away to England, presumably to get some help for a rebellion. NOTE: Macbeth says that from now on, he’s going to act immediately on whatever thought enters his mind: “From this moment / The very firstlings of my heart shall be / The firstlings of my hand.” In other words, no more thinking and contemplating about the pros and cons of being bad – he’s just going to do whatever the heck he feels like doing. Starting with… wiping out Macduff’s entire family, especially his kids, since Macbeth doesn’t ever want to see any little Macduffs running around.
Important quote:
“From this moment / The very firstlings of my heart shall be / The firstlings of my hand.”
William Shakespeare’s Macbeth- Act 3, Scene 6.
Characters in order of appearance:
Lennox
A Lord
Time: Unknown
Summary: While all the other things are happening, elsewhere in Scotland the nobleman Lennox discusses Scotland’s plight with another lord. Isn’t it weird that Duncan was murdered, that his run-away sons were blamed, that Banquo has now been murdered, that his runaway son (Fleance) is being blamed, and that everyone has a major case of déjà vu? Plus, the murders of Banquo and Duncan were too conveniently grieved by Macbeth, who had the most to gain from the deaths. Lennox refers to Macbeth as a “tyrant,” and then asks the other Lord if he knows where Macduff has gone off to. Turns out Macduff has joined Malcolm in England. Malcolm and Macduff are doing a pretty good job of convincing the oh-so-gracious and “pious” King Edward of England, along with some English noblemen, to help them in the fight against Macbeth, the tyrant. The two noblemen pray that Malcolm and Macduff might be successful and restore some order to the kingdom, even though news of the planned rebellion has reached Macbeth and he’s preparing for war. Sorry to say, it’s not looking too good for Macbeth at this point.
William Shakespeare’s Macbeth- Act 3, Scene 5.
Characters in order of appearance:
First Witch
Hecate
Time: Unknown
Summary:
The witches again meet at an open place, this time with Hecate, the goddess of witches, who sounds angry. Hecate lays into the weird sisters in a lengthy, rhyming soliloquy. She’s super irritated that they were meddling in the affairs of Macbeth without consulting her first, as she would’ve done a better job. She points out that Macbeth isn’t devoted to them but only to himself. But, fine, Hecate will clean up this mess. She tells them to all meet in the morning when Macbeth will come to know his destiny, whatever that means. Then there’s a witch song and dance and they leave.
William Shakespeare’s Macbeth- Act 3, Scene 4.
Characters in order of appearance:
Macbeth
Lords
Lady Macbeth
First Murderer
Lennox
Ross
Time: Night
Summary:
At the dinner party, the couple welcomes their guests. When the first murderer enters as everyone is being seated, Macbeth quickly goes to see him, and the murderer says he has killed Banquo but Fleance has escaped. Macbeth re-enters the room, then, Banquo’s ghost shows up but because the ghost is silent, he gets to creep around before anyone notices. While the guests are busy having a good time, Macbeth raises a toast and calls special attention to Banquo’s absence. He hopes Banquo is just running late or being rude and that nothing bad has happened to him, this is quite ironic as Banquo’s ghost is in the room. Again Macbeth is invited to sit on the spot where Banquo’s ghost is sitting. Macbeth goes into a hysterical fit, and the lords all take notice. Lady Macbeth excuses her husband for these “momentary” fits he has had since childhood. She urges them to keep eating, and then corners Macbeth, who is still hysterical. Lady Macbeth asks if Macbeth is a man because he’s not acting like one so much as he is acting like a sissy. She tells him to get it together—there’s nothing but a stool in front of him. This “ghost” business is all in his head. Meanwhile, Macbeth is discoursing with the ghost that only he sees, and then it disappears. He swears to Lady Macbeth that the ghost was there, and then laments that it used to be that when you dashed a man’s brains out he would die. Everything is just getting back to normal when the ghost reappears. Again Macbeth calls out a toast to the missing Banquo (he’s just asking for it now). When he sees that the ghost has returned, Macbeth screams at him for being so spooky. He says if Banquo were to appear in any physical form—even a Russian bear—Macbeth would take him on, no problem. The ghost leaves again and Macbeth tells everyone to stay put. Lady Macbeth lets him know that he’s killed the mood. It’s pretty clear the party’s over. Macbeth tries to recover, and he even questions everyone else asking how they can be so calm in the face of such horrible sights. Um…what sights? they want to know. Lady Macbeth tells the concerned lords to leave immediately. Pronto. NOW. After they exit, Macbeth philosophizes that blood will have blood. In other words, this ain’t over yet. Morning is now approaching, and Macbeth points out that Macduff never showed at the party. He lets out that he has had a spy in Macduff’s house. He promises to go to the witches the next day and says that he’s so far into this bloody business that there’s no turning back now. Lady Macbeth suggests that maybe he just needs a good night’s sleep, and so they go off to bed.