Monday, October 22, 2007

SYNOPSIS

This is a story about a girl’s journey in life. The girl is at a transitional moment of her life. It is the moment when we put away our childhood fantasies and fairy tale visions of the world to become an adult and face the brutality and violence of the real world. The girl is enacted by three main female characters, a child, an adolescent, and a grown up. These characters represent the different stages of life, as emphasized by the physical differences of each character’ body.
The story is constructed within two worlds: A Real world and a fantasy (fairytale) world, which start completely independent and parallel from each other. As the story progresses they start to intertwine and eventually lead to a single outcome.
This journey takes place inside a Fairy tale book. It does not contain more than superficial reference to any actual place, person or event. It takes place “once upon a time” rather than in actual time -As in most fairy tales.
The story will take place inside a fairytale book. The story starts with a little girl, holding a fairytale book and turning its pages. We then zoom into one of the pages where the story starts to unfold in the form of a growing displaced paint on the book page.
The story consists of tree major scenes, which will be marked by the turning of the fairy tale book page. The fairy is the element that leads action and that maintain the relationship between the three different scenes.
Also, worth to mention that, except from the first scene, the script relies on the poem for the succession of events.
o Beginning: Fairy tale world
The fairy emerges from the book page and leads us to the first environment of fairy tale .The visuals; at this level is mainly graphical and abstract, bright and colorful, reflecting a the one hand a dream like imagery, and on the other hand, the little girl’s fairy tale vision of the world.

o Middle: Day Scene
The Fairy, again, introduces us to this the second scene: desert environment where the actual walking journey starts. Real world imagery of new natural characters /elements (Serpents, lizards and scorpions…) are introduced, in addition to a silhouette of he girl walking across the scene.

o End: Night Scene
Another climactic change marks another turning point in the story. The environment changes into a night desert. The visual styles of fairy world and real world/ desert scenes come together. New elements are introduced, which will work with the girl to reach the knowledge she has been looking for.

This short supports some major themes:
o The Fairy Tale:
Although fairy tales are widely adapted for children literature, adults were originally the audience of the fairy tale. Older fairy tales are usually indicative of psychological conflicts and are useful to both children and adults as way of symbolically resolving issues.
o The Journey
The journey may look like an outward trek across dunes of sand in the harshest climatic conditions, but the actual movement is inward into the lands of the soul and the depths of our consciousness. It’s usually about how we can reason our way into discovering and then defining ourselves, and who we are within the circle of life.
The harshness and pains of the journey also represent the paths we must chose from in life, and the crossroads we must bear.
o The Desert
According to Sabine Bouvet, an independent writer who specializes in travel and gastronomy “Mankind’s place in the universe is never as clear as in the desert. Some people climb these immense stretches of sand in search of a place. Others come to nourish themselves with the wisdom of the Sahara… to travel in the Sahara is to make a spiritual journey in search of striking revelations. Whether a simple bare truth or a reflection of the surrounding landscapes”
As to the first time visitor, the desert offers some of the harshest and yet magically beautiful and awe inspiring landscapes on earth (from the crushing sun and heat of the day to the glorious splendor of the star-spangled night.) Which no doubt makes it a great parable for life. All the annoyances we may encounter from day walking, and expeditions in general provides such effective lessons in foresight, organization, endurance, patience, and objectivity, lessons that allow plenty of time to ponder- a rarity these days, at least under certain skies.


o The Light
The moonlight is the revelation, which is granted to man, and which is reflected in his heart after being received and consciously grasped by his reason (the radiant moon); For it is through reason alone that truth can find its way into the hearth of man.
For Saba Haider, in her article “Knowledge is enlightenment”, from New York Spirit Magazine, Enlightenment is a deeply personal realization of oneself, with an “S”, and who we are, fed by our experiences and then living and acting and behaving from there.

o The Tree
The tree is an allusion to the organic continuity of all revelation which, starting like a tree from one root or proposition and growing steadily throughout man’s spiritual history, branching out into a splendid variety of experiences, thus endlessly widening the range of his perception of truth. The association of this concept with the olive-tree was derived from this Quranic verse:
“God is the light of the heavens and the earth. The parable of his light is as it were that of a niche containing a lamp; the lamp is enclosed in glass, the glass shinning like a radiant star: a lamp lit from a blessed tree that is neither of the east nor of the west, the oil where of [is so bright that it] would well-nigh give light [of itself] even though fire had not touched it.”
The olive tree is considered a sacred tree and is characteristic of the lands in which most prophetic precursors of the Quranic message lived, namely, the lands to the east of the Mediterranean. But since all true revelations flows from the infinite being, it is “neither of the east nor of the west” and especially so a revelation that is universal in its goal and that its inner consistency, truth and wisdom ought to be self evident to any one who approaches it in the light of his reason and without prejudice.

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