News English.com Ready-to-use ESL/EFL Lessons

Similar documents
Google delays book scanning

BBC to put programs online

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons Harry Potter star in new naked role

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons

BBC to put programs online

The 50 must-see children s films

New Zealand s election terror scare

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons

Susan Boyle to star in Japanese show

Japan speed-eater triumphs again

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons

New Zealand s election terror scare

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL/EFL Lessons by Sean Banville

Drug giant Merck loses negligence case

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons Harry Potter star in new naked role

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons Disgraced Korean stem cell hero quits

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL/EFL Lessons by Sean Banville

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL/EFL Lessons by Sean Banville Chinese writer to have Shakespeare s face

Japan speed-eater triumphs again

Top store fires Santa for telling a joke

Chocolate bars poisoned in Australia

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons Burma cyclone death toll may reach 80,000

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons Diana s last hours seen by London court

News English.com Ready-to-Use English Lessons by Sean Banville Level 6 Director for new Batman movie coming soon

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons

LISTEN A MINUTE.com. Theatre. Focus on new words, grammar and pronunciation in this short text.

PEOPLE LESSONS.com JAY CHOU

Man angry at English on Japanese TV

News English.com Ready-to-Use English Lessons by Sean Banville Level 3 Bulgarian radio can play modern music again

PEOPLE LESSONS.com

News English.com Ready-to-Use English Lessons by Sean Banville Level 6 Duchess of Cambridge on Vogue cover

LISTEN A MINUTE.com. Poetry. Focus on new words, grammar and pronunciation in this short text.

WORLD BOOK AND COPYRIGHT DAY

WORLD THEATRE DAY.

LISTEN A MINUTE.com. Words. Focus on new words, grammar and pronunciation in this short text.

LISTEN A MINUTE.com. Musical Instruments.

LISTEN A MINUTE.com. Stereotypes. Focus on new words, grammar and pronunciation in this short text.

LISTEN A MINUTE.com. Television. Focus on new words, grammar and pronunciation in this short text.

NEWS ENGLISH LESSONS.com

News English.com Ready-to-Use English Lessons by Sean Banville Level 3 Britney Spears' music scares off pirates

LISTEN A MINUTE.com. Humour. One minute a day is all you need to improve your listening skills.

Breaking News English.com Ready-to-Use English Lessons by Sean Banville

TALKING ABOUT MOVIES, -ED / -ING ADJECTIVES, EXTREME ADJECTIVES

News English.com Ready-to-Use English Lessons by Sean Banville

Daniel Day-Lewis wins record third Oscar

PEOPLE LESSONS.com YUJA WANG

Breaking News English.com Ready-to-Use English Lessons by Sean Banville

News English.com Ready-to-use English Lessons by Sean Banville Earliest recordings of family Christmas found

PEOPLE LESSONS.com

News English.com Ready-to-Use English Lessons by Sean Banville Level 6 Paris halts filming of action movies after terror attacks

LISTEN A MINUTE.com. Noise. Focus on new words, grammar and pronunciation in this short text.

NATIONAL PUNCTUATION DAY

NEWS ENGLISH LESSONS.com

LISTEN A MINUTE.com. Gossip. One minute a day is all you need to improve your listening skills.

OPPOSITE DAY.

BEATLES DAY.

WORLD MUSIC DAY.

Breaking News English.com Ready-to-Use English Lessons by Sean Banville

Exploding toad mystery (Mon 25 Apr, 2005)

News English.com Ready-to-Use English Lessons by Sean Banville Level 6 UK's Prince Harry vows to make a difference

Beginner-Elementary. Ask two classmates the questions below. Write their answers in the spaces.

News English.com Ready-to-Use English Lessons by Sean Banville

Crime and Punishment. Before you read Work with a partner. Have you read a newspaper today? What was the headline?

Breaking News English.com Ready-to-Use English Lessons by Sean Banville

U.S. Theatrical Market: 2005 Statistics. MPA Worldwide Market Research & Analysis

News English.com Ready-to-Use English Lessons by Sean Banville

DARWIN DAY.

PEOPLE LESSONS.com

Breaking News English.com Ready-to-Use English Lessons by Sean Banville

PEOPLE LESSONS.com ANNA

Lesson 51: Music (20-25 minutes)

WORLD.

SURVEYS FOR REFLECTIVE PRACTICE

Let s Be Friends. I have difficulty remembering people s names. I usually wait for others to introduce themselves to me first.

News English.com Ready-to-Use English Lessons by Sean Banville

JAZZ DAY.

Moviegoing in the Digital Age Margaret Wilhelm Director, Digital Insights & Analytics NBCUniversal

Breaking News English.com Ready-to-Use English Lessons by Sean Banville

BUSINESS ENGLISH MATERIALS.com

Cowspiracy NEW INTERNATIONALIST EASIER ENGLISH INTERMEDIATE READY LESSON

SUMMER READING with ANDREW CLEMENTS

Lesson 16: Giving Invitation/Request/Offer (20-25 minutes)


Story of Hollywood. Relative clause Lesson 2

Lesson 50: Theater (20-25 minutes)

Pearson. Classmates. Vocabulary. I know that! In this unit. I can talk about school.

NEWS ENGLISH LESSONS.com

The infinitive of purpose. LEVEL NUMBER LANGUAGE Beginner A2_2037G_EN English

The infinitive of purpose

Lessons On Movies.com

Movies Vocabulary and Self-Study Discussion

The Cinema. It Must Be Love. Run, Baby, Run! A man, a woman, and a race against time. The Space Gang From Earth to the stars.

Transcription:

www.breaking News English.com Ready-to-use ESL/EFL Lessons Star Wars breaks box office records URL: http://www.breakingnewsenglish.com/0505/050524-starwars.html Today s contents The Article 2 Warm-ups 3 Before Reading / Listening 4 While Reading / Listening 5 After Reading 6 Discussion 7 Speaking 8 Language 9 Listening Gap Fill 10 Homework 11 Answers 12 24 May, 2005

THE ARTICLE Star Wars breaks box office records BNE: Episode III: Revenge of the Sith, the sixth and final installment of the Star Wars series, has broken almost all box office records in its opening four days. It became the first movie to rake in more than $50 million on its opening day. Industry analysts have described this as staggering. Avid fans, many in full Star Wars regalia, waited for hours for initial screenings across the U.S. Tickets went on sale at one minute past midnight in the more than 9,000 theaters that screened the movie. Sith also set the record for the biggest global debut ever, a simultaneous release in 104 countries. Even though Sith earned $108 million in weekend sales, it failed to topple Spiderman as the biggest weekend earner of all time. Spiderman netted an impressive $114 million in 2002. Still, it does make the new Star Wars blockbuster only the second movie in cinema history to earn more than $100 million in a weekend. Putting things into perspective, that is double the earnings of the final Lord of the Rings movie. Episode III easily surpassed takings of the preceding two Star Wars movies. Attack of the Clones pulled in $80 million on its opening weekend in 2002, while The Phantom Menace grossed $65 million in 1999. 2

WARM-UPS 1. HEADLINE: In pairs / groups, make your own news report from the words break, box office and records. Develop the story, complete with characters and facts, and tell it to another partner / group. Decide whose story is the best, funniest, strangest, most probable, etc. 2. CHAT: In pairs / groups, decide which of these topics are most interesting and which are most boring. Revenge / Star Wars / movie theaters / fans / movie tickets / $50 million / weekend sales / blockbuster movies / earnings Have a chat about the topics you liked. For more conversation, change topics and partners frequently. 3. BLOCKBUSTER MOVIES: Spend one minute writing down all of the different words you associate with blockbuster movies. Share your words with your partner / group and talk about them. 4. MOVIE OPINIONS: In pairs / groups, decide which of these opinion you agree with. Discuss how much truth there is in each one. a. Movies are art. b. Going to the movies is the best entertainment money can buy. c. Life would be boring without movies. d. The book is always better than the movie. e. Movie stars get paid too much. f. Videos are better - the small screen is better than the big screen. g. Hollywood movies aren t as good as European, Indian, Chinese or Japanese movies. h. There s too much killing in movies. 5. BLOCKBUSTERS: Which of these movie series have you seen? Did you like them? Star Wars Matrix Spiderman Lord of the Rings Harry Potter James Bond / 007 X-Men Other? 3

BEFORE READING / LISTENING 1. TRUE / FALSE: Look at the article s headline and guess whether these sentences are true (T) or false (F): a. Aliens destroyed employee records in a box company s offices. T / F b. The new Star Wars movie is episode three in a six-film series. T / F c. The movie became the first to rake in $50 million on opening day. T / F d. Fans dressed up in Star Wars costumes to watch the movie. T / F e. The movie was released simultaneously in over 100 countries. T / F f. The movie smashed box office records for weekend earnings. T / F g. The movie is one of eight that has netted $100 million in a weekend. T / F h. It is a bigger financial success than previous Star Wars films. T / F 2. SYNONYM MATCH: Match the following synonyms from the article: a. installment showed b. rake in previous c. staggering earn d. regalia notable e. screened oust f. topple episode g. impressive outdid h. perspective attire i. surpassed proportion j. preceding mind boggling 3. PHRASE MATCH: Match the following phrases from the article (sometimes more than one combination is possible): a. final fans b. box an impressive $114 million c. rake topple Spiderman d. avid in more than $50 million e. set surpassed takings f. it failed to into perspective g. the biggest weekend installment h. Spiderman netted the record i. Putting things earner of all time j. Episode III easily office records 4

WHILE READING / LISTENING GAP FILL: Put the words in the column on the right into the correct spaces. BNE: Episode III: Revenge of the Sith, the sixth and installment of the Star Wars series, has broken almost all box office records in its opening four days. It became the first movie to in more than $50 million on its opening day. Industry have described this as. Avid fans, many in full Star Wars, waited for hours for initial screenings across the U.S. Tickets went on sale at one minute past midnight in the more than 9,000 theaters that the movie. Sith also set the record for the biggest global ever, a release in 104 countries. screened analysts debut rake regalia final simultaneous staggering Even though Sith earned $108 million in weekend sales, it failed to Spiderman as the biggest weekend of all time. Spiderman an impressive $114 million in 2002. Still, it does make the new Star Wars only the second movie in cinema history to earn more than $100 million in a weekend. Putting things into, that is double the earnings of the final Lord of the Rings movie. Episode III easily takings of the two Star Wars movies. Attack of the Clones in $80 million on its opening weekend in 2002, while The Phantom Menace grossed $65 million in 1999. earner perspective topple blockbuster preceding pulled surpassed netted 5

AFTER READING 1. WORD SEARCH: Look in your dictionaries / computer to find collocates, other meanings, information, synonyms for the words box and office. Share your findings with your partners. Make questions using the words you found. Ask your partner / group your questions. 2. ARTICLE QUESTIONS: Look back at the article and write down some questions you would like to ask the class about the text. Share your questions with other classmates / groups. Ask your partner / group your questions. 3. GAP FILL: In pairs / groups, compare and talk about your answers to this exercise. 4. VOCABULARY: Circle any words you do not understand. In groups, pool unknown words and use dictionaries to find their meanings. 5. STUDENT CINEMA SURVEY: In pairs / groups write down questions about the cinema and movies. Ask other classmates your questions and note down their answers. Go back to your original partner / group and compare your findings. Make a mini-presentation to another group / the class on your findings. 6. TEST EACH OTHER: Look at the words below. With your partner, try to recall exactly how these were used in the text: installment broken industry regalia initial simultaneous topple impressive history perspective surpassed grossed 6

DISCUSSION STUDENT A s QUESTIONS (Do not show these to student B) a. Were you interested by the headline of this article? b. Do you like reading about movie news? c. Have you seen any of the Star Wars movies? d. What do you know about the Star Wars stories and characters? e. Do you like sci-fi movies? f. How important are movies in your life? g. Can you remember your first trip to the movie theater? h. Do you prefer Hollywood movies or those from other countries? i. Is going to the movies good value for money? j. What could make going to the cinema a better experience? STUDENT B s QUESTIONS (Do not show these to student A) a. Did you like reading the article? b. What did you think of this news? c. Are you interested in how much money movies make? d. What genre of movies do you like best? e. Would you deck yourself out in full movie regalia to see a film? f. What would life be like without movies? g. Which do you prefer, the small or big screen? h. Are movies a form of art? i. Have you ever greatly anticipated the opening of a movie? j. Did you like this discussion? AFTER DISCUSSION: Join another partner / group and tell them what you talked about. a. What question would you like to ask about this topic? b. What was the most interesting thing you heard? c. Was there a question you didn t like? d. Was there something you totally disagreed with? e. What did you like talking about? f. Do you want to know how anyone else answered the questions? g. Which was the most difficult question? 7

SPEAKING ULTIMATE CINEMA: You are in charge of creating the ultimate moviegoing experience. In pairs / groups, decide on the new ideas for each element in the table below that will get movie goers flocking to movie theaters: ELEMENT IDEAS Seats Ticket buying Discount days Refreshments Brochures Foyer / Lobby Screen Extras Change partners and compare recommendations. Provide each other with feedback. Combine your ideas to make the ultimate cinema concept. Return to your original partner / group and show them your revised ideas. 8

LANGUAGE MONEY WORDS: Circle any words you find in the text that relate to money. Compare the words you circled with those of your partner(s). Look for other meanings of the words in a dictionary. Show your findings to your partner(s) Make questions about real life (not the Star Wars movie) using these words and ask them to another partner. Star Wars breaks box office records BNE: Episode III: Revenge of the Sith, the sixth and final installment of the Star Wars series, has broken almost all box office records in its opening four days. It became the first movie to rake in more than $50 million on its opening day. Industry analysts have described this as staggering. Avid fans, many in full Star Wars regalia, waited for hours for initial screenings across the U.S. Tickets went on sale at one minute past midnight in the more than 9,000 theaters that screened the movie. Sith also set the record for the biggest global debut ever, a simultaneous release in 104 countries. Even though Sith earned $108 million in weekend sales, it failed to topple Spiderman as the biggest weekend earner of all time. Spiderman netted an impressive $114 million in 2002. Still, it does make the new Star Wars blockbuster only the second movie in cinema history to earn more than $100 million in a weekend. Putting things into perspective, that is double the earnings of the final Lord of the Rings movie. Episode III easily surpassed takings of the preceding two Star Wars movies. Attack of the Clones pulled in $80 million on its opening weekend in 2002, while The Phantom Menace grossed $65 million in 1999. MONEY WORDS OTHER MEANINGS QUESTIONS 9

LISTENING Listen and fill in the spaces. Star Wars breaks box office records BNE: Episode III: Revenge of the Sith, installment of the Star Wars series, has broken almost all box office records in its opening four days. It became the first movie $50 million on its opening day. Industry analysts have described this as staggering. Avid fans, many in full Star Wars regalia, waited screenings across the U.S. Tickets went on sale at one minute past midnight in the more than 9,000 theaters that screened the movie. Sith also set the record for the, a simultaneous release in 104 countries. Even though Sith earned $108 million in weekend sales, it Spiderman as the biggest weekend earner of all time. Spiderman netted an impressive $114 million in 2002. Still, it does make the new Star Wars blockbuster only the second movie in cinema history to earn more than $100 million in a weekend. Putting things into perspective, of the final Lord of the Rings movie. Episode III easily surpassed takings of the preceding two Star Wars movies. Attack of the Clones on its opening weekend 2002, while The Phantom Menace grossed $65 million in 1999. 10

HOMEWORK 1. VOCABULARY EXTENSION: Choose several of the words from the text. Use a dictionary or Google s search field (or another search engine) to build up more associations / collocations of each word. 2. INTERNET: Search the Internet and find information on Star Wars. Share your findings with your class in the next lesson. 3. MOVIES AND ME: Write an essay about movies and how important they are in your life. Start with memories of your first movie or trip to the movie theater. Write about your thoughts on how the movie industry has changed and is changing. 4. DIARY: Imagine you are a movie star. Write your diary / journal entry for one day in your life on the set of a new movie you are making. Write about the people around you. 11

ANSWERS TRUE / FALSE: a. F b. T c. T d. T e. T f. F g. F h. T SYNONYM MATCH: a. installment episode b. rake in earn c. staggering mind boggling d. regalia attire e. screened showed f. topple oust g. impressive notable h. perspective proportion i. surpassed outdid j. preceding previous PHRASE MATCH: a. final installment b. box office records c. rake in more than $50 million d. avid fans e. set the record f. it failed to topple Spiderman g. the biggest weekend earner of all time h. Spiderman netted an impressive $114 million i. Putting things into perspective j. Episode III easily surpassed takings GAP FILL: Star Wars breaks box office records BNE: Episode III: Revenge of the Sith, the sixth and final installment of the Star Wars series, has broken almost all box office records in its opening four days. It became the first movie to rake in more than $50 million on its opening day. Industry analysts have described this as staggering. Avid fans, many in full Star Wars regalia, waited for hours for initial screenings across the U.S. Tickets went on sale at one minute past midnight in the more than 9,000 theaters that screened the movie. Sith also set the record for the biggest global debut ever, a simultaneous release in 104 countries. Even though Sith earned $108 million in weekend sales, it failed to topple Spiderman as the biggest weekend earner of all time. Spiderman netted an impressive $114 million in 2002. Still, it does make the new Star Wars blockbuster only the second movie in cinema history to earn more than $100 million in a weekend. Putting things into perspective, that is double the earnings of the final Lord of the Rings movie. Episode III easily surpassed takings of the preceding two Star Wars movies. Attack of the Clones pulled in $80 million on its opening weekend in 2002, while The Phantom Menace grossed $65 in 1999. LANGUAGE: box office records / rake in / on sale / earned / earner / netted / earnings / takings / pulled in / grossed 12