This
assignment was much different from the assignments we’ve had previously.
It was less art intensive than the others as this had a little more
grounding in logistics and reality than did the Tiny Stories or the Music
Mosaic which could be much more abstract. Though different, it was
something with which we are more familiar. The collaborative aspect of
this project was very helpful. When writing the story, we all had
different ideas about how to craft it and what direction the plot should
follow. This allowed for many more ideas to be passed around and a lot of
decisions to consider. Though at times it was tough to decide whose idea
to go with, it was beneficial overall because of this collaboration.
When
Josh first thought of this idea, he was inspired by two different and unrelated
sources. A few years ago he watched the HBO series Band of Brothers
which made him find an interest in WWII. He began to learn more about it
in school as well and he watched more war movies and documentaries simply
because he found the stories incredible. When given this assignment,
straight off he knew he wanted to create a story that was somehow involved in
the second World War. However, he wanted to do something a little
different that he had not seen before. First he thought of a pilot in one
of the B-25s and the perspective that pilot had during the Doolittle raid in
1942. While this idea was formulating, a friend of Josh’s went to the
theatre to watch the film Prisoners. Just the name of the film
changed his idea for the story to something about POWs and he didn’t want the
perspective to be one of a prisoner but rather of the guard over them.
Though
we know relatively little about the Hell of war, we felt that the perspective
of this piece is one that many don’t consider, especially from the point of
view of the enemy. Most of the time people view the enemy as evil and
inhuman but this is not true. The enemy is usually just a normal person
who doesn’t want to be doing what they are doing. He is complex and so are we.
This story has aspects of a psychological narrative. There isn’t a clear bad
guy or good guy. This is what we wanted to show. We felt that it
would be most interesting to look at an unwilling Japanese guard dealing with
the horrible things that he’s had to witness. We didn’t want the effect
investigated in the Fort Barnwell story to be part of this story. The
script shouldn’t be romanticized and it shouldn’t be seen through a modern
lens. A story such as this should be viewed in the same light as the
time. It should be, what you see is what you get. We feel this is much
more powerful than showing it in a different and manipulated way.
To write this script, we utilized the power of the internet
with Google Drive. Before writing, we got together to discuss what we
thought the story should do and just to flesh it out a bit. We then went
to our respective homes and began writing on the same document on Google.
We found this to be very effective because we could all write at the same
time and we could observe the others writing without having to be looking over
their shoulder. It allowed us to change things very quickly. The chat
function also made it possible to discuss aspects about the story that we
thought were good or possibly unnecessary.







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