I've already done my assignment! Haha
We handed them in last term. I'd be happy to send you my essay on it, I got full marks for it -- it's only 500 words though, we had a word limit (which was hard to stick to!). I'm going to expand on it if I use it in exams/trials/HSC, but I think I've got a pretty good basis.
Basically I was struggling to link any of my related texts to Coleridge, so it's all kind of vague "oh and they're kinda similar... but HERE, see HERE they're DIFFERENT". I eventually decided it linked quite well to Coleridge's "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner". Actually I just opened my essay to have a look, so I'll copy some of my main points
Any you've come up with would be interesting!
- concept of imaginative journeys explored I thought to be the dangers of imaginative journeys, and how they can overpower reality and experience -- this is just one aspect, obviously, there's a load of other slants you can take, but this one worked well
- a struggle to create a balance between imagination/reality (eg. the photobooth guy -- Amelie thinks he's a ghost, but he's really just the repairman; needs to take a REAL risk in contacting Nino instead of just imagining/planning it)
- imaginative/fantasy elements eg. animation, enhanced green/red colours
- I analysed in detail the scene where Amelie leads the blind man through the street -- good scene that one!
- also analysed the scene where Nino is late to their meeting, and Amelie considers he either didn't get the message, or was involved in a caraccident-robbery-hostage-etc -- also need for balance between imagination and reality
- for the link, I basically said that the idea that imaginative journeys only have value when linked to reality is also expressed in Coleridge's poems (especially Ancient Mariner & Limetree Bower), related the fantasy elements of Coleridge's poems (esp Kubla Khan, Ancient Mariner), and showed the contrast between the tones of Amelie and Rime of the Ancient Mariner, which reflected the ultimate outcomes (Mariner = negative, Amelie = positive)
Phew. I may as well have put in the 500-word essay
I was going to use the Lovely Bones as well, actually, but I didn't -- good text though