Magical Film Exploration
Overview
Lesson Title: Film Study: Harry Potter – Part 1
Unit: Magical Drama Adventures (Lesson 2 of 20)
Year Levels: Years 8–9
Duration: 60 minutes
Class Size: 5 students
Australian Curriculum Alignment
Learning Area: The Arts – Drama
Curriculum Strand:
- Making and Responding: Students refine dramatic skills and practices, collaborate in small groups to explore and make drama. They respond critically to drama they view and reflect on their own work.
- Content Descriptions:
- ACADRM043: Improvise with the elements of drama and narrative structure to develop ideas, and explore subtext to shape devised and scripted drama.
- ACADRR045: Analyse how the elements of drama are combined in performance to convey meaning and evaluate drama from different contexts.
Learning Intentions
- Students will analyse the use of magic in the narrative structure of Harry Potter scenes.
- Students will evaluate how magical elements contribute to character development.
- Students will engage in critical discussion and interpret performance choices creatively.
Success Criteria
By the end of the lesson, students will:
- Offer insights into how magic impacts characters' journeys.
- Identify specific dramatic techniques used to portray magic on screen.
- Collaboratively create a short performance concept inspired by the film scenes.
Materials Required
- Technology: Screen and speakers; prepared film clips from Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone (pre-selected 10-minute total clip package)
- Stationery: Drama journals, pens, whiteboard and markers
- Props: Basic costume elements (scarves, wands, capes)
Prior Learning
Students have completed Lesson 1, where they explored the concept of magical worlds through improvisation and devised short scenes using magical prompts.
Lesson Flow
1. Acknowledgement of Country (2 minutes)
Begin with a simple Acknowledgement of Country, recognising the traditional custodians of the land on which the school sits, and paying respects to Elders past, present and emerging.
(Optional: Invite a student to lead this from Week 3 onwards.)
2. Warm-Up: "Magic Object" (8 minutes)
- Each student receives an imaginary 'magical object'.
- In a circle, students mime how the object transforms or affects them.
- Encourage exaggerated physical expression and vocal experimentation.
- Quick reflection: "How did transforming with a magic object feel?"
👉 Purpose: Activates creativity, connects physicality to magic.
3. Brief Introduction to Film Focus (5 minutes)
Teacher-led discussion:
- Set the intention: Watch for how magic is not just 'cool' but meaningful in scene storytelling and character change.
- Key questions to keep in mind:
- How does the magic challenge or transform the characters?
- What emotions are evoked through the magical events?
4. Viewing Selected Film Scenes (10 minutes)
Scenes (compiled, total 10 minutes):
- First arrival at Hogwarts
- Harry discovering the Mirror of Erised
- Troll in the dungeon sequence
While watching, students should jot down quick reactions in their journals:
- Magic Moment: What mesmerised you?
- Character Shift: How did a character change?
🛑 Pause briefly after each scene to let students write notes.
5. Group Discussion and Short Analysis (10 minutes)
Collaboratively unpack the viewing:
Guided Questions:
- "What purpose does the magic serve in these scenes?"
- "How did the magical setting create challenges for the character?"
- "If you could remove the magic, would the scene still have the same emotional effect?"
Encourage rich responses and differing viewpoints, building active listening skills.
Record key phrases and ideas on the whiteboard under two categories:
→ Magic as Storyteller
→ Magic as Catalyst for Change
6. Creative Challenge: Re-imagining the Scene (20 minutes)
Students in pairs (or trio + duo):
- Recreate one selected scene, but change the magical element.
(e.g., Instead of the Mirror of Erised, perhaps a magic Talking Painting.)
Steps:
- Decide on your magic element.
- Quickly storyboard key actions (max 4 'moments').
- Rehearse using available props and exaggerated physical storytelling.
- Perform a 1-minute version to the rest of the class.
👉 Focus: How the type of magic you invent alters the story or the character's emotional journey.
7. Reflection and Wrap-Up (5 minutes)
Love a fast-paced exit ticket! Each student answers aloud:
- One word about Magic in Drama
- One reason why magic helps develop character
Teacher Notes: Collect student journals at the end of the lesson to informally assess engagement and note initial literacy in film analysis.
Assessment Strategy
Formative Observation:
- Participation during group discussions
- Thoughtfulness of journal responses
- Creativity and understanding shown in performance
Informal Journal Check:
- Evidence of linking magic to character development and emotional impact.
Next lesson (Lesson 3) will focus on physicality and magical movement exploration inspired by today's observations.
Teacher Tips
✅ Encourage imaginative risks without worry over ‘getting it right’.
✅ Use positive language that values students' interpretations.
✅ Prompt quieter students with specific, scaffolded questions, e.g., "Can you describe how Harry's feelings changed in the magic mirror scene?"
Additional Notes
This lesson is adaptable for differentiation:
- Students requiring extra support might focus on a specific moment rather than a whole scene.
- More able students might layer an extra complication into the re-imagined magic scene (e.g., time limit, reversing magic effects).
Final Thought
This is a foundational lesson to spark students’ critical and creative engagement with magical realism and its relationship to human emotion — inviting students to move from 'audience' to 'analyst' to 'creator'. ✨