Writing Prompts

This week’s writing prompt is:

FILMS

What’s your favourite film? Perhaps it’s something modern, or is it an iconic movie that’s stood the test of time? My earliest memory of going to see a film is when my mother took me to see Bambi. She soon wished she hadn’t as I cried through most of the film and all the way home (it was a long walk – for a three-year-old anyway!) because Bambi’s mother died. I’ve cried at many a film, including ET and Les Misérables. And I’ve laughed at a good few too.

You don’t have to share your work, but I always enjoy seeing what you come up with if the prompt gives you inspiration. Your last prompt was BEST DAY. Here are the pieces you shared:

Tessa Dean:

I felt the baby move. It wasn’t a kick. It was simply a movement to let me know they were there. The baby moved all the time now, and except for the kicks, which could be quite painful, I found the moving to bring a profound sense of wonder to me. It is still quite a moment of bonding between us. I know others find feeling it from the outside wonderful, but feeling it inside of you is amazing and only something a mother can experience. 

The day I gave birth to my first child was the best day of my life. It is a grand feeling to know that you, as a mother, are the only one who can bond with this child in this unique fashion. You are the only one who could bring this child into the world. Your body was its home for nine months. This was a privilege.

The Bag Lady:

I cannot pick a best day because I’ve had many. I’m old! But this year finding my oldest son is cancer free is the very best day I could ever hope to have!

Roberta Writes:

The Red BMX (Tanka Prose)

When I was a tween, I wanted a red bicycle. Not just any bicycle. I wanted a red BMX bicycle. BMXs were hugely popular at the time and the boys who rode them participated in all sorts of exciting events at the BMX racetrack on the outskirts of the town where we lived. One of my classmates, Craig, had a BMX and he did all sorts of brave tricks on it. I admired Craig who was thirteen and seemed very much older and more sophisticated than eleven-year-old me. I was the youngest in my class by more than a year. I was accepted into school early because I could read and had started writing. In the small and sleepy town of George in the Western Cape, most of the children started school a year late. This was the reason for the two-year age gap between me and many of my peer group.

My father agreed to purchase me a bicycle. When he brought it home, it wasn’t a red BMX. It was a silver ladies bicycle imported from France. It had a basket on the front. I never expressed my disappointment and in time, I grew to love this bicycle. The basket turned out to be useful as I could fit seven books into it when I visited the local library.

Ladies bicycle

Provided independence

Basket full of books

Four plus three equaled seven

Sister’s card put to good use

Lucky Fall (shadorma prose)

When I was a tween and my sister, Catherine, was a little girl, we used to cycle to school. I was a rather reckless girl, and I would go as fast as possible down the slopping, main road that passed the busy Afrikaans school. At the bottom, I would stop and wait for my little sister to catch up.

One day, I was cycling like a maniac down the road with my school satchel on my back. I hadn’t notice that my shoelace had come undone, and it caught in the gears of my fancy French ladies bicycle. Crash! Over went the bicycle. I was flung out into the road right in front of a car.

Screech! The car jammed on breaks and stopped just in front of me. The driver, a mother who had just dropped off her children at the school, was livid. She shouted at me in Afrikaans. I jumped up, remounted my bicycle, and tore off down the hill away from the angry woman.

I’m flying

Mischievous shoelace

Plays a trick

I wobble

Fall sideways in front of car

Driver jams on breaks

***

13 responses to “Writing Prompts”

  1. I’ve watched a ton of movies in my life, so I’m not sure I can recall just one favorite. Brampton Stoker’s Dracula is among the top favs, the OG Top Gun, Tombstone, and Twister are all on the list. Can’t wait for some sequels coming this year!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Some great ones there!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Twister has a sequel coming soon and. Can’t wait to see the new Deadpool also!

        Liked by 2 people

  2. The Breakfast Club. I watched it so many times as a teenager I could quote the entire script! I have some great artwork I found in a artisan market in Manchester that depicts the characters.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I remember that! Though I don’t think I watched it as many times as you. Quoting the script – now that’s dedication!

      Like

  3. Hi Esther, thank you for sharing my pieces. Films – I have watched a few in my life. Let me think ….

    Liked by 1 person

  4. […] Writing Prompts […]

    Liked by 1 person

  5. squirreljan Avatar
    squirreljan

    THESE ARE A FEW OF MY FAVOURITE FILMS (Janice Johnson)

    What is my favourite film? That’s such a tough question. I think it depends on my mood. I know I struggle these days for a film to hold my attention. We’ll download or record one and then halfway in, I do some more of my jigsaw puzzle or a bit of crocheting, so I don’t get bored.

    Over lunch at the London House Cafe in Malvern, I asked my husband what his favourite film was. After a lot of discussion about Alien, The Shining, Dirty Harry, and Predator, he decided upon Monty Python’s, Life of Brian. None of these were on my list, although I enjoyed some of them.

    My short list ended up with the original Disney version of Jungle Book (I Wanna Be Like You); Gone with the Wind (tomorrow is another day and the best sex scene ever – who needs graphic detail when Scarlet O’Hara says it all with a smile); Oliver (As Long as He Needs Me); Carousel (When You Walk Through a Storm in its original context); Mary Poppins (Feed the Birds); and making it to the top, Grease. I chose Grease because I was just seventeen when I first saw it at the pictures, and it holds special memories. Also, every time it’s on television I say, “Nah, I’ve seen this at least twenty times. I’ll give it a miss.” Two hours later, I’m hoarse from singing all the songs at the top of my voice, word perfect and totally in tune, of course. There are worse things I could do with my time! I have a passion for musicals just like my mum.

    I also love ‘old’ films. Put one on and I am transported back, not just to the film but also to the enjoyment of watching them with my mum, dad, and sister on a wet Sunday afternoon in the sixties and seventies. That raises another memory of the first time I ever cried over something on a screen. My younger sister would sob at an advert for crisps, but I never let tears fall over a film or television programme until I watched Carve Her Name with Pride at about the age of nine. I remember this build up in my stomach, bubbling until it erupted and then I could not stop crying. And what set me off? It’s an emotional film with a powerful story, but what really got to me was the poem, The Life that I Have by Leo Marks. I always loved words, and this made me truly appreciate the tremendous power they can have.

    (Thanks for the prompt, Esther. I hope this isn’t too long for here and it’s actually going to form part of a longer piece for my website. So many ideas flowing!)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. This is super! I’m glad it got you thinking. Some great films there!

      Like

  6. […] Esther’s writing prompt this week is Films. I’ve stayed with my childhood memories and written two shadorma prose pieces for the prompt. You can join in here: https://estherchilton.co.uk/2024/07/31/writing-prompts-25/ […]

    Liked by 1 person

  7. SexagenarianScribbler Avatar
    SexagenarianScribbler

    What’s my favourite film?

    Now you’re asking! My short list will be a very long one…

    The first film I ever saw was ‘ One Hundred And One Dalmatians’, and not at your

    ordinary cinema. This was in Singapore, at our local swimming club; we would be seated on side of the pool and the film on screen on the other side.

    Then, not long after we came home, it was Mary Poppins, with my brother and dad. (Mum suffered from claustrophobia and panic attacks.)

    I remember at school everyone singing ‘Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious.’

    In my teens, we’d go every week, it didn’t matter what the film was, half the reason was cos of the fellas!

    And that’s where I had my first kiss with my first love. Boy, was I in heaven.

    And then I met my future husband, and working in the city, we would regularly go to Leicester Square, a few stops away on the tube. Those were the days of Robert Redford, Paul Newman, Steve McQueen, and the big disaster movies, like ‘Earthquake’, The Towering Inferno’, and ‘The Poseidon Adventure’.

    Nowadays, the kids wait to get films on DVD, or watch on Netflix, but for me nothing beats the atmosphere of the cinema and a big screen.

    So back to my favourite..

    A few contenders; ET, Apollo 13, Message In A Bottle (Kevin Costner might

    have had something to do with that one!)

    And the winner…drum roll…

    Dirty Dancing.

    RIP Patrick Swayze

    Liked by 1 person

    1. What wonderful memories! Thank you for sharing them. I loved Dirty Dancing too 😍

      Like

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