viernes, 31 de octubre de 2014

The Uninvited

I 'm at a party, but all I want to do is get home. And then I hear my mother's bell. I go to find her. She's alone. She's not supposed to be alone. I run up to the house to find my dad. There's something wrong. It doesn't feel safe. There's something evil in the house.


The psychological horror story

This is the story of a man who lived with an old, always cared him, but the old man was missing an eye and the man he raged that vision. Until one day he decided to kill him, and then cut it into pieces and bury under the wood floor. 
One day the police went to the house and asked the old man, he got nervous because they felt the heartbeat of the old, and it was thought that the police also felt, went crazy and ended the confessed the murder.
The Gothic Novel
1.Who invented the G.N?
The gotic novel was invented almost single-hamedly by Horace Walpole.

2.What was the first G.N?
The first gothic novel was "The Castle of Otranto".

3.When was it first published?
It was published in 1764.

4.Which basic elements of horror didn't incude on your list?
1.-Lights in abandoned rooms
2.-Crazed laughter
3.-Clanking chains
4.-Doors grating on rusty hinges
5.-Characters trapped in a room
6.-Atmosphere of Mystery
7.-Ruins of buildings
8.-Footsteps approaching
9.-Supernatural or otherwise inexplicable events
10.-Omens, portents, visions


10 horrors ideas of ghotic:
vampires
zombies
 wolfmen
doors grating on rusty hinges
gusts of wind blowing out lights
thunder and lightning
surprise
scream
terrified
dead

viernes, 10 de octubre de 2014

My multiple intelligences




auditor
detective
physicist

film animator
navigator
outdoor guide

athlete
doctor of sports 
personal trainer

LOGICAL/MATHEMATICAL INTELLIGENCE is the ability to use reason, logic and numbers. These thinkers are good at seeing patterns and relationships and making connections between pieces of information. They are critical and relentless questioners.
They easily grasp the intricacies of complex problems and are attracted to computers and puzzles that draw on their reasoning abilities.

They need things to make sense logically and can get quite annoyed when things don’t make sense. They enjoy the challenge of systematically and analytically working through a difficult problem to it’s logical conclusion.

VISUAL-SPATIAL INTELLIGENCE is the kind of intelligence you use when you are parallel parking your car on the street. It comes into play, in unfamiliar territory, when you are visualizing or imagining in your mind where you are, so you don’t get lost.
This is also the intelligence you use when you are reading a novel, or hearing someone tell a story for the first time. It creates a movie of the characters and story action in your mind.
You often hear people say they were disappointed in the movie version of the story, because it didn’t match the one they had created in their imagination, as they read the book.
It’s the ability to form a mental 3D model of the spatial world and to manoeuver and operate using that model.
KINESTHETIC INTELLIGENCE is the kind of intelligence we use when we are making our bodies do things. It is especially highly developed in athletes, dancers, gymnasts, circus performers — people who use the body in precise and exacting ways.
For example, those who win at sports, are able to quickly make their bodies move, and do what they can imagine them doing in their minds.
Those who are strong on this kind of intelligence are highly paid for their skills as athletes and entertainers.
Notice that they are combining two kinds of intelligence here: Kinesthetic and Visual-Spatial.

ANIMAL IN ME: