Tag Archives: Winner

So what exactly is the Booker Prize?

Anyone with half an eye on the literary world can’t help but notice the hype around the Booker Prize which is everywhere at this time of year. Recently, this Booker frenzy has only been intensified by the contoversy surrounding the decision to make American authors eligible for the prize. But what exactly is all the fuss about? Elli Christie, Books Editor, takes a closer look…

Photo Credit: TheManBookerPrizes
Photo Credit: TheManBookerPrizes

The Man Booker Prize, or as it is more commonly known, the Booker, is a prize which many British and Commonwealth writers have long yearned to win. Soon it will be possible for writers the world over to join in this yearning, since it was recently announced that from 2014 the prize will open up to any work which is written in English and published in the UK.

This news of change has created a uproar in the literary community. The Booker has been at the heart of British publishing since it was first started in 1968, when it was originally known as the Booker McConnell prize due to the company which sponsored it. However, this change in criteria is not the first in the Booker’s history nor is it the first controversy. Previous arguments have seen Trainspotting removed from the longlist in 1993, Anthony Burgess refusing to turn up and many of the judging decisions being called into question.

Those in charge of the Man Booker committee also love to have spin-off competitions; which has led to Midnight’s Children winning The Best of the Booker, the Booker of Bookers prize and the Man Booker itself. In 2010 there was also an attempt to rectify the misfortune of losing a year when the rules were changed in 1970 so that books were no longer considered from the previous year but instead from the current one. J. G. Farrell’s Troubles won this prize after a shortlist was given to the public vote.

This year the shortlist has proved to once again epitomise the eclectic nature of the Man Booker prize, ranging from Colm Tóibín’s The Testament of Mary to Eleanor Catton’s The Luminaries and also including NoViolet Bulawayo’s We Need New Names, Jim Crace’s Harvest, Jhumpa Lahiri’s The Lowland and Ruth Ozeki’s A Tale for the Time Being. The winner will be announced on 15 October, having been previously slimmed down from a long list of 13 titles and a possible pool of 140 novels by a judging panel chaired by Robert Macfarlane.

Elli Christie, Books Editor

Forum Film Pitch Box: Exeposé Screen picks your Top Five ideas!

Everyone loves free cake. If you turn down free cake, it’s a definite sign that something’s wrong. You’re an alien in disguise as a human, with no understanding of this wondrous offer. Or you’re so upset about something that you don’t really notice, which is distressing because free cake would almost certainly help ease your worries. Maybe you suspect that the makers, bakers or purchasers of said cake have tampered with it, maybe they don’t look trustworthy at all…

Image Credit: Craig Browne
Image Credit: Craig Browne

Exeposé Online occupied the Forum last week to promote the website and force students to participate in silly games, like Guitar Hero, which certainly doesn’t seem that heroic to us. Anyway, the free cake has already been widely publicised but you could also get involved with the Screen section by coming up with an idea for a film or TV show and dropping it in our Film Pitch Box.

We wanted your imaginations to be as crazy and colourful as possible. My feeble powers of creativity are evident from the opening paragraph of this article. I mean seriously, aliens disguised as humans? Already done to death in the Men in Black franchise and elsewhere. It’s really hard to conjure a truly unique idea for a film or TV programme out of thin air!

When we set up camp in the Forum then, we were looking for nothing less than genius. Below are the entries that you submitted in our box, followed by our Top Five picks, including our winner. All the suggestions have their merits, but obviously the Top Five have the potential to spawn lucrative movies or shows.

Enjoy! (We accept no responsibility for some of the disturbing ideas submitted…)

  • I got a fever and the only cure is more Christopher Walken
  • ‘Being Nicholas Cage’ a remake of ‘Being John Malkovich’
  • Big Brother in the Forum
  • Marketplace comedy skits – “who took the last ham sandwich Barbara?”/”Johnny. From Cricket. Thinks he’s a big cheese”
  • The Dark Knight + cooking show = Ready, Steady, BAT!
  • Zombies invade school – one young boy raids the sports cupboard and fights back, killing one undead bastard at a time
  • Everyone takes drugs and does Takeshi’s Castle
  • Cumberbatch and Fassbender making sexy eyes @ the camera
  • Biopic of Ellie Swingewood
  • Ben Affleck talks about beards for 2 hours
  • Fifty Shades of Grey – both the guy and girl are played by Emma Watson
  • Remake of Schindler’s List with every character played by Samuel L Jackson
  • A soap set in a museum
  • Bryan Cranston tries on hats for an hour
  • Period Drama (meaning ambiguous…)

And now, the Top Five!

5) Christopher Walken is Jane Eyre – he’d be brilliant, wouldn’t he?

4) Boobs – extra points for originality. This pitcher understood that sex sells!

3) Craig Browne trying to score a slam dunk – an endless struggle against circumstance and life itself. Only an Oscar-winning actor could do this idea justice.

2) Topless Men Baking a brilliant high concept idea, easy to summarise to potential investors and even easier on the eye for the ladies. Simon Cowell might get hold of this one.

1) War film from the perspective of a maggot an ultimately disturbing but irresistibly dark and different idea. War films all look the same these days, but this one wouldn’t. A visionary filmmaker could make this into an abstract study of battlefield horror. Or Pixar could make it into a fun adventure story, about one maggot escaping from his grim destiny to the delights of a peaceful world…

Congratulations to Jessica Cath for submitting the winning idea. Maybe watch a comedy DVD to banish some of your demons though?

Behold a poster for your film…

Image credit: soil-net.com
Image credit: soil-net.com

Caption Contest!

 

Photo credits to JD Hancock
Photo credits to JD Hancock

What?

This month, we’re giving you the opportunity to win a Waterstones voucher worth £10

How?

It’s simple. All you have to do is submit a caption to the photo above. It can be silly, serious, funny or sad. We only have a couple of rules- keep it clean and keep it short(ish).

When?

The deadline for entering is Monday 18th March and the winner will be announced the following day.

Where?

Email exepose-comment@xmedia.ex.ac.uk and keep checking the website or Facebook and Twitter for the results.

Good Luck!

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