Your introduction should be designed to attract the reader's attention and give him/her an idea of the essay focus.
Within the space of a few lines, you should introduce the subject of your essay, in addition to your contention. The reader should know just from the introduction what your point of view is, and where the essay will be heading.
To introduce the subject for a text response essay, you should mention the title of the text in addition to the author. This should not be a stand alone sentence (e.g. Tim Burton directed the film ‘Edward Scissorhands’). It should be effortlessly integrated into a sentence (e.g. Tim Burton’s film ‘Edward Scissorhands’ is a fable with several important underlying messages ) OR you should just begin the essay by introducing the subject and then move on to the issue at hand (e.g. In Tim Burton’s film ‘Edward Scissorhands’ the title character serves as a modern day Frankenstein, whose presence upsets an otherwise predictable suburb).
The title of the film should be used in italics, underlined or single quotation marks. Only one of these is necessary. In a film study, you should refer to the Director as the author of the film, much like you would for the author of a novel. Refer to the director by their full name the first time you introduce them, and by their surname only for every additional time you mention them (e.g. – second paragraph: ‘Burton portrays Jim as manipulative’).
Writing the intro: 1. Try and begin with an attention grabber. The attention grabber you use is up to you, but here are some ideas: * Startling or interesting information
The information must be true and verifiable, and it doesn't need to be totally new to your readers. It could simply be a fact that explicitly illustrates the point you wish to make.
If you use a piece of attention-grabbing information, follow it with a sentence or two of elaboration. * Quote
Not essential, but if there is