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1.

Listen to the song and fill the missing words:


A long, long time ago there was ____________ Chorus
living all alone in the middle of the sea Rising from the sea below stood a __________
He sat high above his bed watching all the volcano
_____________ play
Looking all around but she could not see him
And wishing that he had ___________, too.
He tried to sing to let her know that she was not there
And from his lava came this song of hope that he sang
_____________
out loud everyday for years and years.
But with no lava, his song was all gone
Chorus
I have a dream I hope will come true
He filled the sea with his tears and watched his dreams

That you're here with me and I'm here with you ____________
I wish that the ___________________ up above As she remembered what his song meant to her.
will send me someone to lava. Chorus
Years of singing all alone turned his lava into Oh they were so happy to finally meet above the sea
________________ All together now their lava grew and grew
until he was on the brink of _______________ No longer are they all alone, with aloha as their new
But little did he know that living in the sea below
______________
another volcano was listening to his song.
And when you visit them this is what they sing.
Everyday she heard his __________her lava grew and
I have a dream I hope will come true
grew
That you'll ____________ with me and I'll
because she ___________ his song was meant for her
Now she was so ready to meet him above the sea _____________ with you

As he sang his song of ______for the last time. We thank the _________________, we thank too.
I lava you
I lava you
I lava you.

2. Read the text about the creation of the cartoon:


The Real Geology Behind Pixar's Short Film Lava
Pixar’s geological love story Lava isn’t just meant to evoke the tropical islands of Hawaii; it’s
actually inspired by a real underwater volcano off the coast of the Big Island.

“I took my family on vacation to the Big Island,” Lava director James Ford


Murphy told us in an interview. “We took a helicopter tour and I saw Kīlauea
and that was huge. Then, on the last day, we were all kind of sad and leaving and
we were walking through this shopping mall that had this diorama of the Big
Island. And it’s five volcanoes that form the Big Island that have all merged
together over time. But then there’s this little sign on the bottom that said
‘Lō ʻihi.’ And I was like, ‘What is Lōʻihi?’

“So when I got home, I started doing my research and I found out that it
is an underwater volcano that is slowly going to connect [to the Big Island].
And that just blew my mind, because I just thought, ‘Does Lōʻihi know
that the Big Island is up here? And does the Big Island know that
Lōʻihi [is down there]? And what if they didn’t know?’”

From that moment of anthropomorphism came the seeds


of Lava. And just as a real volcano inspired the film, Murphy and
his team used real places to construct their volcanic characters.

3. Match the highlighted words with their meanings:

Arousal of the mind to special unusual activity or


To evoke creativity.
Attribution of human motivation, characteristics, or
To be inspired by behavior to inanimate objects, animals, or natural
phenomena.

To merge A source or beginning; a solid thing inside fruit.

Bring or recall (a feeling, memory, or image) to the


To blow smb’s mind conscious mind.

antropomorphism To become combined or united.

seed To surprise or shock.


4. Are these sentences true or false? Yes no

The volcano in the cartoon is the exact copy of a real volcano.


James Ford Murphy saw an underwater volcano from the
helicopter and got the idea for the cartoon.
Hawaii is actually 5 volcanoes that have merged together.
On the last day on Hawaii the director and his family took a
helicopter tour.
Lōʻihi is never going to connect to the Big Island.
The creator of Lava gave the volcanoes human aspirations before
he decided to make a cartoon.

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