Sunday, May 12, 2013

6 Filmmaking Tips From Steven Soderbergh

This summary is not available. Please click here to view the post.

6 Filmmaking Tips From George Lucas


By at least two metrics, George Lucas is the most successful independent filmmaker of all time. He’s made other films, sure, but it was Star Wars that took everyone – including the director – by surprise. Ultimately, the largeness of that movie swept Lucas up, driving him further into his own universe, and he’s lived there for three decades. Now he’s sold the property to a company that has vowed to continue the story without him, and that comes with a promise to retire from big movies. What that means is anyone except Lucas’ guess, but it’s not hard to imagine that his next projects will be more American Graffiti than Amidala. So here’s a bit of free film school (for fans and filmmakers alike) from the man who invented and tore down your childhood. Don’t Just Predict the Future, Shape It Lucas has been a guiding force in the transition from film to digital, which also puts him in the middle of the argument over what might be the end of film in filmmaking. He’s used money and clout to push for new camera technology that has increased what directors and DPs can do, but he’s also urged for responsibility in using breakthrough tools. “Having lots of options means you have to have a lot more discipline, but it’s the same kind of discipline that a painter, a novelist or a composer would have. In a way, working in [digital] is much less frustrating than working in film, but it’s not as though it’s limitless no matter how you go. The artist will always push the art form until he bumps up against the technology – that’s the nature of the artist. Because cinema is such a technological medium, there’s a lot of technology to bump into, and I think as more people use digital they’re going to find [it has] a lot more limitations. Some of those limitations will be [equivalent to] the limitations they had with film, and some of those limitations will just be because they’ve gone so far that they finally bumped into the technological ceiling.” Yes, that’s Lucas looking beyond digital during the launch of digital. Evolve with New Generations You don’t get a documentary made about love/hating you unless you’ve done something monumental and then ruined it in the eyes of original fans. Probably no one has achieved that as thoroughly as Lucas, but for all the disdain from fans who felt a sense of ownership over the original Star Wars trilogy, the universe’s creator has “destroyed” his own work while finding millions of new, younger fans (and piles of money). “People who are over 40 love [Episodes] IV, V, and VI and hate I, II, and III. Younger people like I, II, and III and don’t like IV, V, and VI, or they like I, II, and III better and think IV, V, and VI are kind of boring and slow. And of course the older people say, ‘Oh, I, II, and III—it’s too jittery, too fast, too complicated, it’s too digital,’ or whatever they want to say. But definitely one generation has grabbed hold of one of them, and the other generation has grabbed hold of the next one. One of the key characters that helped us realize what was going on was Jar Jar Binks, because the kids that are under 10 years old, he’s one of their favorite characters. For people over 40, they cannot stand him—it’s a hate thing. You know, they’ve always been for 12-year-olds, and that’s never changed. People don’t want to think of it that way. They want to think those films are for grown-ups. Even though they were 10 years old when they saw it, it’s still very important to them, so, for them, it’s a grown-up movie, as opposed to a kids’ movie. The pre–Jar Jar Binks was 3PO. Everybody hated 3PO. I mean, it was like they couldn’t stand him. It really had to do with his character. They don’t like his character, and they don’t like Jar Jar Binks—but they’re not designed to be likeable characters.” Bottom line? Don’t be surprised when the next trilogy is made for 12-year-olds and not you. For all the hate that’s been thrown Lucas’ way, he’s still been able to make movies the way he’s wanted to make them, and his financial success (not to mention his cultural success) has come from understanding the changing landscape of fans. In a way, the creator of the Geek Generation hasn’t bought into the hype of a Geek Decade where studios have made movies that should have been for 12-year-olds aimed squarely, instead, at their fathers. Of course, Lucas also said this: “Look, what would happen if there had never been John Wayne movies and Errol Flynn movies and all that stuff that we got to see all the time. I mean, you could go into a theater, not just watch it on television on Saturday morning, actually go into a theater, sit down and watch an incredible adventure. Not a stupid adventure, not a dumb adventure for children and stuff but a real Errol Flynn, John Wayne — gosh — kind of an adventure.” Imbue Your Blockbuster with Something Deeper Also, does this mean Lucas didn’t know where he was going with Luke and Leia, or that he was relishing everyone not knowing what he already knew? Don’t Work Alone No matter how many times it gets said, this particular piece of advice is worth repeating. Lucas grew into filmmaking along with a band of outsiders like Brian de Palma, Francis Ford Coppola and Steven Spielberg who helped each other with advice, time and money. They also showed each other their movies and gave unflinching feedback. That continued after they had made it big, but maybe you shouldn’t always listen to de Palma. Never Ever Ever Ever Stop Working It’s easy to see Lucas as a towering success without remembering that he was once a complete unknown. He was a wannabe, banging at a Hollywood built by barriers to all outsiders at a time that when not having connections meant that you weren’t getting in to see the wizard. His journey to success was a long, grueling one, and this is a nice reminder of that. Your Special Effects Are Not the Story What Have We Learned Here is a rebel who infiltrated the system and became a billionaire. He created an entire universe, lush and vibrant, in his mind and transferred it to the big screen to the delight of many. At the heart of it all is hard work and an enduring love of movies. He’s a fan, too, and it’s clear that he’s let that fandom define him from time to time, but he’s also made business decisions that have made him a ridiculous amount of money. Perhaps he’s a controversial figure because of what he’s done to his own franchise, and maybe it’s telling that a man as successful as he couldn’t get Red Tails picked up by a studio, but he’s an icon that came from nowhere that has had an indelible role to play in the culture of the late 20th century. For those interested in finding their own way into the establishment, studying how he got there isn’t a bad start.

6 Filmmaking Tips From Akira Kurosawa


The Movie King. The Emperor. Even at their height, words fail to capture the towering legacy of a master like Akira Kurosawa. Growing up with a movie fanatic father, the writer/director was educated with thousands of silent films, and he would go on to make perhaps more masterpieces than any other singular filmmaking force. With Throne of Blood, Yojimbo, Seven Samurai, Ran, Rashomon and many more, he became immortal. So here’s a bit of free film school (for fans and filmmakers alike) from a man who had the heart of a child and the mind of a genius. Get Greedy “Movie directors, or should I say people who create things, are very greedy and they can never be satisfied. That’s why they keep on working. I’ve been able to work for so long because I think, ‘Next time, I’ll make something good.’” Who says perfectionism is a bad thing? Perhaps there more to this than simple greed, but the Emperor is pointing out a mindset for excellence that stands as the first step in making sure your creative output is the best it can be. Just as no screenwriter I’ve spoken to has ever said they didn’t care for another shot at re-writing a script, there’s a natural sense of imperfection and incompleteness to any project because the cameras have to roll, the editors have to get their hands on the film, and the audience has to see the end result at some point. Aspiring filmmakers have the ugly luxury of not having a deadline, so they can afford to take another pass on that screenplay. Of course money becomes a factor in getting one more shot or one more cut, but the grand principle here is that you can’t punch the clock at 5 and call it an early day. Work to make the film as good as it can be and know that you can also do better on the next one. In other words: the bad sleep well. Story Comes First “The most important part of my film is the scenario for without a good script, actors are not much use.” Again, do you have some time to polish that script just one more time? This fundamental truth about movies is often (maybe because it’s so obvious) pushed aside, especially when special effects and famous faces seem to engage audiences. Even the big studios are beginning to relearn this powerful lesson (Battleship anyone?) because there’s nothing like a stellar story to send audiences out of the theater in a rush to tell their friends. Aim For a Masterpiece Everytime Don’t Let Success Go To Your Head “What I promise you is that from now on I will work as hard as I can at making movies, and maybe by following this path I will receive an understanding of the true essence of cinema and earn this award.” That’s what Kurosawa said when earning the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Academy. It puts a few things in perspective, doesn’t it? Keep It Simple “A truly good movie is enjoyable too. There’s nothing complicated about it.” Of course, it’s easier to say that when you’re a technically gifted director with a great ear for dialogue, but there’s a kernel of easy truth in it. Kurosawa’s movies usually have a simple core to them that a bit of chaos tends to flow out of. Even when working with Shakespearean texts, his characters’ motivations are usually singular in focus. It also might be a better task to try to deconstruct the human condition in thirty movies instead of just one. Ask a Common Question What Have We Learned There’s a great emphasis on the pursuit of excellence with many of his interviews and statements. With some, that might seem like false humility, but with Kurosawa continually putting out peerless work while promising that he would really do better with the next one, it’s fairly clear that he had a Jiro-like outlook on mastering a craft. So maybe some of this can seem redundant, or worse, out of reach, but the biggest lesson hear is that this kind of talk comes only with a sturdy basis in practice. The words mean nothing if time isn’t spent learning, getting your hands dirty and gaining one more centimeter on perfection. The tirelessness that shows through in all of his movies is Kurosawa’s true instruction manual. But wearing a jacket that says “It is Wonderful to Create!” might not be a bad idea either.

6 Filmmaking Tips From Kathryn Bigelow


Hanging with bikers, vampires and surfing bank robbers, Kathryn Bigelow has made a name for herself chasing after adrenaline. After mixed reviews and a bad box office break for her Soviet submarine flick K-19: The Widowmaker, Bigelow developed one of writer Mark Boal‘s articles into a television series for Fox called The Inside, then chose to work with him to turn his experiences embedded in Baghdad-patrolling bomb squad into The Hurt Locker. The film — which she never took to studios, opting instead for independent financing and freedom — was a marvel, earning a massive amount of critical love and earning both the Oscar for Best Picture and Best Director for Bigelow. She’s a fierce talent who has weathered a decades-long career to emerge as an important modern storyteller who takes on difficult, true-life events and spins them into profound works. So here’s a bit of free film school (for fans and filmmakers alike) from a woman who likes to blow things up for a living. Ignore the Glass Ceiling “If there’s specific resistance to women making movies, I just choose to ignore that as an obstacle for two reasons: I can’t change my gender, and I refuse to stop making movies.” There’s no way to improve upon that statement. Stand The Heat “We started shooting [The Hurt Locker], just because of the nature of actors’ schedules, in July in 2007 in Amman, and Amman has a slight elevation. I had also scouted Kuwait, which at that time of year, is truly punishing. I think the day I was there, it was about 135 degrees. I couldn’t even imagine what 135 degrees could feel like. It sort of feels like you’re standing in front of an overheated car with the hood up, but you can’t get rid of the car; it’s just this blast of hot air, and it’s very punishing. That was Kuwait. Anyway, we were in Jordan, and there was an average temperature of about 115 degrees, and the most challenging aspect was putting that bomb suit on Jeremy [Renner] every day. Jeremy is an extraordinarily talented actor, but you’re asking him in that kind of climate to put on a piece of wardrobe—it wasn’t just wardrobe, but an actual bomb suit—that weighed between 80 and 100 pounds. Every day. You know, spend all day in it. That was really punishing. I was very sensitive to his needs and his oxygen levels, and trying to keep him as comfortable as possible, there’s only so much that can be done. That was probably the most difficult physical, logistical aspect of the shoot.” All of this was in service of getting as great a sense of authenticity as possible. Bigelow also mentions that going to a studio would result (amongst other things) with them probably wanting to shoot in Morocco if they could even see fit to leave the California desert. That might have been an option, but Bigelow wanted something better, especially in hiring Arabs to play Arabs. As a consequence, they had thermometer-busting heat to deal with, and through all that, her concern was for her lead actor. That’s why this tip can also be called “No Complaining.” If Bigelow can risk dehydration, what’s stopping you from filming in your own backyard? Prepare to Risk (and Keep) Your Job Also, be on the lookout for your Director Making Moment – when doing what’s right for the film means potentially doing the impossible and definitely taking a leap of faith. Don’t Hold Back “If you hold a mirror up to society, and you don’t like what you see, you can’t fault the mirror. It’s a mirror. I think that on the eve of the millennium, a point in time only four years from now, the clock is ticking, the same social issues and racial tensions still exist, the environment still needs reexamination so you don’t forget it when the lights come up. Strange Days is provocative. Without revealing too much, I would say that it feels like we are driving toward a highly chaotic, explosive, volatile, Armageddon-like ending. Obviously, the riot footage came out of the L.A. riots. I mean, I was there. I experienced that. The toughest decision was not wanting to shy away from anything, trying to keep the truth of the moment, of the social environment. It’s not that I condone violence. I don’t. It’s an indictment. I would say the film is cautionary, a wake-up call, and that I think is always valuable.” Bigelow has often, of course, also talked in the same terms about The Hurt Locker — finding the intensity of the real-life situation by shooting from Humvee-level and attempting to capture the danger in a grounded way even while working with a fictional framework. We’re also talking about the director who portrayed Osama Bin Laden’s death on screen. She trades in stark reality now, although she’s dealt with violence nearly all her career. There’s More to Filmmaking Than Making the Film “The research [for Zero Dark Thirty] took us more time than filming the whole movie. The facts and figures kept going back and forth. We had people who were hesitant to talk about what they did, although they were all proud of it.” So here’s the bad part. Filmmaking isn’t all getting behind a camera, calling “Action!” and telling an intern to go grab one of those frosted donuts from craft service. Everyone knows that, but it’s also easy to fall into the trap of being story-ready with something that’s no close to being done. As much as it feels like school, research can be the greatest tool in ensuring a script is strong where it needs to be in order to let the character arcs and dialog shine through. In other words, getting the reality of your world wrong (and even invented worlds need a reality) can be a huge distraction when you’re trying to share characters and situations with an audience. Get that right at the script level, and you’ll have a solid foundation to build everything else on. Even if you’re not shooting a true-life story that’s still fresh in people’s minds, you’ll still want to avoid tripping yourself up on clarity and consistency. Find the Story Behind the Big Story What Have We Learned Refusing to fold into easily into the studio system, taking on severe subject matter with grace and intelligence, and finding the humanity even amid larger-than-life scenarios. These are the actions of a filmmaker with tenacity and, if not fearlessness, the bravery to tackle the fear that naturally arises. For those looking to tackle similar subjects, she’s an inspiration, but there are keen lessons here even for those who don’t care to narratively hunt down Osama Bin Laden. First among them: instead of stifling your passion, finding a way to make everything work despite the risk. Second: invest in an air conditioner.

6 Filmmaking Tips From Peter Jackson


We can all hoist accolades on the filmmakers found in this series, but there are few who are as transparent about their process and actively engaging when it comes to including fans on set (at least via video) than Peter Jackson. Not just a minimal-effort chore for marketing, Jackson seems to relish with childlike abandon in making the Making Of videos and taking audiences behind the scenes of movies while they’re being made. Maybe that shouldn’t be surprising for a details-oriented storyteller who has built entire worlds for us to visually visit. But he wasn’t always sitting on top of Middle-Earth. Before The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit, it was more likely you’d catch him with a lawnmower in hand and a bucket of fake blood close by. So here’s a bit of free film school (for fans and filmmakers alike) from someone who fought in the Battle of Helm’s Deep. Filming a Journey is Its Own Journey ” It’s the last movie is the reason you do it, isn’t it? Any time you make a movie, it’s because you want people to see it and enjoy it… Every time you start a film there’s always a degree of excitement because you want to see it [in finished form]. That’s what you’re striving to do. The trilogy [is] all about the third film really. What’s the point of doing any of the others? The two films exist because you’re reaching that third chapter. That’s the one that defines the previous two, and puts them in context. Prior to now, they haven’t had a context. Fellowship was the beginning, Two Towers was the difficult middle chapter that everybody described it as and now you have the third film. Suddenly, everything has a context now. It’s the point of the whole exercise. It has closure too. It has a strong sense of closure. It’s tough for the actors as well because they’re feeling emotional seeing the movie because the movie’s emotional. The movie finishes it off and it sort of represents the ending of all of our journeys. We’ve all become friends on this project. It’s all finishing at the same time, both on screen and off screen. It’s everything I hoped it would be. I hoped it would be sad, that it would capture something of that sadness of the book, but sadness in a way that’s not a downer. It’s just sad but you’re happy that they achieved what they set out to do but there was a price to be paid. ” Seven years is an extreme example, even if it covers three epic-length movies, but this rule applies from Return of the King all the way down to short films. There’s a process in place, and it’s easy to think of it that way, but it’s also a journey with a beginning, middle and end. Hopefully it’s a happy one. Viewing the production process as a journey also reinforces that old idea that who you work with becomes your family. You might get a cake on your birthday at the office, but it’s different when a group of people endeavor through sweat and panic to create something together for themselves. Friendships have the great potential to be forged in a more lasting kind of Summer Camp way, but with tensions riding high, it also means you have to be careful how you treat others on set. And be ready to tear up a bit when it’s all over. There’s a reason wrap parties exist. A Duty to Self-Censorship “[The Lovely Bones is] not a murder film and I wanted kids to be able to go and see it. Film is such a powerful medium. It’s like a weapon and I think you have a duty to self-censor. ‘There are some people who might enjoy watching a 14-year-old girl getting killed, a small minority maybe, but how could you live with yourself in providing that titillation? I wouldn’t want the movie defined by that.” As the Telegraph piece adds, it’s a bit odd to imagine the director of Braindead saying something like that, but either by age or because he viewed those early splat-stick films as “harmless” in their silliness, Jackson recognizes that extreme elements (like the rape and murder of a young girl) can be handled in many different ways depending on the audience you’re looking to reach and the tone you’re looking to shape. You’ll Always Wants to Change a Movie When You Look Back On It But you’ll also want it to stay exactly the same: Know the Physical Limitations of Your Camera “A good example is the way in which, when we did Lord of the Rings, we built miniatures, so anytime you see a piece of architecture or an unreal landscape on Lord of the Rings – whether it’s Mount Doom or Minas Tirith or Helm’s Deep — you’re looking at a miniature. Some of the miniatures are the size of this room. I mean they’re large, and the thing with miniatures is that you’ve got a couple of constraints. One is that you physically, you have a very large camera that you have to get close; if you want to do a shot where the camera’s flying over the rooftops of Minas Tirith, you literally can get the camera so close to the rooftops and sometimes you have to use a periscope lens to get them to be able to drift over the top of the roofs, but if I wanted to fly down between the roofs and go down to the street, I couldn’t because you physically, with a miniature, you couldn’t fit the bulk of the camera into that space. . . so you design the most interesting shots you can.” Jackson goes on to talk about how, with The Hobbit, they used CGI instead of miniatures which meant he could do pretty much anything he wanted (even if that meant flying through someone’s keyhole). This may seem obvious, but knowing intimately those physical constraints can help save time and money during the planning phase, especially if you can work to stretch those limitations without getting yourself into an impossible shot situation. If You Can’t Finish Your Movie, Go Ahead and Finish Your Movie “You’ve got to realize, that when I started doing Bad Taste, it was only a short film. In my mind the enormity of the project was restricted to ten or fifteen minutes, so we started shooting and it just sort of. . . spread. I never, ever dreamt that it would be a feature and I never thought it would until about a year into it. Until then, I hadn’t edited any of the footage – I was just sticking it in tins under my bed – so I took a week off work for editing and put together a 60 minute rough cut only to find it didn’t have an ending. I thought, ‘Christ, there’s nothing I can do, other than just patch on and make a feature.’ It was actually scary at first, making a feature. I thought, ‘It’s impossible, you can’t just make a feature film,’ but then I thought, ‘Why not?’ So I wrote out this ending and we just started shooting again. Not to make this sound so quick though, the film took four years to finish.” If You Can’t Hire Sony or ILM (or WETA), You’ve Got to Do It Yourself What Have We Learned There’s definitely a pioneering spirit to his work, and that might be a bit too “all in” for other filmmakers. After all, most of us probably can’t create a digital effects house from scratch just because we can’t afford Industrial Light and Magic. There’s also a bit of free-wheeling here, made possible by staunch preparation and a sincere passion for the subject matter. Jackson has said he makes movies that he wants to see, the ones he falls in love with as they play in his head, so it’s clear that despite the arduous labor and the time commitment, there’s real love there. Ultimately, it takes a combination like that to make the world believe in your grand scale abilities after only making a few niche flicks far away from Hollywood. Plus, having a lawnmower handy couldn’t hurt.

6 Filmmaking Tips From Quentin Tarantino


Emerging from a nitrate fire in 1963, Quentin Tarantino was fed only exploitation films, spaghetti Westerns and actual spaghetti until he was old enough to thirst for blood. He found his way into the film industry as a PA on a Dolph Lundgren workout video, as a store clerk at Video Archives and by getting encouragement to write a screenplay by the very man who would make a name for himself producing Tarantino’s films. Peter Bogdanovich (and probably many others) think of him as the most influential director of his generation, and he’s got the legendary story to back it up — not to mention line-busting movies like Pulp Fiction, Inglourious Basterds and Django Unchained under his belt. He’s also the kind of name that makes introductions like this useless. So here’s a bit of free film school (for fans and filmmakers alike) from a guy who really loves Hi Diddle Diddle and plans to keep 35mm alive as long as he’s rich enough to do it. Lie Until People Think You Worked With Godard “What happens when you start out acting, you gotta have a resume, and if you ain’t done nothin’, you can’t write ‘Nothing.’ People aren’t gonna pay attention to that so you’ve gotta lie. Alright? I had better luck at it than most because I knew a lot about movies and stuff. I was a fan of Jean-Luc Godard, and he’d just had a movie come out. It was from Cannon back in the 80s or something called King Lear. Woody Allen is in it for a moment, and Molly Ringwald is in it, and I saw it. And, it’s like, there’s no way in hell anyone’s gonna see this movie, so I wrote down under ‘Motion Pictures’ on my resume, ‘King Lear – dir. Jean-Luc Godard w/ Woody Allen, Molly Ringwald.’ I even did that with another movie, too, called Dawn of the Dead, you know, the George Romero zombie movie. Well there was a motorcycle guy in the motorcycle gang who kinda looked like me, so I just said it was.” Tarantino is quick to point out that he had the lies down, providing anecdotes from the set and details from the movies. The King Lear lie eventually seeped into his biography in press notes after Reservoir Dogs, but since he found it funny (and never corrected the mistakes), the lie spread even further. He was eventually listed in Leonard Maltin’s “Movies On TV” as being in the cast of Godard’s film. Sadly, IMDB doesn’t list him in it. Of course, there are a ton of people lying to get work in the movie business, so if you’re going to do it, know what you’re talking about and go with gusto. It might also help to know as much about movies as Tarantino. Good Artists Borrow, But Great Artists? “I steal from every movie ever made.” This may be a key deconstructive criticism for his work, but it might also be that he’s simply more honest than everyone else. If we can’t help but pick bits of inspiration from everything, why not be direct? Why not blend them all together to make something new that looks familiar? Who says a director can’t be more like a DJ? You Might Make Guitar Picks Make the Movie On the Page When asked if Stealers Wheel’s “Stuck in the Middle With You” was what he originally wanted for the torture scene in Reservoir Dogs: “It’s actually in the script. Which I can tell you I’ll never do again, because the record companies read the script and they know that you want that song. I actually got it — actually extremely cheap — but it was like every other song wasn’t written in the script, so we actually got it for a lot cheaper. They know you want it — it’s written in the script. See, I wanted to make films, and the only thing I could get going was on the page. So I put it all in the script. The big shots. The chase is broken down shot for shot. It’s cut in the script. ‘POV through windshield. Mr. Pink off screen.’ I was making the movie on the page, because it was the only way I could make movies. And then, when I would show it to someone I could say, ‘Look, this is what I’m going to do. I’m not going to do this. Just this.’” That’s a cardinal sin in screenwriting classes, but if you’re planning on directing (or if you don’t have to prove to anyone why you should be the director), it sounds like solid advice. Be Impersonally Personal “My movies are painfully personal, but I’m never trying to let you know how personal they are. It’s my job to make it be personal, and also to disguise that so only I or the people who know me know how personal it is. Kill Bill is a very personal movie. It’s not anyone’s business. It’s my job to invest in it and hide it inside of genre. Maybe there are metaphors for things that are going on in my life, or maybe it’s just straight up how it is. But it’s buried in genre, so it’s not a ‘how I grew up to write the novel’ kind of piece. Whatever’s going on with me at the time of writing is going to find its way into the piece. If that doesn’t happen, then what the hell am I doing? So if I’m writing Inglourious Basterds and I’m in love with a girl and we break up, that’s going to find its way into the piece. That pain, the way my aspirations were dashed, that’s going to find its way in there. So I’m not doing a James L. Brooks—I loved how personal Spanglish was, but I thought that where Sofia Coppola got praised for being personal, he got criticized for being personal in the exact same aching way. But that doesn’t interest me, at least not now, to do my little story about my little situation. The more I hide it, the more revealing I can be.” Think Outside the Casting List What Have We Learned Tarantino’s appeal is sort of hidden in plain sight. Yes, it’s easy to love his twisted takes on genre and the beauty of his violent, idiosyncratic characters. But he also represents the movie geek who ascended beyond fandom to become a creator. He is the promise of every cinephile who has even a shred of ambition to write a script or direct. He’s proof that being a huge nerd can pay off in a supreme way. Not just that you can become a filmmaker, but that you can be heralded for doing it exactly the way you want to do it. His existence and dominance proves that it can be done! Like Bigelow and others, he’s avoided the mainstream route while finding mainstream success. That’s something afforded to him (as he’s recognized) because his style was so thoroughly embraced by audiences. He didn’t use Pulp Fiction as a springboard to taking on blockbuster budgets within the studio system. Instead, he saw its success as a continuation of the movies everyone wanted him to make — so he happily kept making them. With intense detail, aggressive focus and just a little bit of lying.

6 Filmmaking Tips From Silent Era Icon Harold Lloyd


An icon of the silent film era, Harold Lloyd first appeared on the silver screen in the short film The Old Monk’s Tale. Its release in February 1913 means this is the 100th anniversary of the start of Lloyd’s movie career. A decade after that not-at-all-illustrious beginning, he would star in Safety Last!, which is almost definitely his most famous film — an unbelievably funny film where a simple store clerk organizes a contest to climb a tall building and ends up having to do it himself. Like Buster Keaton, Lloyd was a master of stunt work, making it look so effortless that audiences could be simultaneously stunned, awed and relieved. Laughter often followed gasps. He was also a director and producer with a unique perspective on the birth of a popular art form. The question is whether his viewpoint can still teach us a few things about the process of filmmaking. I think there is, so here’s a bit of free film school (for fans and filmmakers alike) from a man we’ve known for a hundred years. Comedy is Tension “The more trouble you get a man into, the more comedy you get out of him.” There’s been a tendency among some films (and certainly in the amateur film world) to take it easy on characters. If they get into any trouble at all, they’re whisked away from it too quickly. There’s an ease there that makes everything safe and fatally injures the ability to craft strong humor. The truth is, there’s danger to be found in the synopses of many of the best comedies ever made. In Dr. Strangelove, the world is on the brink of nuclear annihilation with idiots in front of the big red button. In Blazing Saddles, a black sheriff is sent to protect a racist town that’s repeatedly been ransacked and brutalized. In Lloyd’s own Grandma’s Boy, a cowardly young man is tricked into facing a violent criminal in order to prove his courage and win the heart of the woman he loves. Done differently, all of these films could just as easily have been dramas or thrillers. They tackle difficult subject matter, adult situations and life-ending threats. Their characters are in very real danger, and that makes them far, far more funny. Be The Best At What You Do Lloyd got his start playing a character named “Lonesome Luke” who bore a striking resemblance to Charlie Chaplin’s Tramp. He made over 60 shorts featuring the character between 1915 and 1917, but then he did something unexpected. He retired the character, later citing Chaplin’s perfection of the style as his reason for leaving it behind. Instead of coming out the loser in the situation, Lloyd focused on his everyman Glass character and found huge success in the following years. Instead of being thought of as a second-rate Chaplin, he evolved as a film persona and ended up being prolific and wealthy. Plus, you know, he’s remained a movie icon for a century. A Gimmick Creates an Image, But Humanity Creates a Legacy Lloyd once noted that his famous glasses created a notable trademark for only 75 cents. But it took removing them to make him the relatable figure that solidified his career: Create Your Thrill First, Worry About the Rest Later “About using scripts. In Safety Last, prob­a­bly one of our most pop­u­lar films, we did the final scenes of that clock climb first. We didn’t know what we were going to have for the begin­ning of the film. We hadn’t made up the open­ing. After we found that we had, in our opin­ion, a very, very good thrill sequence, some­thing that was going to be pop­u­lar and bring in a few shekels, we went back and fig­ured out what we would do for a begin­ning and worked on up. We tried out the same thing in The Fresh­man.” This probably only works if you’re a towering talent, but there’s something to the truth that crafting the water cooler moment gives you some leeway with the overall feel of the rest of the film. Obviously few audiences now will tolerate an hour of their time wasted simply to get to the jaw-dropping part (we can just YouTube it…), but having a great idea and building a centerpiece to start with aren’t such bad methods. Comedy is Naturalism “The man who tries to be funny is lost. To lose one’s naturalness is always to lose the sympathy of your audience.” There are a lot of things that people mistakenly think are funny, but we can all hopefully recognize that there are few things as un-funny as someone trying hard to get a laugh. In fact, proclaiming that you’re funny may be the easiest way to turn off an audience (unless you’ve already shown that you have the skills). Comedy works either as normal people adjust to an insane situation or insane people invade a normal setting, but that dichotomy has to exist. They magnify one another and create, you guessed it, tension. “The spectacle of a fat man slipping on an icy sidewalk never fails to get a laugh. The same is true of a man attempting to drive a nail and mashing his finger in the process, or a man with his arms full of bundles attempting to keep his hat from blowing off. These things are funny because they have happened to all of us and probably will happen again. They are trying experiences for the individuals involved and we sympathize with them. But we laugh, nevertheless because they are human touches.” Be Able to Do Something Extraordinary With due respect to stunt work by Harvey Parry too. The question is this: if you can’t climb a building, what can you do that’s just as amazing? How can you utilize that in your filmmaking? What Have We Learned Film is a young art. It may not feel that way at times, and the atmosphere of today’s market might seem alien to those who first propelled Lloyd to stardom, but there are a few mainstays that keep the core of the art form looking as it did all those years ago. That one good idea can blossom into a wonderful movie, that hard work and raw talent can spell success, that putting someone beyond the safety of peace and comfort is the best start to building comedy. Imagine that you made something as thrilling as the Clock Scene in Safety Last! was to audiences at the time. Audiences would have almost no choice but to stand up and take notice. That takes becoming the best at something – just as Lloyd did – and dedicating yourself to its further perfection. But don’t climb any skyscrapers without safety gear or anything.

6 Filmmaking Tips From John McTiernan


He’s made some amazing films, he stands as an icon of a lengthy era, but I submit that John McTiernan is still an unfairly maligned filmmaker. He’s relegated by many to a position as merely a mindless action director, and maybe, yeah, Rollerball was tough to stomach, but there’s a reason why Die Hard is still used as the template in thousands of pitch meetings every year. Plus, the guy went to Juilliard (so he’s probably also an incredible dancer). Those who dismiss him do so at their own peril and have clearly never heard the man speak about the craft of filmmaking. He knows a production truck’s worth of practical information and can condense it into lessons that make sense to all of us rubes. So here’s a bit of free film school (for fans and filmmakers alike) from a man who started his studio career by having an alien attack Arnold Schwarzenegger. A Good Idea Needs a Good Script (and Vice Versa) “You see a lot of good ideas or well-written scripts that are bad ideas.” Easier said than done, sure, but think back to the times you’ve returned to the theater lobby irritated by how the movie you just saw squandered a brilliant concept (one that you could have knocked out of the park!). There’s tension there. Movies like that naturally come packaged with the question “How could someone smart enough to come up with that concept not know how to do anything with it?” stapled to their one-sheets. The yang to its yin is the film that’s solid but built on a shaky foundation, and the same grating feeling comes with that ticket price. There are two check marks to earn here: good idea, good execution. That combination is one of the reasons Die Hard is so beloved (and has spawned such a lasting series of films). An everyman fish-out-of-water fighting off witty terrorists with no escape but victory. It wasn’t a well-worn idea at the time, and the storytelling is so tight, and McClane is in such a state of suspended danger (even when he’s not being shot at), that the material remains compelling long after the appeal of the idea itself fades away. And that’s really the bottom line. A good idea gets you the first 10 pages of a script, but where will the next 110 come from? What’s the second good idea, and the third, and the fourth that you can pile on top of the first to make something packed with goodness instead of something laboring under the weight of a single interesting concept? We’re Wasting Our Time with This Filmmaking Tips Series “You can’t tell filmmakers anything, no matter what stage of life they are in. If you could, they wouldn’t be film directors.” Damn, I love this guy. Even if it means I should pack this all in. Maybe for the sake of the column we’ll call this one “You’ve Got to Learn A Lot On Your Own Through Failure.” Yeah, that sounds good. Of course, he’s also given this advice: “It’s the same thing of how you get to Carnegie Hall: practice, practice, practice. Also, I’d say get a hold of a video camera and just shoot as much as you can, of anything. If you have a script, get a couple actors together and shoot two pages from the script, then edit the footage on a really basic video editing program. It takes as long to develop a prose style on film as it does a prose style in writing, so it’s crucial to practice whenever and however you can.” Think of Camera Movement as Music Allow Yourself to Discover a Character Along the Way And to let your actors help with that construction beyond the writing. From our Commentary Commentary entry on Die Hard: “In the script, John McClane is a tough-as-nails New York cop, but McTiernan and Bruce Willis didn’t really have the character sorted out until about halfway through shooting. It was then they figured out this was a guy who didn’t like himself very much, but who’s doing the best he could. The little moment of McClane banging his head against the door frame after fighting with Holly was a reshoot done after the character was figured out.” That is, hopefully you have the money for reshoots if they’re needed. Be Ready to Lose Weight and Hate Life “The biggest disconnect between what the studio was trying to enforce for the action sequences and what McTiernan wanted to do himself, is the opening siege on the camp, which was mostly constructed by his second unit team and is frightfully boring. Gone are McTiernan’s fluid, subjective shots, and in their place are flat plates of things exploding and people firing guns. At the very beginning of the DVD commentary track, McTiernan admits that the production was, ‘terrifying in a lot of ways.’ (And not just because everyone got really sick – in one sequence Arnold performs while an IV drip is sticking out of his arm, just off camera. McTiernan himself lost 25 pounds, just from not eating.) Elsewhere on the same DVD, Carl Weathers describes McTiernan on set: ‘I remember a lot of times seeing John with his head in his hands, like ‘What the hell have I gotten myself into?’” What Have We Learned First of all, not to underestimate the intelligence of action directors. Second of all, that a filmmaker career sometimes shapes up in the most illogical way possible. McTiernan had very little knowledge of how to shoot action when he made Predator, but he knew he wanted to imbue the film with a new sense of motion and editing that had people puzzled. The Juilliard-attending, AFI graduate became an icon of action filmmaking — a surprising twist of fate — specifically because he wanted to do something different. You can’t be a pioneer in a field by maintaining the status quo. His career also shows that there are sacrifices to be made, that working with the studio system can be a grueling nightmare, and that having a great idea isn’t good enough. You have to push beyond it, build on it, and then make something that’s more than its logline.

6 Filmmaking Tips From Ang Lee


Coming off of his second Oscar win for Best Director, Ang Lee is as fierce a filmmaking force as ever. But even if his name comes with a sheen of prestige, it doesn’t change a broad range of topics and tones that he’s been able to capture on screen. This is the man who made the Civil War-era Ride with the Devil and contemporary dramedy Eat Drink Man Woman. Not to mention Brokeback Mountain right after Hulk. The man’s versatile. So here’s a bit of free film school (for fans and filmmakers alike) from the Crouching Tiger From Taiwan. Make What You Don’t Know “I did a women’s movie, and I’m not a woman. I did a gay movie, and I’m not gay. I learned as I went along.” Imagine that. You can step outside your own experiences and make something poetic and meaningful. Or absurd and entertaining — whatever you’re aiming for. Of course, the last part of Lee’s statement is the most important there. You cannot simply be a storyteller in sheep’s clothing; you have to do enough to understand the points of view that you’re attempting to present. Otherwise, they’ll ring hollow, and you might as well stick to what you know. Ultimately, the real lesson is to make what you don’t know yet. Prepare to Immediately Regret Your Decisions “Kid, water, big special effects, animals – and they have to be in a small boat on water. It seemed to be a filmmaker’s every nightmare. I thought it was difficult and challenging and I got geared up and decided ‘I’ll be the one to do this’, but once I got into it I thought it was a dumb idea to have picked it up.” Challenges are supposed to be scary. In that interview, Lee details a bit more about the challenges facing him when making Life of Pi, particularly the mountain of filming the unfilmable and adding the difficulty of 3D. This is probably the only practical lesson here, but it’s a big one. Think of how many script and filmmaking contests are out there, think about how many you’ve entered, think about the time and money that gets spent trying to win. Now think about what these contests are actually offering as a prize. That’s not to say that anything less than full funding of your winning script is a waste of time, but it’s paramount to weigh the reward against the cost. Pay Attention to the Non-Obvious Chance at the Big Leagues “How can you resist working with Emma Thompson? In [Sense and Sensibility] I didn’t think I did anything new for myself as a filmmaker, but I was bringing myself up to a new level. For an eastern director, it was the first significant western movie. Sense and Sensibility scared me because I had to prove I can endure a studio production, I can direct English language, I can work with a movie star, and so on.” Be honest. If you were offered a period piece based on a classic novel for an Oscar-winning actress who’d most recently appeared in an Arnold Schwarzenegger comedy and who was getting her first screenplay made, would you think for a second that you were about to launch to super stardom? Probably not. But that’s the movie that really changed the game for Lee (while scoring 7 Oscar nominations). The key is that there are opportunities that might not seem like launch pads even if they are ready to send the right person into orbit. Keep your eyes peeled. Let Emotions Be Your Guide “There is more than one way to make movies. To me it has to be led by emotion. That’s the only thing I could trust when making a movie. Emotions serve characters’ purposes. That is their motivation. Or at least it’s my safety net. The times you just don’t know what to do, every day people are asking you hundreds of questions: what should we do about this? The that? If we can’t do this, what about that? You have to have something centered around you, and to me, that’s always emotion. I’m an emotional person; maybe I rely on it. Maybe I’m melodramatic, I don’t know.” What Have We Learned For the diversity, there are also some common kernels and themes that flow between the projects that Lee chooses to do. It’s kind of interesting to think about an alternative universe where Lee ended his career with Hulk, but thankfully he decided to get over his weariness by making something more intimate. Had he not done so, had he not continued on with Brokeback Mountain, he probably would have gone on to live comfortably as a professor somewhere without an Academy Award to his name. His lessons here are challenging because they demand a certain amount of attention being paid to the unfulfilled possibilities of storytelling. Just as Lee sees a common Western-set love story in a movie many regard as controversial, he has also been able to see different routes to success, and he’s taken them not just to get ahead, but also because of their inherent value. What that all amounts to is seeing something that’s hidden or, even more difficult, seeing something that hasn’t even come into focus yet. It’s about anticipating qualities in stories that others don’t readily recognize, and being able to bring them to the surface in a way that makes everyone catch on.

7 Filmmaking Tips from Danny Boyle


So far one of the highlights of SXSW was the panel featuring director Danny Boyle. The enthusiasm he shared with us about the event was evident during his Q&A. Even when the nifty “Danny Boyle’s Filmography” montage Fox Searchlight cut together was playing we saw Boyle dancing to it. He was happy to be there, and so were we. While the Slumdog Millionaire director was there to promote Trance, Boyle discussed many of his films, and the lessons he learned from them. Unfortunately he didn’t have time to reminisce about all his movies, but what the director of Trance did talk about was noteworthy. That’s why we took notes: Become a Great Filmmaker By Showing Interest in Priesthood “There are similarities [between a director and a priest]. There’s directing in priesthood and pouncing around. There are a number of directors who were going to be priests, like, Martin Scorsese and John Woo. Confessing your sins with movies is nice. You go to these dark places and access your darker side.” Study Actors “Theater is a much easier place to access, and you learn skills there. I learned how to deal with actors and the secrets. In the new film, Trance, Rosario Dawson says, ’5% of the population is extremely suggestible.’ They use techniques to find the 5%, and they’re often actors who want to change and do things that change them. I think you get that with an actor: wanting to experience something as an actor and as a storyteller. You have to trust your actor be a storyteller. Most people go to the cinema to see the actors.” Your First Movie Has a Magic You Might Not Get Back “Yeah, I think there’s something wonderful about your first time. Film is so technical. There’s so many elements that are manipulative, which you construct specifically to produce an effect. There’s a worry you’ll lose the innocence of your first try. Lie to Financiers and Win an Oscar “There’s a perversity in there that’s delicious. We used Slumdog‘s impact to make a film we wanted to make. Nobody was going to make [127 Hours] because it’s a guy alone for six days and cuts his arm off. You lie to them, ‘Yeah, it’s an action movie with one guy!’. [For Slumdog] We didn’t tell them a third of it was going to be in Hindi. Sure, some kids get their eyes taken out, but it’s like Amelie crossed with Trainspotting! You’ll say anything to get your film made. “Too MTV” Isn’t a Bad Thing “I was watching The Big Chill on the way over here, and those were bold choices. The Doors and Ride of the Valkyries in Apocalypse Now…I mean this whole realistic world is now being shown through this prism. When we started with Shallow Grave and Trainspotting we did that, but we were attacked as being ‘too MTV.’ They said they were like music videos. I thought it was a compliment at the time. People are living their life like that. I see my life like pop music, singing to myself and seeing it here and there.” The Power of Music “My coming of age was puck. In 1978 I was 20, and that was an amazing time for me. 15 years later there was rave culture in Britian, and I was just about old enough to go enjoy that. I was 35, around when I started making films. Although the book ["Trainspotting"] is about drugs, the film is about dance culture. We did that unapolgetically. We wanted to make a drug movie you could watch, since most are so depressing. Maybe someone does heroin, throws up, and sits in a corner for 10 hours, but that’s not cinematic. The drug does destroy people in the film, but the rhythm of the film can be expressed with a different tempo. That’s why the music in Trainspotting…there’s a hidden path from pop to electronic down music and then to Brit pop.” Movies Should Assault “I love energy in movies. I want my films to mesmerize people. I used to get that with Nic Roeg films, where I’m pinned by the characters and there’s no oxygen…I want the rabbit in the headlights. We don’t go to a dark room to discuss a film, but feel it and experience it. If it’s a dumb action movie, you may not want to. Depends on the context. When you’ve paid 12 dollars, I want you to be assaulted by the film. I want the film to assault you.” A Few Other Tidbits From Boyle “In the films we make, we try to change genre so you don’t go in, ‘I know how to do this.’ I’ve done that before, and it’s not good for you. You should try to work it out.” “The risk taking you shouldn’t do is what you should do, but you should cover your back. Those risks make your films standout.” “I was never a fan of zombie movies. I never thought we were making one [with 28 Days Later], but that’s what everyone calls it. It’s gone on to kick off a renewal of interest, including a TV show we have no rights for.” “When I go to a movie I’m happy to let myself be changed by the experience.” “I have a terrible temper. There were a few moments on The Olympics where I was vile, which was surprising. In a huge, corporate thing like that, you have to defend your patch.” When it came to turning down knighthood, Boyle said, “Just wasn’t my cup of tea, really. I have no interest in that.”

6 Filmmaking Tips From Harmony Korine


That fuzzy guy on the end there came up in filmmaking with Kids when he was just a kid. With that, and with his following projects, Harmony Korine has awed a rotating audience while confounding all the people that his audience convinces to please, please, please just watch for fifteen minutes. He’s the fresh voice most people claim they want in filmmaking, but he doesn’t fit in with any grand tradition. It’s not like others have made Korine-style movies while orbiting around a shared stylistic vision. At least, if they have, they haven’t reached his stature. Since there won’t be a Weird Wave that grows out of what he’s doing, he remains a vibrant loner and a wonderful army of one. So here’s a bit of free film school (for fans and filmmakers alike) from Mister Lonely. Don’t Worry About “The Point” From an excellent conversation about Trash Humpers over at The A.V. Club: The A.V. Club: During the Q&A after the Toronto première of Trash Humpers, someone in the audience asked “What was the point of that movie?” You responded, “What is the point of your hat?” Do you feel any need to explain the film? Harmony Korine: I don’t know. I’ve always got questions like that with all the films I make. I never feel like there’s any one point to the film, to anything, to any of the movies I’ve made. This one, it’s everything and nothing. It’s like, “What’s the point to life?” “What’s the narrative thread in a home movie?” It’s a collection of moments. Maybe it’s not even a real movie in the traditional sense. Maybe it’s something else. It’s its own thing. It’s hard to say, exactly. I don’t really know what’s the point. It’s like, what’s the point of a photograph? Sometimes I can try and make something up, but I think it’s better just to… it’s an experience. AVC: Christo, the artist who did The Gates in New York, would tell people who asked the point of his installations, “There is no point. It’s art.” HK: Yeah, I don’t understand what everybody’s obsession with “the point” was. Everything has to have some kind of a point for people to breathe easy. What’s the point of life? I have no clue, but sometimes there are things that just attract us and pull us in a certain way. Like you say, it’s art. It is what it is. Find Beauty in the Everyday “…I have always loved street lights and especially the ones around [Nashville]. They have a theatrical element, but I don’t know if they are more like stages or if it’s a natural spotlight, a natural suburban Broadway. You know what I mean? Yeah. These characters are drawn to that light. . . I would never speak for the characters in the movie, but I feel like, I assume that’s what they feel. I’ve always liked street lights, and I’ve always photographed them. I probably have a collection of two to three thousand photographs of them, just around the city, mainly at night.” That stapler on your desk. A log in front of a fire. A lamp. A dog scratching his ear. The coffee table. There’s is something in all of them that you’re not seeing, that you might see if you look the right way. What Korine is pointing out here is the simple, yet insanely effective tool of learning to see beyond the surface. It can provide all kinds of elements for your storytelling, and it’s a skill we’re taught in elementary school. Although the recursive tip — to turn the exceptional into the mundane — might be equally as useful. f You Don’t Fit In, Then Don’t Fit In ” I still feel [alienated]. I just haven’t let myself get to a place where I’ve felt a part of any kind of a community, so I’ve always stayed outside of it. I do have friends who make movies, but for the most part I never really wanted to feel like I was part of an industry. My knock with filmmaking is the whole bureaucracy around it, so in some ways staying outside of it is easier for me. I went through this really horrible phase where I didn’t know what I was doing and I wasn’t sure if I wanted to make movies anymore. For a few months, I spent time with this small cult of fishermen known as the Malingerers. It was a group I met in Panama who were searching for this fish called the Malingerer fish, which was supposed to be a golden fish that had these three dots on the side. The story goes that if you press the three dots in a certain way, it sounds like a toy piano. . . In the beginning it was interesting to watch these guys, and I started to believe this fish existed. But I became disenchanted by the whole thing, and one day I got into an argument with one of the leaders, and his wife said, ‘You don’t believe anymore. It’s time for you to go.’ And I said, ‘You’re right,’ and that’s kind of when I started feeling like maybe I could make movies again. But it had taken me a good six or seven years away from it.” The other side of this coin is being realistic about expectations. If you don’t fit in the mainstream, you shouldn’t expect mainstream popularity or success. Korine’s career has been marked by his quirkiness, but there’s no denying that his movies aren’t for everyone, and that they’ve been vilified as often as they’ve been praised. Some self-awareness is key here. Fortunately, if you don’t like the cut of the red tape, there are now more ways to hack through it and blaze a trail on your own to the audience that will appreciate what you’re doing (even if an executive never does). Let Yourself Dream “Ever since I was little, I would just make stories up in my mind. It was based on people I saw in the street or someone I would talk to or I would hear a specific voice. I’ve never actually directed anything I haven’t made up. I’ve never adapted anything. It usually comes from somewhere… I let myself dream.” What Have We Learned It’s actually pretty unclear. A lot of this advice can be dangerous, and it’s important to remember that Korine is the exception to the rule, so following his path might not be the best call (or even possible for that matter). These 6 entries could also yield some incredibly bad outsider art. Of course, no one would go to Korine for advice about how to make it in the corporate filmmaking system, so there’s that. Plus, his advice has a lot of storytelling joy to share as well as some reminders about not taking the status quo for granted.

6 Filmmaking Tips From Dennis Hopper


Dennis Hopper is fucking awesome. I use the present tense there because the man, though gone, is eternal. At least when it comes to his art. He definitely had some experiences. Several that no one could be proud of, but he also came to represent a free wheeling sensibility that came with defying the establishment while learning from it. The man’s resume remains formidable (and it will only continue to grow with more “Very Special Thanks” entries). So instead of listing his best movies, take your pick. You can probably name 10 you love just off the top of your head. There are a ton of them. So here’s a bit of free film school (for fans and filmmakers alike) from a real easy rider. Be Prepared to Clean Some Toilets From the “Interview Magazine” interview: “HOPPER: I was. I was at the Old Globe Theatre. When I was at Nelson-Atkins back in Kansas City, we’dbe there for five hours on a Saturday, but we would have an hour to go around the museum. They had a theater in the museum, and during my hour, I used to go in and sketch the actors. So I startedacting when we moved to San Diego at the Old GlobeTheatre in Balboa Park. The first play I did was [Charles] Dickens’s A Christmas Carol. I played the urchin who comes at the beginning asking for alms and gets run out. At the end, he gets a turkey. So I had to sit from the first act to the last act. [laughs] But I got through it. And then I started playing Shakespeare during the summer. They’d bring over English directors because the Old Globe in San Diego was a duplicate of Shakespeare’s Globe in England, which had burned down. The one in San Diego wasa duplicate they made for the California Pacific International Exposition in 1935. But I worked with some really good English directors. I worked with these guys from time to time during the summer, because you really had to be in college to do that, but there were a lot of parts that they let me play. BRANT: What do you consider your big break in terms of getting parts? HOPPER: Well, when I was about 16, I got a job working as an apprentice at La Jolla Playhouse. I worked for a guy named Hank Milam. Hank lived in the guesthouse at Vincent and Mary Price’s house near Beverly Hills—he did interior design. Hank was my boss, so I cleaned toilets, cleaned dressing rooms. And Vincent Price had actors over all the time, so I’d pick them up and drive them. But [actress] Susan Kohner, [agent] Paul Kohner’s daughter, was the other apprentice. We were around the same age, and they’d let us do backstage stuff until finally they gave me a couple of walk-ons.” Granted, a few things have changed since then. In fact, the filmmaking world is different today directly because of Hopper and his work outside of the system. So maybe you won’t actually have to clean toilets, but if you get a chance to labor while being paid in access to wisdom and aid, it’s a good idea to get your latex gloves on and get to work. Make a Pitch for Posterity If there’s one movie that Hopper will be connected with forever, what is it? That’s easy. “Easy Rider is the film by which he must stand or fall. He says it is his masterpiece, his pitch for posterity, and it is his, all his. He wrote, directed, acted in it. No matter that the writing credits read Peter Fonda, Dennis Hopper, Terry Southern – ‘Terry Southern never wrote one fucking word of Easy Rider. Only the title Easy Rider came from him. He broke his hip; he couldn’t write. I used his office and I dictated the whole fucking thing in 10 days.’ Surely Peter Fonda made some contribution? ‘He did. He had a name. He had a credit card. And he loved motorcycles [Hopper hates them]. But Jack Nicholson was the one who put the deal together, he went in and told them there was no way they could lose money on a motorbike picture.’” That’s Lynn Barber speaking with Hopper for a fantastic feature that looks back on his insane personal behavior and his artistic attempts at immortality. It’s fascinating to know how self-aware he was, especially when it came to the largeness of the undertaking, but there’s a lot to learn from his active role in striving for a lasting cultural impact. For one, maybe it’s important to strive for a lasting cultural impact. For two, maybe we should remember that Hopper had already been in the industry for 14 years when Easy Rider was released. That didn’t make its creation all that easy considering, but there’s no doubt that he had connections, talent, experience and street smarts to guide him. Make something that will outlive you, but don’t worry if that doesn’t happen the first time you check the gate. Keep Working “Work is fun to me. All those years of being an actor and a director and not being able to get a job – two weeks is too long to not know what my next job will be.” Obviously this is a tough one if no one is beating down your door to give you big, fat contracts, but the sentiment is the same. Keep working. Don’t stop just because you’ve finished one project. Have your next one lined up as you try to sell the one you’ve just wrapped. Jot down ideas every day so that when you get done celebrating your last day in the editing bay, you can put that rest to good use. Show Your Time “Would I make [Easy Rider] now? It was about then. And I think a filmmaker’s responsibility is to show his time. Brueghel, I think, was the first artist to show his time.” A knowledge of the Dutch masters also helps (although it’s unclear which Brueghel he meant). Jokes aside, Hopper acted, wrote, directed and painted. How much do you think each informed the other? What Have We Learned The simplest things can be become very difficult. Filmmaking is about details (even when that detail is how much of a cigarette has been smoked), but it’s also about experimenting with big ideas and dangerous freedoms. Not the least of which is telling your own story or the story of your generation. So maybe the two parallel ideas here are 1) to aim high and 2) to remember the small stuff. And to never slow down. And to grow a sweet mustache. And to see a motorcycle movie as a political statement. And to be okay living and working as an outsider.

6 Filmmaking Tips From Shane Black


If people really pay attention to directors, a lot of them found out who Shane Black is this weekend. Iron Man 3, his second best film as a director, sees him transitioning to a phase that he’s lived in before as a screenwriter. He found success in his twenties after acting in Predator and selling his script for Lethal Weapon, following-up with even more stories about kidnapping and Christmas. He’s brash, great with a comeback, and known for inserting fourth wall-breaking jabs into his scene descriptions, but he’s also been on both sides of the studio coin. That’s given him a front row seat for great success, backlash, a re-emergence that didn’t strike it big, and now another resurrection. It was clear before that he had talent, and now he’s got wisdom. So here’s a bit of free film school (for fans and filmmakers alike) from a man who knows what you find when you look up “idiot” in the dictionary. Writing a Script Doesn’t Make Writing Easier “Here’s what I didn’t know when I was starting out that I now know. . . I thought when you were starting out it was really hard to write because you hadn’t broken in yet, you hadn’t really hit your stride yet. What I found out paradoxically is that the next script you write doesn’t get easier because you wrote one before. . . each one gets harder by a factor of 10.” This seems a bit counter-intuitive, and might not be echoed by all writers, but it might have a corollary in marathons. Running one doesn’t make the next one easier — it doesn’t subtract miles from future races, and you still have to train to keep up the performance (or get better). On the other hand, presumably finishing a script lets you know what it feels like to have finished a script, creates a sense of satisfaction there and helps sharpen the tools you need to train for the next one (even if it’s not really easier). You Are Not Immune to Peer Pressure “Interestingly, out of the blue, I decided to apply for the Academy Of Motion Pictures. I had done at that time The Long Kiss Goodnight, Lethal Weapon, pictures with Schwarzenegger, Bruce Willis, Sam Jackson, and they turned me down for membership. They sent me a letter saying maybe next time, when you have more credits, we’ll consider you. Then I looked at the criteria for being a member – you must have at least two works of substantive, literary merit that have been produced on screen. So according to the Academy, I did not even have two pieces of substantive work. I thought, ‘Man, people must hate me if they are not going to let me in their club after I’ve made six movies.’ So it was strange. It was almost as if writing movies had given people one more reason to hate me, or dislike or resent me. And I just want to tell a story. . . I think in the back of my mind I was thinking, ‘I’m going to show them, I’m not going to write an action picture. I’m going to show them I can do more.’ And that’s ridiculous; I should have written what I felt like writing. But I wanted to do a drama or something that would convince people that I’m truly serious about what I want to do. So the writer’s block was me for a couple of years trying to think of something and trying to write a romantic comedy a la James Brooks, who was my mentor at the time. One day Brooks came to me and we sat down to lunch. He had read some pages and he said, ’You know, really like what you are doing but it’s wandering.’ I said, ‘I know, I feel like I’m sort of at sea, I’m not on quite familiar ground.’ He said maybe it was because I was trying to take too much of a leap from action pictures when part of the charm of my work was melancholy and edginess. Brooks said he always pictured me doing something like Chinatown which was character driven with a lot of twists. I thought, ‘Okay, that’s what I’ve been doing wrong.’ What I really wanted to write was a murder mystery with romance in it. The edge was coming off this romantic piece and rendering it vicious and distasteful, and it wasn’t funny.” Black goes on to talk about feeling like a fraud because of how many people dismissed the enormity of his success. He started to imagine that they were right, that he was paid too much for his previous scripts, and that thought combined with a search for legitimacy that ultimately got him stuck in the writer’s block mud. The murder mystery that pulled him out was, of course, Kiss Kiss Bang Bang. Talent Changes Your Odds 99% Preparation “I’d love to say that [directing] was incredibly difficult and murderous, but it was a snap. If you’ve done your preparation, including storyboarding the more complex sequences, ultimately your only job on the set is to execute your preparation and be flexible enough and social enough to go beyond it in places and hopefully get something better, and change things according to the order of the day, like if the actors come up with something better. I would watch movies all night to prepare. I can almost give you shot-for-shot on Panic Room just because I watched it so many times. I would go to the set for as long as I could to just sit there, and look around, then you have all the possibilities in your head. Then you take your cinematographer with you, and you ask him about all the possibilities. So when you walk in, you’ve already covered all your bases, even if you want to throw it all out and do something different.” Twist a Cliche and Find Gold Clearly there was more to the success of Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, but Val Kilmer’s Gay Perry was a big part of its overall cleverness. In twisting the stereotype, Black proved that he 1) understood the standard but 2) was ahead of the curve. “Having a character be gay in a movie just isn’t shocking anymore. Will and Grace and My Best Friend’s Wedding have softened us up with regards to the funny gay character. We still haven’t seen the heroic gay character that, when the chips are down, kicks down the door, shoots everybody and saves your butt.” Movies Aren’t Climax, Climax, Climax What Have We Learned Because of the fine folks at the Austin Film Festival, I was lucky enough to spend some time with Black shortly after Kiss Kiss Bang Bang hit theaters, and the main thing I remember was how level-headed he was. He exhibited that paper thin difference between cynicism and realism. A grounded man who wrote imaginative stories. His interviews echo that, and it’s exciting to see a filmmaker so honest about his own wart-covered process. Black is a great writer/director who owns a bucket of brass tacks, so the honesty here isn’t surprising.The ultimate difficulty about writing is that it’s a lonely process that can sometimes be judged by public execution. So, yes, there are some tips here that aren’t exactly pick-me-ups, but kind words aren’t going to hone talent into something sharper. Having someone point out the pitfalls is far better than pretending you have a balloon to float over them. So get excited about completing your script, and don’t freak out too much when you find a blank page waiting for you back at your desk.

Tips for Making Your First Film Better


Whether you’re a student or hobbyist, there are some common mistakes made in a filmmaker’s first film. Many students attempt to do too much with an extremely low-budget, short film. Worse yet, students will often make their first film too long. The same concepts that apply to feature screenplay writing apply to first film projects. The exception is with experimental film, where no rules apply except the creativity of the creator. Most beginners are assigned to tell a story by their instructor or are attempting a short story-telling film. Lets focus on the short story-telling film project. Short films use the same structure and story telling techniques as longer films. The difference is that turning points and elements such as rising and falling action are quicker. Turning points are when the direction of the story makes a sudden turn. If one exercises the concepts of the popular instructor and writer, Syd Field, then turning points for a five minute film would be at approximately two minutes and four minutes. Most script analysts consider a feature length film’s entire exposition to take up only about two to four inches of a script page spread throughout the script (approximately 25 seconds). Therefore, for a five minute film, there would only be about five seconds worth of exposition. This is a critical factor in student films and is a common mistake. Student films are often filled with exposition such as characters making long speeches about what previously has happened to them. For that reason, students are wise to consider making their first film with no dialogue. Then they might not encounter the problems associated with exposition. Use of exposition is one of the more difficult problems of making films. Students should first strive to express their story in one short sentence. This is also true for veteran screenplay writers preparing their pitch. Most often that sentence takes hours or days to write. It is an important step, as executives won’t listen to you after hearing that sentence if they don’t like it. Next, write a paragraph describing your story. One of the greatest problems is that students often don’t have a clear protagonist or antagonist. These are the same problems that experienced screenplay writers have. Writing is always a continual challenge. Let’s look at shooting. The single most common problem with cinematography on student projects is camera movement. Of course exposure and composition are critical, but badly motivated camera movement is common in student films. Save complex camera moves for later when you’re much more experienced and know when to use them properly. Any camera movement must be unobtrusive and motivated by the action. I’m not suggesting that all shots should be static. Instead, limit your movement and make sure it doesn’t call attention to itself unless it is intentional. No single element (camera, music, acting) should stand out on its own. Conveying your story in a seamless and unobtrusive manner so the audience becomes one with the story is crucial to your filmmaking success. This is just a brief look at common problems in student films. There are often many other mistakes. Sound out of sync with the speaker and distorted sound often destroy a student film. I’d really like to emphasis again the importance of storytelling. If the student has a clear handle on his story, then the student takes the rest of the process very seriously and does a good first film. It’s also important to choose the most experienced crew possible. Don’t simply work with friends. Find another student who has worked as cameraman on several other student films so you have someone with experience. Filmmaking is expensive. Be very selective when picking your crew and actors. Always try to surround yourself with crewmembers who are more experienced than yourself. Hopefully they will help save you on this first film project. If you are shooting on film, then spend a lot of time with your lab manager getting advice and help. Sometimes labs have special student rates. The more time you spend in preparation prior to shooting, the more successful your project will be. Producing is planning and preparation. Get your script critiqued by your instructor or an experienced filmmaker. Put your cameraman together with the film lab manager and discuss what film stock you would be best using. Create storyboards so you and your cameraman have carefully visualized the shooting in advance. Visit your locations with your cameraman and other pertinent crewmembers in advance. Be aware of any power problems that your gaffer might experience. Note whether or not there are any loud ambient sounds at the locations such as it being in the landing pattern for LAX Airport. If your using individuals homes or offices, make sure your arrangements for using them are in writing and the agreement is very clear. Also, make sure you have releases from all the talent or extras that appear on camera. Take extra release forms with you on the shooting day just in case you have to use someone unexpectedly as an extra or cast member. Create breakdown sheets for each scene that includes all the requirements such a personal, props, crew, cast and location needs. Complete a shooting schedule and some alternative schedules in case of rainy days or sick crew or cast. If possible, create a production board for your scheduling. Most of all expect the unexpected and try to anticipate problems. Spending several days with your actors rehearsing and blocking their movement is invaluable. If you can bring some key crewmembers to rehearsal such as your cameraman and editor, then it may be possible to discover some unforeseen problems. It’s far better to discover them in a rehearsal hall than on location. These same suggestions apply to feature length professional motion pictures and not just to the beginner. For instance, on shooting days you might want to contact your actors or crewmembers in the early morning to insure they are awake and on the way to the location. Student filmmakers will likely have a voluntary crew. You need to provide superb leadership when you have a free crew. I’ve known students who decided to behave very autocratically to their crew only to have them resign from their free job leaving the beginning filmmaker in tears. Your job is to motivate the crewmembers in a friendly manner and exercise much patience. These are only a few suggestions for successful first short films. If your film is successful and you enter it into student film competitions and win some awards, then you are very fortunate. Most student films don’t qualify for any competitions. Remember, short films are your first calling card for your potential film career. Future employers at production companies often pay more attention to these films than anything else on your resume. It is truly worth the effort to do an excellent short film if you’re pursuing a career as a filmmaker. --Mickey Grant

Filmmaking tips from a legend


THREE RULES 1) Write and direct original screenplays 2) Make them with the most modern technology available 3) Self-finance them EOSHD takes a look at Francis Ford Coppola’s approach to filmmaking with the help of the 99% Francis Ford Coppola (Apocalypse Now, The Godfather) did this (very candid) interview with the 99% a blog by Behance (not related to the anti-capitialst movement)…Rather than just re-print it all I going to give you what I think are the most crucial bits of advice and my thoughts on it… Filmmaking can never be mastered “I just finished a film a few days ago, and I came home and said I learned so much today. So if I can come home from working on a little film after doing it for 45 years and say that – that shows something about the cinema” A director is constantly coming up against new techniques and technologies. Coppola has a 3D section in his latest movie which is inspired by a drunken dream. To stay on top of the new stuff is vital. The world is a dynamically shifting place. Before you master something it will change. Coppola says he refused to teach a Master Class because he believes he’s still a student. I believe the best way to learn filmmaking is to just do it. Risks are essential “Even in the early days of the movies, they didn’t know how to make movies. They had an image and it moved and the audience loved it. You saw a train coming into the station, and just to see motion was beautiful. The cinema language happened by experimentation – by people not knowing what to do. But unfortunately, after 15-20 years, it became a commercial industry. People made money in the cinema, and then they began to say to the pioneers, “Don’t experiment. We want to make money. We don’t want to take chances.” An essential element of any art is risk. If you don’t take a risk then how are you going to make something really beautiful, that hasn’t been seen before? I always like to say that cinema without risk is like having no sex and expecting to have a baby. You have to take a risk. “I was never afraid of risks. I always had a good philosophy about risks. The only risk is to waste your life, so that when you die, you say, Oh, I wish I had done this.” I’ve written about why creativity is such a risk before at EOSHD, you can read that article here. Commercial filmmaking is safe as it needs to turn a profit. The most artistic filmmaking comes from the people who take a gamble. It is a gamble not just on the gear but mainly on people – actors, writers, composers, producers, marketing teams – and on ideas. That gamble costs money. Usually your money! At the end of your career is it best to have a load of zeros on the end of your bank balance or to have lived and to have made great films? Don’t rely on memory, put your ideas on paper “One of the most important tools that a filmmaker has are his/her notes. [Date them, put the location on]“ One way to do this is to turn your notes into a blog. Many people are afraid of exposing ‘their work in progress’, preferring only to show stuff when it is ready. Be candid – the work in progress says as much as the final film. If you don’t begin by imitating, you won’t begin at all “Don’t worry about whether it’s appropriate to borrow or to take or do something like someone you admire – because that’s only the first step and you have to take the first step.” Ideas are never formed in a vacuum. They are the product of what goes on between minds, between communities, between countries. It helps to borrow (stealing is too strong a word – you’re not depriving the original artist of their work) then develop the idea in your own way. Over time you can create something genuinely new and original from it. All the great artists have done and where this is clearest is in music. The Beatles stole from 50′s R&B and that turned out pretty well. Oasis stole from The Beatles and helped form the Brit Pop scene in the 90′s which was genuinely new. Don’t rely on selling your art directly “Try to disconnect the idea of cinema with the idea of making a living and money. Because there are ways around it. You work another job and get up at five in the morning and write your script. Maybe the students are right. They should be able to download music and movies. I’m going to be shot for saying this. But who said art has to cost money? And therefore, who says artists have to make money?” The idea of people paying to watch films is outdated. In 5 years people will not pay to watch your film, they will not pay to listen to your music. Instead the new distribution model is crowd funding – where you give someone a sense of ownership of the film along with merchandise and a credit as a producer, or working a day job. This could be anything from an office job, to writing for a magazine, or blogging, or teaching workshops on filmmaking, or being paid to produce content and films for businesses. Where I disagree with a lot of people here however is about the purity of an artist’s hand. Don’t use your hand to promote a product. Use your reputation or personal endorsements but not your hand. If Coppola had shot and directed a glossy ad like the one above, it would devalue his hand as an artist. His hand should be used for art, not selling. Listen but filter intently “A screenplay has to be like a haiku [Japanese poetic form]. It has to be very concise and very clear, minimal. [But when you come to shoot it] you’re going to listen to the actors because they have great ideas. You’re going to listen to the cinematographer because he will have a great idea. You must never be the kind of director, I think maybe I was when I was 18, “No, no, no, I know best.” That’s not good. You can make the decision that you feel is best, but listen to everyone, because cinema is collaboration. I always like to say that collaboration is the sex of art because you take from everyone you’re working with.” I agree here only to a certain extent. Listening is one thing but the really important thing is filtering and judgement. A filmmaker must absorb the world around him but if your internal filtering lacks taste, you will create shit. You will act on the wrong ideas. You will involve the wrong people. You will choose the wrong gear. You will send out the wrong message as a filmmaker. I believe the ability to filter crap is the filmmaker’s biggest intuitive asset and very little of that is learned later on. The rest of it comes from within, from your upbringing and the culture of where you grew up and what you absorbed. Even as a cinematographer in a specialised role, creating a composition and framing the shot – you are constantly relying on your filter to pair down the shot to something beautiful. The art of photography is reductive not additive. To throw out the stuff that looks bad and only include the stuff that looks good, you first have to know what is good and what isn’t. That is a real talent. Even writing a blog like EOSHD is a challenge for filtering. If I drew attention to the wrong stuff, it wouldn’t be interesting, but what is interesting is in the eye of the beholder. So as an artist, it helps to have sympathy with your audience. When making a movie focus on a theme “When you make a movie, always try to discover what the theme of the movie is in one or two words. Every time I made a film, I always knew what I thought the theme was, the core, in one word. In The Godfather, it was succession. In Apocalypse, it was morality. The reason it’s important to have this is because most of the time what a director really does is make decisions. All day long: Do you want it to be long hair or short hair? Do you want a dress or pants? Do you want a beard or no beard? There are many times when you don’t know the answer. Knowing what the theme is always helps you. “I remember in The Conversation, they brought all these coats to me, and they said: Do you want him to look like a detective? Do you want him to look like a blah blah blah. I didn’t know! And [because the theme was privacy] I chose the plastic coat you could see through. So knowing the theme helps you make a decision when you’re not sure which way to go.” A tight focus – this is what makes a film more effective, more moving, more beautiful. If you don’t have anything driving that focus, you’re not directing. You’re guessing. The cinematography I’m most proud of on EOSHD came from when I had a tight focus on a theme. With Modernisation it was a poor / rich divide and the old world being overtaken by a powerful new one. With For a Minute I Lost Myself it was the terror and disorientation of out of control capitalism in a crazy metropolis. For Longshan’s People II it was the people and tradition versus 1000 missiles pointed at Taiwan by China. In each of these cases each idea was gifted to me by the location, I didn’t invent anything. These were all emotional factors driving the compositions. If the place you live in does’t give you any new inspiration, the answer is to travel. If the people you have around you don’t give you any inspiration, the answer is to meet new people. The life you live is essential for giving you the ideas to base films on. Cast with improvisation sessions “With improvisations, they really stick if there’s something sensual connected with them, like food or eating or making something with their hands.” I think improvising is better than sticking rigidly to a script when casting an actor, because the actor is forced to give more of their personality. Rather than forcing them to get their head into a character, see what they are like as a person and what they bring to the film as a character in their own right, see if they are a fit to the script. I believe the best actors should be like close friends on the same page as you, and firing ideas back and forth. It takes a long time to find a creative team, including actors, writers and other collaborators in filmmaking but it is worth persevering. Have conviction in your vision and ‘bake the scene in the oven’ “When I was young on a movie set, I would try to stage the scene and the actors would read it, and I said – Well, you stand here and you sit there…[But] They would say – Well, I don’t think I should sit there, I should stand there. And I don’t think this line is right….And they would begin to challenge the text. What I learned, which is a simple idea, is that if you hold out with your vision a little bit, it’s like a cake being put in the oven. The scene doesn’t work immediately, you have to bake it a little bit. It’s unfair, when you begin to create a shot, say, or a scene, that it’s going to immediately be like those beautiful scenes in the movies. It needs a little bit of time to mature.” Kubrick was famous for take after take, after take. This is a bonafide working technique that delivers. A scene morphs and shifts as it bakes in the oven. The trick is to know when to take it out. Don’t lie to yourself “You never have to lie. If you lie, you will only trip yourself up. You will always get caught in a lie. It is very important for an artist not to lie, and most important is not to lie to yourself. There is something we know that’s connected with beauty and truth. There is something ancient. We know that art is about beauty, and therefore it has to be about truth.” I think the worst scripts are those where someone acts as they wouldn’t do in real life. It takes me right out of the film. Avoid bullshitting your audience and don’t insult their intelligence with the obvious. Pair down the shots to those that move the story forward. Nobody wants to see a character walking around from room to room in a lame attempt to introduce some tension, pacing or build up. The hand of the artist, when writing and directing, is all about touching what provides atmosphere, drama, emotion and intrigue and what is just surplus to requirements. Have confidence “The artist always battles [their own] feeling of inadequacy. Self confidence is the biggest barrier to becoming a filmmaker. We are very insecure. People are insecure, not just young people. Everyone is insecure. “They say that Barbara Streisand, when she goes on, she has a panic attack. She feels she can’t sing. Of course, she can sing. I believe that when you write something, when I write something, I turn it over and I don’t look at it. Because I believe the writer, the young writer, has a hormone that makes them hate what they’ve written. And yet, the next morning, when you look at it, you say, “Oh that’s not bad.” But the first second you hate it. ” Even the greatest artists have doubts. Can I do it? Filmmaking is such a mammoth effort that you have to be crazy to devote so much time to something you think you might not be any good at. But it is far easier (and less risky) to fail due to lack of faith than it is to fail trying.