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February 9, 2010

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Directing

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MovieMaker Sneak Peek

Mythology of Anthony Minghella, Storyteller

Anthony Minghella is part of that rare breed of
auteur who favors quality over quantity, releasing very
few films--but gaining high critical praise for each
effort. Making his feature debut with Truly Madly
Deeply
in 1991, Minghella's subsequent projects have
totaled only two: The English Patient in 1996,
for which he won an Oscar, and The Talented Mr. Ripley in
1999 (for which he was also nominated). This Oscar season
is sure to bring Minghella's name back to the minds of
voters, as the long-awaited big screen adaptation of
Charles Frazier's novel, Cold Mountain, is set
for theaters this December, and features an all-star
cast that includes Nicole Kidman, Jude Law, Renée Zellweger,
Philip Seymour Hoffman, Natalie Portman, Donald Sutherland,
Giovanni Ribisi. (No comments yet)


King of the Ants

After 20 years, director Stuart Gordon is still breaking new ground

King of the Ants, the latest cringefest from director
Stuart Gordon, who gave us the classic Re-Animator
(1985), is another gruesome foray into the dark side of human
nature. His coupling of a brutal revenge story (by acclaimed
British author Charlie Higson) with a minimal budget (Gordon's
wife provided catering for cast and crew) has resulted in
a streamlined, neo-noir thriller with macabre overtones. This
movie is sure to be a Halloween night favorite. In this interview,
the influential talent recaps his horror career, from pre-Re-Animator
days staging David Mamet plays with Chicago's Organic Theatre
to his present success. (No comments yet)


Things I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker

When you do a movie for a studio, it's gonna be somewhat homogenized. But a smaller movie like the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre just came out of nowhere and horrified everybody. The fact that it was shot in 16 millimeter made it seem even more real. I would put Audition and 28 Days Later in the same category-they're not studio films. The small movies, where the director is capable of anything and not held back by studio pressures, are the most frightening. (No comments yet)


Things I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker

I storyboard extensively; it helps me to learn my film. Sometimes the boards don't work on the set and that's fine, but it's something to start with-a blueprint that can be deviated from, if necessary. (No comments yet)


Things I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker

There's no underestimating the power of the detail of real locations, whether you build it or go there. The amount of subtle information that people can absorb, from anything from the quality of light to the detail in the background, has an incredibly powerful impact on performance and on the audience. (No comments yet)


Killer Movie, Killer Moviemaking

Writer-director Patty Jenkins on Monster

Writer-director Patty Jenkins has hit the ground running with her first feature, the widely acclaimed, Monster, a riveting and dark love story detailing serial killer Aileen Wuornos' tragic descent into obsession and murder. Jenkins, who initially studied painting at the Cooper Union in New York City, fell in love with movies while attending an experimental film course between painting classes. After graduation, she went to Los Angeles and soon earned a union card as a first assistant camera operator. (1 comment)


Things I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker

If you want something fast, ask for it on an apple box. You can get an apple box faster than anything else on a set, maybe faster than anything anywhere in the world. (No comments yet)


Appetite for Self-Destruction

David Duchovny writes and directs House of D

We first noticed David Duchovny's sardonic tone, quick wit and immense talent back in 1993 with a then little-known sci-fi show called The X Files. Now, Duchovny puts his extensive resume to work with House of D, his debut film as a writer-director. (2 comments)


Things I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker

When you're doing something for the first time, go in with a real concrete plan and take the time before you jump in there and start filming to map out what it is you want to do and why. So that whenever anyone asks you-whether it's an actor or a producer or a cameraman-'why are we putting the camera here' or something else, you always have an answer. (No comments yet)


Crossing the Line

Writer-director Matthew Ryan Hoge on The United States of Leland

Finding success as a first-time writer-director is hard—unless you have Kevin Spacey in your camp. With only two indie features under his belt (and both of them incomplete), writer-director Matthew Ryan Hoge was able to persuade Spacey and his Trigger Street production company of his talent and desire to step behind the camera on the very personal The United States of Leland. (No comments yet)


Things I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker

Nothing matters but the characters and the acting. As a production designer, I would put so much effort into making the set perfect and then I would watch some movies I had done and realize none of it mattered. There are a lot of films with great sets, but we don't care to watch them if the story and the characters aren't compelling. (No comments yet)


Things I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker

You're told in film school that in order to direct an actor properly, more important than directing is the ability to write a scene in which the actor will feel comfortable, with dialogue which makes sense. Then put this actor in the right set, with the right clothes, with the right partner--and pick the right actors. (laughs) If all those elements have been carefully prepared, you have nothing to do but enjoy. (No comments yet)


It’s All About Pleasure

Jean-Jacques Annaud returns to theaters with Two Brothers

After a three-year absence, French moviemaker Jean-Jacques Annaud is back--returning to theaters this summer with Two Brothers, a sort of spiritual companion to his acclaimed international hit, The Bear. Always ready to go where no moviemaker has gone before, Annaud speaks with us about his latest project, the HD technology and why he finds beauty in the most unlikely places. (1 comment)


Even Sweeter the Second Time Around

With her new film, Lords of Dogtown, Catherine Hardwicke shows the success of Thirteen was no fluke

Catherine Hardwicke’s first film, Thirteen, won her the 2003 directing award at Sundance. But her “overnight success” was actually 15 years in the making. Now she’s back with the Lords of Dogtown, another film about troubled teens set in and around Venice, California with a bigger budget to handle—and a reputation to live up to. (No comments yet)


Things I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker

Don't let anyone else steer the direction of your film, your vision and your creativity. Let your own voice do the talking. (No comments yet)


Weighty Subject Benefits from Humor

Morgan Spurlock on his engaging, enlightening Super Size Me

McDonald’s is by now surely tired of hearing the name Morgan Spurlock. But moviegoers everywhere are eating up his new documentary, Super Size Me, in which Spurlock commits to a diet of three square Mickey D meals a day—for 30 days. Here, Spurlock offers up his dieting tips and talks about how one person can make a difference. (11 comments)


Things I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker

Break down the ego and create from truth. You need to tear yourself down and create from a clean place where nothing is certain and vision can grow. When you let your ego interfere your only hindering your art and limiting yourself in your abilities. (No comments yet)


Everything Comes Together

For Marc Forster, it's still all about telling stories

Five years ago, a little film called Monster’s Ball snuck into theaters and changed the landscape of contemporary independent film, propelling its director, Marc Forster, straight onto the Hollywood A-List. As he prepares for Stranger than Fiction and The Kite Runner and the DVD release of his latest film, Stay, Forster speaks with MM about his indie breakthrough. (No comments yet)


Things I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker

If you've got good, unique stories to tell, and you stick to your guns and keep telling them with whatever resources you've got and just don't go away, eventually people will start listening. (No comments yet)


Things I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker

You need to have a very specific vision of what you are aiming for. But you have to simultaneously retain an openness to allow serendipity to creep in. (No comments yet)


Original Voice, Weirdly Poetic

Writer-director Rian Johnson redefines film noir with Brick

As the winner of last year’s Sundance Film Festival Special Jury Prize for Originality of Vision, writer-director Rian Johnson’s feature film debut, Brick, can easily be added to that lofty list of truly unique voices in cinema. MM spoke with Johnson about the language of film, the Sundance experience and being happy that his film is not for everyone. (No comments yet)


Extraordinary People

Writer-director Bronwen Hughes gets real with Stander

After trying her hand at kid’s films (Harriet the Spy) and romantic comedies (Forces of Nature), Steven Spielberg protégé Bronwen Hughes now has a number of true stories on her development slate, the first of which will be this August’s Stander, starring Thomas Jane. Like Hughes herself, the character at the center of her latest picture is not easily definable: Andre Stander was a celebrated cop who also happened to be one of the country’s most notorious bank robbers. In an interview with MM, Hughes spoke about that memorable meeting with Spielberg and why for her, interesting real people beat interesting fictional characters any day. (No comments yet)


Things I’ve Learned As A Moviemaker

When a script is ready, I commit to it. That's one of the problems with me. I usually develop my own material, and it takes a while, so therefore I am not directing as much as other people. And it's frustrating. You want to be working as much as possible, but I can only do the things I get passionate about. (No comments yet)


Batman and Kramer

The writer-director behind The Cooler arrives on the scene

Wayne Kramer is making his moviemaking
dreams a reality. After two indie features-Blazeland (which he calls "an
epic of misfortune unto itself") and Crossing Over-Wayne Kramer
is making a name (and career) for himself with The Cooler, a gritty
tale of the Las Vegas underworld starring William H. Macy, Alec Baldwin,
Maria Bello and Ron Livingston. On the eve of the film's release, Kramer
spoke with MM about his goals as a moviemaker, being a
collaborator and what it's like to go up against Alec Baldwin. (No comments yet)


The Power of “Warts and All” Moviemaking

Taylor Hackford takes on Ray Charles and Jamie Foxx

Early Oscar buzz may be the Holy Grail for most directors, but Taylor Hackford isn’t your average Hollywood helmer. Working in and out of the system for more than 25 years now, he’s more concerned with knowing that audiences will finally get to see Ray, a film 15 years in the making. (1 comment)


Things I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker

Trust your script. It's easy to fall in love with something that's "set funny." Trust the document that made you want to make the film, even if you wrote it yourself. (No comments yet)


Things I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker

Say something that isn't just a platitude; something that really is meaningful. (No comments yet)


Second Chances

Writer-director Laurie Collyer explores her past in Sherrybaby

After coping with the loss of childhood friends from overdoses and prison, writer-director Laurie Collyer let out her aggression the only way she knew how-through movies. Gaining recognition for her gritty documentary Nuyorican Dream in 1999, Collyer quickly began work on her first screenplay, Sherrybaby, to explore the deep-seeded issues of her past. (No comments yet)


In True Indie Fashion

Editor-turned-director Curtiss Clayton strikes out on his own with Daniel "Lemony Snicket" Handler's script, Rick

You'd think that after 20 years in the business, making movies would only get easier. But as editor-turned-director Curtiss Clayton discovered with his directorial debut, the dark dramedy Rick, all the experience in the world cannot protect you from The Laws of Indie Moviemaking. (No comments yet)


Make Them Laugh-Then Make Them Think

Director Jason Reitman says Thank You For Smoking

Since its premiere at last year’s Toronto Film Festival, Jason Reitman’s Thank You For Smoking has been acquiring the kind of overwhelming buzz that is often associated with great moviemaking success stories. MM recently spoke with Reitman about perseverance, his father Ivan’s good name and the harsh reality check that is IMDB. (No comments yet)


Things I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker

I found that when you think you're done editing you can always cut out another 20 minutes (as long as your film is not 90 minutes when you first get that feeling). (No comments yet)


Auteur Seeks Complex Character

Writer-Director David Jacobson tackles complex characters in Down in the Valley

First gaining attention with 2002’s Dahmer, a brilliant character study depicting the life of serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer, writer-director David Jacobson secured his position as a new and important voice in independent cinema with three Independent Spirit Award nominations. Now, with Down in the Valley, Jacobson is crossing character lines once again. Jacobson spoke with MM about working why test screenings do more harm than good and the joy that lies in writing characters that cannot be easily pinned down. (No comments yet)


Things I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker

Soundstages are more reliable than Mother Nature. (No comments yet)


Things I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker

If you can shed your ego and get other people to help you, you all benefit more in the end. I think that could be applied to anything in life. But the good thing as the director is that you get so much of the credit in the end anyway. (No comments yet)


Master of the Universe

Director Frank Coraci has the world in the palm of his hand

Curtiz and Bogart. Kurosawa and Mifune. Herzog and Kinski. Scorsese and De Niro. Coraci and Sandler? College buddies Frank Coraci and Adam Sandler may not be aiming to make the next Casablanca, but there’s no denying the magic that exists in their collaborations. Of the five feature films that Coraci has directed, Sandler has starred in three of them—including The Wedding Singer and The Waterboy—and together they’ve brought in close to a half billion dollars at the box office. (No comments yet)


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