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Shooting for an Alternate Reality
Benoît Delhomme discusses his work on Ming-liang Tsai's What Time is it Over There?
We have all heard it said countless times: cinema is a collaborative
art. Anyone who can deliver the goods at a high level of craft
and work well as part of a team is likely to find a healthy
amount of success is the industry. Such a person could be,
like French Director of Photography Benoît Delhomme, a very
busy artist, moving from one interesting project to another,
and collaborating with some of cinema´s most exciting, innovative
moviemakers.
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Things I’ve Learned As A Moviemaker
One piece of advice I give to people of both sexes in this business is don't let anyone abuse you-life is too short.
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Walking the Tightrope
Longtime David Lynch producer/editor Mary Sweeney talks about their latest collaboration, Mulholland Drive
Beginning her career as an apprentice sound editor on Reds, Mary Sweeney began her now more than 15-year editing and producing collaboration with David Lynch on 1986's Blue Velvet. With their latest film, Mulholland Drive, in theaters across the country, Sweeney talks about her relationship with one of the world's most original directors and the struggles of being a woman in a man's industry.
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Things I’ve Learned As A Moviemaker
Never, ever, give anyone-friend, foe,and especially a professional-a script whose three digit page count has the middle numeral of "three." "One" is preferable. "Two" only if necessary. "Four" or higher means you should not quit your day job.
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The Cat’s Meow: A Classy Story of Classic Hollywood
Patience pays for New York-bred, LA-based screenwriter Steven Peros
For writer Steven Peros, overnight success has been a long
time coming. Though he thought he was "on his way" when his
first original screenplay was optioned shortly after his graduation
from NYU, the movie wasn't made. Unlike many neophytes, though,
Peros believed in his talent enough to persevere, and he survived
for a dozen years working as a reader for William Morris and
landing "sporadic, small-change writing gigs." Finally, his
script for The Cat's Meow was brought to the project's
ideal director, Peter Bogdanovich, and the rest was history.
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Things I’ve Learned As A Moviemaker
You know, you're with the subject for a long time. It's important that you get it to where you want it to be.
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The Circus Comes to Town
Todd Field talks about shooting In the Bedroom on the coast of Maine
If up until now Todd Field has been known primarily as an
actor, all that is about to change with In the Bedroom,
his feature directorial debut. The movie garnered a special
jury prize for acting for the film's stars, Sissy Spacek and
Tom Wilkinson, and is already generating some Oscar talk.
Here, Field talks about how being an actor informed some of
his directing choices and why being an performer is a whole
lot easier than being a director.
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Film Education’s Maine Attraction
A Conversation with Int'l Film & TV Workshops Founder David Lyman
Anyone can tell you that America's moviemaking hotspots are
Los Angeles and New York City. But what about Rockport, Maine?
With the help of David Lyman, founder of the International
Film & Television Workshops, Rockport has become an important
outpost in the world of cinema education. In this interview,
Lyman discusses the benefits of his sleepy seaside town, and
how Mary Ellen Mark and Conrad Hall helped to make the program
what it is today.
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From Dance Fever to Digital Video
A Conversation with NY DV Show's Rick Friedman
The digital revolution is hardly a secret, but why has New
York City been kept in the dark? The Big Apple doesn't have
to wait any longer, as NY DV Show 2002 hits the city this
month (Feb.) Mindshare Ventures president Rick Friedman talks
to us about the upcoming conference.
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Things I’ve Learned As A Moviemaker
Whenever I DP a film, I try to bring something different to the table that separates it from my previous work.
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Focusing the Eye Through Composition
An Interview with DP Neal Fredericks
In 1999, Blair Witch mania hit and made instant superstars
out of all those involved. For cinematographer Neal Fredericks,
it was the opportunity of a lifetime. With 10 years of experience
in film, television, commercial and music video experience
behind him, the success of that film was all he needed to
become one of independent film's most in-demand DPs. Here,
Fredericks talks about his preferred filming format, his new
projects, and how his globetrotting childhood helped to hone
a cinematic sensibility.
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Julia Stiles Never Lets Them See Her Sweat
The actress steps behind the camera to write and direct Raving
When you're a director embarking on your very first project, it might seem intimidating to have your work backed by one of the world's top fashion magazines. But this is just how Julia Stiles found herself both writing and directing the short film Raving, which premiered at this year's Tribeca Film Festival in April and aired on The Sundance Channel in May.
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Things We’ve Learned As Moviemakers
Don't ask people to do something they can't do. Casting is crucial. Don't give a very physical actor a lot of intellectual reasons to do something; learn to know your actors and direct each differently according to who they are as individuals
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Of Cinema and Cargo Pants
Palm Beach Film School's Jim York provides words of wisdom for the moviemaker of tomorrow
Palm Beach, Florida may first bring to mind images of sandy beaches, palm trees, alligators and the Everglades, but more and more novice moviemakers are finding it is the perfect city to start learning their craft. The Palm Beach Film School (PBFS) has been largely responsible for this indie boom, bringing together the various members of Palm Beach's moviemaking community to provide its students with a top-notch education in the cinema arts.
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What I’ve Learned As A Moviemaker
I think a major sin in screenwriting is not listening to your critics. However dumb they may seem to you, however brutal their criticism, remember that you are in a room with five people, and if you don't get it right there, you're going to end up out in the world with thousands of people and it doesn't get any better. So listen because they are trying to make it better, however wrong-headed their decisions may be. I think that young writers find criticism is hard because it's very personal, but it's crucial. It's called collaboration; it comes in the form of notes and sometime they're hard. Experience teaches you to take it less personally.
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From Mrs. Brown to Charlotte Gray
The Working World of British Screenwriter Jeremy Brock
English screenwriter Jeremy Brock had it coming. After cutting his teeth as a writer in British television for over a dozen years, he vaulted into feature writing when Miramax saw gold in his original script, Mrs. Brown. With Charlotte Gray -- his second feature -- in release, Jeremy Brock has returned to the big screen with another complex and fiery heroine. In an interview with MM, Brock discusses his beginnings in the industry, his ways of working and what it takes to create the kinds of characters that stay in your memory long after a movie's over.
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Henry Jaglom’s Moment of Truth
Film's freest director dissects the Hollywood machine in Hollywood Dreams
When it comes to the film world's original independent voices, names like Orson Welles and John Cassavetes are the first to be bandied about. But for more than 35 years, Henry Jaglom has been making movies the only way he knows how-his way! Beginning with A Safe Place in 1971 and leading up to the recent Hollywood Dreams, the former actor has managed to complete 15 feature films throughout his career-not just a writer and director, but as an actor, editor and distributor, too.
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Apocalypse Now and Then
A Conversation With Editor/Sound Designer Walter Murch
Editor/Sound Designer Walter Murch has worked with some of the film industry's most talented directors and stood alongside each one as an equal collaborator. With eight Oscar nominations to his credit and three wins, he has proven himself a true master of his craft. Here, he talks with MM about about the digital revolution, the challenges of a dual career and how his Apocalypse experience defined his life as an editor.
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Ice in Her Stomach
A Conversation with Dogme 95 Director Lone Scherfig about "breaking the rules of film language" on Italian for Beginners
In 1995 Danish moviemakers Thomas Vinterberg and Lars von
Trier took a break from the technical conventions of modern
cinema and created the now famous Dogme 95 manifesto. This
month, Italian For Beginners, the fourth Danish Dogme
film, will be released with director Lone Scherfig at the
helm. In a conversation with MM, Scherfig talks about making
a Dogme comedy, Danish insecurities and staying true to that
prickly "Vow of Chastity."
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Training the Next Generation
Exploring the "professional difference" at San Francisco's Academy of Art College
With hundreds of schools now competing for enrollment, choosing the right film education program can be an exhausting process. Students looking for a professional approach to moviemaking-and the chance to network with seasoned professionals-might want to add San Francisco's Academy of Art College to their short list.
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Kevin Costner Goes Psycho
Hollywood's golden boy gets dark in Mr. Brooks
Earl Brooks is a fabulously successful businessman, a devoted father and husband, a much-respected pillar of his community and, on those occasions when he simply cannot suppress his baser instincts, a coolly meticulous serial killer. Kevin Costner is an Oscar-winning director and a chronically underrated actor who delights in exploiting his own star power to illuminate every facet of his starring role in Mr. Brooks, a movie that is equal parts ice-cold thriller and pitch-black comedy.
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Slamdunk Conquers the World
John Peterson discusses his organization's winning formula for running a film festival-and empire
The founders of Slamdunk are on the cutting edge of a trend that has seen an increasing number of festivals take their shows on the road, with very successful results.
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What I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker
When you get a brilliant idea that sounds familiar, think of a new idea.
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Comic Relief
Mike Binder and Adam Sandler team up for a unique take on the events of 9/11 with Reign Over Me
Six months after the five-year anniversary of the events of September 11th-and months after United 93 and World Trade Center-comedian-turned-auteur Mike Binder is releasing his own take on the events of that fateful day-or, more appropriately, the after effects-with Reign Over Me, starring Adam Sandler.
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Innovation and Creative Intuition on the Set
An Interview With Legendary Cinematographer John Toll
Though he has been a frequent collaborator with several of
the world's most celebrated directors, John Toll, DP of such
disparate work as Legends of the Fall, Braveheart
and The Thin Red Line has always succeeded in bringing
his own vision to the forefront.
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Truly Moving Images
The Center for International Disaster Information announces a call to arms for film students looking to make a difference
Socially-conscious moviemaking is on the rise-from thought-provoking documentaries like Spike Lee's When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts to dramatic adaptations of real-world atrocities such as those seen in Hotel Rwanda and The Last King of Scotland. But how does a film student break into this arena? The Center for International Disaster Information's PSAid Film Contest may be the answer.
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What I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker
When you're the editor, you're not the director. You didn't conceive or shoot the film. When the footage for a scene arrives, try to forget every notion you had about what the scene was supposed to be like and take all your cues from the film that was actually shot. There will be time later to try to push the scene in some other direction, but it's important for me to not have a plan, and to simply find the scene in the footage.
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Breaking Away
Editor Tim Squyres on his longtime collaboration with Ang Lee and his latest work on Robert Altman's Gosford Park
If Tim Squyres' name is not immediately recognizable, most of the features he's edited in the past decade are: Eat Drink Man Woman, The Ice Storm, Sense and Sensibility and Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon are four of Squyres' collaborations with director Ang Lee.
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Tough Love
Sam Jackson tames Christina Ricci-and Amy Vincent catches it all on film-in Craig Brewer's Black Snake Moan
After riding an unexpected wave of success with their debut collaboration, Hustle & Flow, writer-director Craig Brewer and cinematographer Amy Vincent are partnering up again, this time on Black Snake Moan, an unconventional "coming of age" story in which an aging blues musician helps to cure a young nymphomaniac of her sexual addiction.
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Things We’ve Learned as Moviemakers
Writing with a sibling is a unique collaboration. Because we share similar backgrounds and experiences, there is a kind of unspoken communication between us that can save time.
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13 Conversations About Writing
The Multiple Storyline, Sisterhood and Aristotle, for Starters: An Interview with Jill and Karen Sprecher
Five years after their triumph at Sundance with Clockwatchers, sisters Jill and Karen Sprecher have re-emerged with 13 Conversations About One Thing, an extraordinary film that explores the dramatic impact strangers can have on one another.
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Bill Lustig: Things I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker
Don't stop working. For me, moviemaking is practice that makes you better but never perfect.
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The New School’s Truth, Whole Truth and Nothing But the Truth
The New School is about to graduate its first Documentary Studies class-and is gearing up for year two
Box office receipts confirm what The New School's assistant chair for documentary studies Annie Howell already knows: "Documentaries are hot!" This current trend toward truth in moviemaking has prompted the New York City-based university to create an all-new Certificate in Documentary Media Studies, a one-year, full-time, graduate-level program.
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A Few Minutes with William (Bill) Lustig
Lustig speaks with MM about his career and what it takes to stay at the top of the moviemaking game over the long term.
Bill Lustig has been appreciated by the French as a director with a unique, unflinching cinematic eye for years. At home in L.A., he?s best known as a cult midnight moviemaker who has crafted some of the most fun, frightening, gory films of the ?80s, including Maniac, Vigilante, and Relentless. Intelligent, articulate and intimidatingly well-steeped in film lore, the hardworking Lustig recently began a new career as a film restorer and DVD producer with Anchor Bay Entertainment.
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Indie Movie Guide
Reviews of some of the independent film world's newest independent films
Reviews of The Adventures of Prince Achmed,
Surfing for Life and Cipher in the Snow.
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Video Views Pick: Wanted
The editors of VIDEO VIEWS magazine pick Wanted, based on the Mark Millar graphic novel, as the best new DVD this week. Featuring eight bonus featurettes and a cast that includes James McAvoy, Angelina Jolie and Morgan Freeman, home video watchers can't go wrong.
Posted 12.3.08 | Video Views Pick | 1 comment
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