Professional Documents
Culture Documents
These are useful learning tools I've gathered from extensive research over the
course of years and links posted by other anons on previous threads on this issue.
A general guide of information I considered useful.
Becoming a filmmaker involves a lot of study, patience and practice, especially if
you want And although you won't get things right at first, and you'll make a lot of
mistakes regardless of how much you study, you have to learn from it and push
through.
I hope these can help you. I'll try to cover as many bases as I can.
reduser.net
cinematography.com
cinematography mailing list
dvxuser
theblackandblue.com
cinearchive.org
wolfcrow.com
mystery man on film
philipbloom.net
wordplayer.com
r/screenwriting (actual industry pros are constantly posting here)
donedealpro
creativecow
post magazine
theasc.com & american cinematographer
cinefex
nofilmschool.com
And if you are in need you might want to go on /photography/ every now and then,
there's a lot you can learn there about shot composition and video.
Be sure to check out the /vid/ sticky for information regarding cameras
https://pastebin.com/WajU1V5d
Cinematography
-Cinematography: Theory and Practice - Blain Brown
-The Five C's of Cinematography
-The Camera Assistant's Manual -- David Elkins
-Practical Cinematography -- Paul Wheeler
-Painting With Light - John Alton
-Motion Picture and Video Lighting -- Blain Brown
-Set Lighting Technician's Handbook: Film Lighting - Harry C.Box
-The Art and Technique of Digital Color Correction - Steve Hullfish
Check out the works of Freddie Young, James Wong Howe, Vittorio Storato, Nestor
Almendros and Leo Braudy.
Filmmaking
-http://filmmakeriq.com/
-http://learnaboutfilm.com/
-http://filmmakingessays.tumblr.com/
-https://www.youtube.com/user/curtisjudd
-http://linchpinseo.com/color-guide-designers
-https://www.youtube.com/user/RJFilmSchool
-https://www.youtube.com/user/DSLRguide/videos
-https://archive.org/details/filmtechniqueact00pudo
-https://www.cinema5d.com/film-color-schemes-cinematic-color-design/
-https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Gh-fomKSuIEZ-GJo2tere4YMjsDvmmsuyiJKzQ-1ZRk/
Books on sound:
-Practical Art of Motion Picture Sound - Davis Yewdall
-http://designingsound.org/2010/02/sound-design-essentials-6-recommended-books-and-
11-google-books-links/
-http://www.goodreads.com/shelf/show/sound-design
-http://sound.stackexchange.com/questions/200/what-sound-design-books-have-
influenced-you-the-most
-http://filmsound.org/newbooks.htm
-http://creatingsound.com/learning/books/
-http://www.musicofsound.co.nz/blog/sound-design-book-list
Editing:
-Technique of Film Editing -- Karl Reisz
-Everything by or about Walter Murch and Slavko Vorkapich
-Cut to the Chase: Forty-Five Years of Editing America's Favourite Movies - Sam
O'Steen,
-When the Shooting Stops - Ralph Rosenblum
-Technique of Editing -- Ken Dancyger
Visual Effects
-Filming the Fantastic -- Mike Sawiki
Any "Behind the Scenes" or "Director's Commentary" should also prove useful. If you
don't already, you might want to start paying attention to those.
Acting:
-Jean Benedetti's translations of Stanislavski
-Technique of Acting -- Michael Chekhov
And everything by Robert Cohen
Writing:
-Adventures In The Screen Trade
-Which Lie Did I Tell
-Monster -- John Gregory Dunne
-Art Of Dramatic Writing -- Lajos Egiri
-http://www.imsdb.com/
-http://www.screenwriting.info/
-https://litreactor.com/columns/writing-powerful-descriptions
-http://cdn.writershelpingwriters.net/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/Active-Verbs-
List.pdf
And while it's true that almost all the knowledge about making films could be
easily obtained on the Internet (like this pastebin), it is still a lot to learn
(especially about writing and acting/dealing with actors), it's not something you
can learn in a week as many people imagine.
Most people expect film school to magically grant them careers, and when it
doesn't, they complain that the school was worthless and a scam. This should go
without saying, but DO NOT expect to get a job the moment you get out of school,
they cannot magic a career out of thin air for you. That's not what it is for. You
don't have to go to film school to be a filmmaker, but it gives you at least some
sort of grounding and it's good for having access to equipment and to meet people
(and this is extremely important in the industry).
All and all, chances are you are going to fail at least once. But if you are afraid
of failure, you are afraid of success. Don't be.
If you are curious as to whether or not you really want to, or need to, go to film
school, I'd start by making a few films by yourself just to figure if you
realistically want to do this. You don't want to go through 1-4 years of school
just to realize you dont have the ambition it takes to actually make a movie. It
takes a lot of energy, time and money to get anything made. Especially now that it
has become so easy to make films. It now has become so much harder to actually make
money off of it because of this factor so you need to consider if your interests
are high enough to go that extra mile.
Q: Any other reason why I should go to film school besides learning from the best ?
A: Yes. Networking.
Film school is great for making connections with people your age who are going to
work in the industry. There are usually no job listing anywhere, people generally
get people they know and get them for jobs and stuff. Connections and
collaborations are everything in film. Even if you want to do writer/director
feature indie movies, experience on set is priceless, you see how different crews
and directors work, both cheap and expensive projects. Make friends with everyone
and don't underestimate your classmates; statistically at least 10% of them will
make it into the film industry and these fine dudes will be your foot on the door.
The greatest benefit of going to school for film making is that you will be
surrounded by people with the same interest as you who want to make films. As long
as you all realize that film is a collaborative medium and you have to work
together to get anything made, then you might have a chance to enter the industry.
Additionally, major film and TV companies pay extra attention to students that
attend these schools, and often have experienced artists such as Glen Keane come
and give special guest lectures. However, it's still your responsibility to create
those social connections between companies and people in the industry in order to
get your first job. There are many film students who haven't tried hard enough to
make those connections and graduated without getting anywhere. It's one of the
biggest reasons why you shouldn't go to film school until your mentally ready and
socially mature. Yes, you can blame your terrible advisers, but in the end the
student is responsible for their education and career goals, not the school. When
you attend film school, the door to your future is often right in front of you, so
don't waste that opportunity while you're there!
Q: What if I just can't go to film school because I lack money and other
circumstances?
A: There are many people who haven't gone to film school and still succeeded in
getting in the industry. Most of these people have done more than self-studying.
They have created short films and entered them at film festivals, made connections
with every artist they met, and went out of state/country to go to film festivals
and networking meetups for a weekend. They admittedly have a lot more mold to break
through than art students, but it's possible.
Q: How many short films do you make before you're ready to make a feature?
A: As many as you need to feel a true sense of ease and understanding with film.
No one can make a truly great work unless they feel in tune with the work they need
to put in. So many amateur films feel like the director just wanted to make a film
and so they did. Like a gimbal shot of a forest is why people watch films, like
they can buy their way into Lubezki fame. Learning how to compose a shot or connect
two together is like learning how to place a comma in a sentence. Even so, there’s
a huge difference between cinematic grammar and the cinematic language. We’re
learning a language here, not throwing darts in a pitch black room waiting to hit
bullseye. The point is to convey.
No one needs to see our first attempts. But we should be sure to make the attempts.
And every attempt should be made with the goal of learning at something about the
plasticity of film. Amateur ventures should be as personally risky and evocative as
possible, since they give us total agency to fuck up before we work on our
features. I mean, thank fucking God we’re alive now when technology is so cheap,
and the history of cinema has evolved to a point where we can learn everything we
need with a $10 streaming subscription. All we’re left with is a fear of failure,
but we have to fail, don’t we?
Q: All this gear talk is confusing and expensive, and I have little money and no
friends.
A: As it's been said before, it's not the equipment you have, but how you use it.
David Lynch made a film on a consumer grade SD digital camera, and it was still
more than tolerable.
You don't need expensive equipment to make a decent short film. Expensive equipment
should be the last thing on your mind when making a student film. Feature films
have been shot on iphones. You can be ingenuitive with lighting. A cheap ass DSLR
with a few prime lenses can give you great shots. Good audio equipment is cheaper
than a camera.
Just learn the limitations of that cam and shoot something based on what you can
achieve.
Get a pair of prime lenses and a tripod and that's all you need (for camera). If
you have to rely on something is an audio recorder/mic or you can get a cheap one
for your iphone (smartlav+) and repeat the scenes a lot just for the audio/video
sync, or just record a voice over or do a silent film and use free sound effects.
It is a necessity to have a digital recorder and boom mic. There are film hubs and
equipment rental places that rent these out and it's usually fuck all to have them
for a weekend. You might still have to record audio separately.
Learn about lighting; nice lighting is the best thing that can make your movie
''look like a movie''. You can buy strong LED bulbs for your lamps at home and see
how it looks in cam. And if you can't, then use natural lighting. I recommend
shooting in the early morning and late evening because it is when things look
better. Films like Days of Heaven were shot almost exclusive with natural lighting
at that time (it requires many more days because it just last half an hour
everytime). Remember to shoot on a neutral profile and learn basic grading with
Davinci Resolve (it's free).
And about getting actors, if you don't have friends to call, contact acting schools
and get them to set up auditions for you.
Just say you're shooting a student film for film school and they'll generally do it
for free.
Q: I tried achieving my dream, but the teachers I had were arrogant pricks, I can't
find a job, I'm in debt, and overall I feel some people are just lucky and I'm
wasting my time. Is film really for me? Why should I even try?
A: You only truly fail if you give up and stop trying. I'm not going to act like
the typical optimist who believes anyone can achieve their dreams if they just try
hard enough, because that's not true. But that also doesn't mean I'm going to act
like the typical cynic who also immaturely thinks there is no opportunity at all.
All I can share is my advice on passion again.
If you feel the urge to work on this career goal everyday no matter how bad you
feel, like a habit, then this is the career for you. People who want to get into
film for financial success are doing it for the wrong reasons. All careers in art
don't pay as well as other careers do and film is not an exception. If you're going
into film, or any art career really, they say you're already a delusional optimist
because it's an incredibly risky career. But we all know we do it because we're
passionate about it, and that drive makes us work consistently to create something,
even if the pay isn't incredibly amazing.
Q: I still feel like film school would be too much of a waste of time and money.
A: If you truly are going to take an autodidactic approach, you need the self
discipline and assurance that the power comes from the attempt. Every failure will
show you the variables that led you there. No one ever learned to speak a language
without fucking up a few conjugations. We need to test our ability to materialize
our work, and see where we’ve been led astray. Rinse and repeat to success.
If you truly think you can learn entirely by yourself and become an acclaimed
filmmaker on your own, all the more power to you. Take what money you've got and
make films