Book Reviews


16
Feb 12

Robert Rodriguez: Rebel Without a Crew

Since I’ve been writing these book reviews as a way of sharing my own film-making self-education. The first thing to mention is what kind of audience I think Rebel without a Crew is appropriate for. In some ways Rodriguez’ book is most appropriate for those of us who want to make movies. However it is so entertaining and the El Mariachi stories are so cool that I think any indy film buff will like this book.

Everyone’s heard of a bucket list, how about a cold beer list. After reading this book and watching 10 minute film school, I’d put Robert Rodriguez on any top 10 list of people I’d like drink a beer with. He is funny as hell and tells a great story.

As the title suggests, this is not a book about making Hollywood movies. Rodriquez made El Mariachi with his buddies, a borrowed 16mm camera, some cash he got from selling his body to science and a script he thought of as something to practice on. If Neil Young is the godfather of grunge, Rodriguez is the Patron Saint of indy films. The problem is our idea of an indy film is still a millions of dollars affair. His idea of being a true one-man-band is really worth some thought before your re-finance your house to make your first film.

“The creative person with limitless imagination and no money can make a better film then the talentless mogul with a limitless checkbook every time.”

In the film Inception the story turns on the concept that a single idea can be really powerful, that it can change someone’s life. Rodriguez had one of those singular life-changing ideas. He wanted to write a script. Someone told him that everyone has two bad movies in them, so the advice offered was write two scripts and throw them in the trash. Then write a script to shop around. Rodriguez didn’t think he would have the discipline to write something knowing it was going in the trash. So his singular life-changing idea, write a script and make a movie from that script. That way he would get practice at both. To sweeten the idea he figured he could make it on the cheap then sell it to the Mexican film market for just enough to cover the costs of making it and one more practice movie. You guessed it, he didn’t make a movie for the trash, he made El Mariachi.

Not only did he make El Mariachi, he kept a diary of the whole wild ride. That’s the meat of Rebel Without a Crew. It’s fully worth reading the story, it’s not only highly entertaining it will motivate you to make your film.

Rodriguez really is a rebel. Just like David Mamet, who says Hollywood producers have no souls, Rodriguez doesn’t have much patience for capital “P” producers. He is so convinced that breaking the rules is the first step to creativity that he urges you not only to break all the Hollywood rules but to break his rules too.

“question everything because it can all be rethought and improved… in the end the only techniques worth knowing are the ones you invent your self.”

Here is the original 10 Minute Film School:

As if Robert hasn’t taught you enough about filmmaking here is 10 Minute Cooking School, as I said this is a guy you want to have a beer with.

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1
Feb 12

Recommended Reading: David Mamet’s On Directing Film

I stumbled upon David Mamet’s now twenty-year-old book On Directing Film while looking for something else on Amazon, Jeff Bezos should be happy. Whatever algorithm is working behind the scenes spit out  just what I was after.

I bought the book because I like Mammet’s writing for films like House of Games, The Spanish PrisonerWag the Dog, Ronin and State and Main. Like Aaron Sorkin’s double speed writing you can really tell a Mamet script by the halting cadence.

On Directing Film comes from a series of lectures Mammet gave at Columbia University after directing House of Games. The format is a transcript of Mamet’s lecture with his student’s responses to his questions.

There will be two moments to give you pause reading this book, one in the beginning when you pull out a dictionary to understand what Mammet means by uninflected a word he uses again and again. Another when you wonder if the book should be titled, On Writing for Film. Mamet does have a Pulitzer.

Mamet’s key point is that a movie is a story told in cuts. It should be created by juxtaposing uninflected images which tell the story. By uninflected he means something like unrelated. This is essentially Eisenstein’s theory of montage. Show the audience a series of images that move the story forward; tell the story in the simplest way without narration. There is an entire chapter on this here: David Mamet’s Glengarry Glen Ross: text and performance 

For a moment I wondered if this book was really about directing or if it was about writing drama. Really it’s a book about preparing. I think Mamet is very right when he says that being unprepared on set will not cause you to be creative, at the best you can copy something that you know works or do something interesting that may not be right for the story. He says that directing is all done before the cameras and crew show up.

Mamet shows his students how to see a film in manageable units. The largest unit is the film, the smallest is the shot and the unit of most interest to the director is the scene. Each scene should be a tiny drama of its own where the protagonist has a goal to achieve (or not). Then we are to break the scene down into beats and shots. For Mamet preparing this road map from shot to beat to scene to film is directing.

To better understand this, think of a scene. For example, the scene is “flee from a crime”. The protagonist’s goal is: get away. The beats are: a) get to the car, quickly b) start the car, c) drive away, unnoticed. At this point the shots start to fall into place: Running from a distance, tight shot of feet showing speed, looking over his shoulder, getting to the car, working the key in the lock, starting the car, hands on wheels, foot on pedal, eyes in mirror, tires spinning, car moving through the lot, turning onto the road, disappearing into traffic.

Mamet explains it much more convincingly then I could here, read the book. What you will learn is that this concept of looking at each scenes as a drama told in beats and shots provides a check-sum. An opportunity to see the story very close up (shot by shot) or to pull back to the beats or scenes and make sure that everything contributes to the through-line.

 

 

 

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27
Jan 12

Recommended Reading: Moviemakers Master Class: Private lessons with the world’s foremost directors

While I’ve been waiting patiently for Red to ship my Scarlet camera I’ve been taking the opportunity to do some reading. On a recent flight I brought along Movie Makers Master Class. It’s a good read.

Laurent Tirard wanted to be a filmmaker but found a career as a journalist. He figured out a way to make great use of his job to meet the best directors in the world. In the process he taught himself to make films – which he is now doing – and created a book which is at the least a good read and at the most may be the inspiration for your directing. The masterclass is an interview format in which Tirard asks the same series of questions to 20 of the best directors in the world. Or as he says the ones he could get to sit with him. The result is that the reader has a  framework to compare the answers from each director to each question. For example Tirard asked each interviewee how they decide to position the camera, what is the first thing they do on set each day, how they work with actors, their opinion of the auteur theory…

Some of the directors Tirard talks to are household names, all are people whose work has helped shape the way movies are made and stories are told: Joel and Ethan Coen,  Martin Scorsese, Oliver Stone, Woody Allen, Tim Burton, David Lynch, John Woo, Pedro Almodavar, Sydney Pollack, Bernardo Bertolucci,  Emir Kusturica, Claude Sautet,  Wong Kar-Wai, Wim Wenders, Lars Von Trier, Takeshi Kitano, Jean-Pierre Jeunet, John Boorman, David Cronenberg, Jean-Luc Godard.

The problem with a book titled Master Class is it can’t help to be disappointing. The reader has been promised the meaning of life. The reality is the only high-level lesson that will come from a book like this is that each of the artists interviewed have found their own path, stuck to that path and brought a unique vision to their audience. That alone is a lesson any creative person needs to learn – maybe again and again. The real value in these master classes is accepting that there is not one path but seeing how each of the directors found a unique solutions to the creative problems at hand.

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26
Jan 12

Recommended Reading: In The Blink of an Eye by Walter Murch

You may not recognize Walter Murch’s name but there is no doubt that you know his work. He edited Apocalypse Now, Godfater II and III and The English Patient to name a few. I bought this book when I was deep into my first couple motion projects. I realized learning to use the editing tools is just putting your toes into the water. To edit film you have to understand what a cut is and why it works for the human brain. This is where Murch’s book starts. He takes us through both the mechanics of film – frames flashing by 24 times a second – and the neuroscience of why the human brain accepts the illusion. It could just as easily have not worked and movies wouldn’t work the way they do. He spends a fair amount of time talking about editing actual film and most of this is wasted on people who are only familiar with NLEs (non-linear editors like Adobe Premiere or Final Cut). The second edition goes into his beginnings in digital post but I would love to see him write a new version of this book discussing his own thoughts now that digital intermediaries and digital capture are standard. That said, the tools are irrelevant, read this book to start thinking like an editor and start really understanding how films are like dreams and how the audience perceives the cut.

 

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