Fantastically explained. Very useful for actors and Executives and Angel Executive investors to understand it from the directors eye... :-) Thankyou....!
It ultimately depends on your overall budget as a filmmaker. If you are crafting a film on a strictly limited budget, you cannot do anything. For example, there may be certain shots you would wish to have in your film that you simply do not have the money for. Good advice on cinematography, nevertheless. Depending on how you choose to execute a certain shot, you can reveal a character's subjective desires, observe their inner emotions Every aspect of a film, -- every line of dialogue, every scene, every shot, -- should move the narrative forward. It should all have purpose.
Good films always have small budgets. Because when you can't do anything you want, you need to get creative. I'm talking about auteur cinema of course, not Marvel or basically any Hollywood production. .
there absolutely are rules, thinking of it linguistically, you can say anything, but will you make sense.
That is a brilliant way to put it.
Dang, this guy is smart.
According to the IMDB page they shot all the flashbacks on 16mm Ektachrome film with Bolex cameras.
I wondered, actually.
Today, they would've just slapped some "aged film" filters over digital footage.
David fincher is awesome
i will consider your advice for my next works, david
He's talking about the shoot list, the blocking, the pace and the tone of scenes. These are not "cinematography" decisions but "director" decisions.
The so called "director" supervises over all aspects of the picture. He takes lighting, cinematography, scoring, editing etc. All those decisions.
nice soft lighting -- but what is wrong with this audio ?!
choclodite Lensman yeah it sounds way off, oscillating from faux stereo to mono everytime he starts speaking.
Fantastically explained. Very useful for actors and Executives and Angel Executive investors to understand it from the directors eye... :-)
Thankyou....!
Fincher is legendary
Thanks for posting this, I wish you could post the entire commentary.
9 years later it prolly doesn't matter but anyways, th-cam.com/video/Qzwd7jOm1gM/w-d-xo.html
It ultimately depends on your overall budget as a filmmaker. If you are crafting a film on a strictly limited budget, you cannot do anything. For example, there may be certain shots you would wish to have in your film that you simply do not have the money for. Good advice on cinematography, nevertheless. Depending on how you choose to execute a certain shot, you can reveal a character's subjective desires, observe their inner emotions Every aspect of a film, -- every line of dialogue, every scene, every shot, -- should move the narrative forward. It should all have purpose.
Leonard Ney Welcome.
Good films always have small budgets. Because when you can't do anything you want, you need to get creative. I'm talking about auteur cinema of course, not Marvel or basically any Hollywood production.
.
think you could upload the boogie nights commentary somehow?
Thanks for posting this...
sure thing, buddy!
Excuse me for the stupid question, but what film is this? Looks gorgeous so would like to watch.
The Game
The Game
correction - two. the first two, to be precise
Is this on the Criterion Edition?
Liked and subscribed!
Credit where credits due... To Universal......... ?
I'll probably do that. subscribe for updates
To bad there arnt more videos of him on the set of his movies talking
This is from the DVD commentary track?
Yes. But it's only on the DVD or criterion blu ray.
You know.
He directed one episode.
Don't know if this is illegal or not
hmmm..I think, every movie is different...so there are no "real" rules....
Every film is definitely different. So how do you (personally) decide what to do for the purposes of whatever film you're working on?
Sounds awful !
david fincher is awesome