Archive for July, 2018

“David Lynch’s The Elephant Man is the one Lynch film that found a mesmerizing middle ground between conventional Hollywood story structure and its director’s surreal dreamscapes. Yet today it seems on the verge of being forgotten, and that’s a shame.” Kyle Smith, National Review The Elephant Man is currently available on Netflix and I had forgotten what […]

Original Source…

Comments No Comments »

I come out of a background — I was a private detective for years after I started as a filmmaker. I like to think, of course I could be completely wrong, that there’s this detective element in everything I do. My movies start from interviews. Everything that I’ve really done —The Thin Blue Line started […]

Original Source…

Comments No Comments »

Academy Award and Emmy Award-winning producer/writer/director James L. Brooks has had one of the most remarkable careers in Hollywood. There’s his credits as creator or co-creator of The Simpsons, Taxi, and The Mary Tyler Moore Show. His credits as a producer include Jerry Maguire and Big. And he wrote and directed As Good As it Gets and […]

Original Source…

Comments No Comments »

“Plot is just not my gift. I’m fascinated with complex characters, and that doesn’t mix well with complex plots. . . . I’ve made up little mantras for myself, catchphrases from a screenwriting book that doesn’t exist. One is ‘Write the movie you’d pay to go see.’ Another is ‘Never let a character tell me something […]

Original Source…

Comments No Comments »

“[For First Reformed] I had the character from Diary of a Country Priest, I had the premise from Winter Light, I had the ending from Ordet, I had the levitation from Tarkovsky’s The Mirror, I had the credits from Voyage to Italy—I was stealing all over the place. . . .The secret of stealing is […]

Original Source…

Comments No Comments »

“There are some cases where you want to afflict the comfortable, and there are other cases where you want to comfort the afflicted.” Katie Couric on the journalist’s job Interview on The Tim Ferriss Show According to a Poynter article by David Shedden the roots of that sentiment go back to a one-act play with […]

Original Source…

Comments No Comments »

Make a difference today for someone who is fighting for their tomorrow. You don’t need to be a Russell Wilson, an Aaron Rogers, to make a difference out there. Every single person in this roon can be a difference maker. You can be just a normal person that gets up every morning and goes to […]

Original Source…

Comments No Comments »

“Sometimes people will say to me, why do you always have these characters act so badly? Why are they behaving terribly? Why do they think this way? And I always say because they need to learn a lesson. If they’re smart, and self-actualized, and kind, and compassionate there’s no story. Stories are about people who […]

Original Source…

Comments No Comments »

“I like to think about sequences. I really believe less in a three-act structure and much more in sequences that are sort of eight-to-12 pages. Roughly about ten-minutes that work almost like chapters in a story. Nobody is better at building a story this way than Steven Spielberg… The sequences have their own beginning, middle, […]

Original Source…

Comments No Comments »

Yesterday I picked up the Blu-Ray of A Quiet Place. I haven’t bought a movie on the day of its release in years. I wanted to fit in another post about it and landed on this first frame from the movie—DAY 89. That’s minimalistic exposition at its best. It hooks the audience and forces them to […]

Original Source…

Comments No Comments »