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re: "I think directing is the most over-rated job in the world"

Posted on 2/6/19 at 6:40 pm to
Posted by EyeTwentyNole
Member since Mar 2015
4199 posts
Posted on 2/6/19 at 6:40 pm to
The Steven Spielberg doc on HBO is really interesting to watch. He didn't just have the vision, he would literally look at a scripted scene and say eh I don't like the way this looks and come up with the shot as well as the lighting on the spot. A lot of the handheld shooting on Schindler's List was he himself running around with a camera telling people what to do in the shot. The specific shot in Saving Private Ryan of them charging up the hill at the sniper (when Giovanni Ribisi dies) was come up with on the spot because they expected the sun to be in a different location at that time of day. Spielberg said OK well let's just shoot the whole thing in the opposite direction
This post was edited on 2/6/19 at 6:41 pm
Posted by mizzoubuckeyeiowa
Member since Nov 2015
35651 posts
Posted on 2/6/19 at 7:19 pm to
quote:

The Steven Spielberg doc on HBO is really interesting to watch. He didn't just have the vision, he would literally look at a scripted scene and say eh I don't like the way this looks and come up with the shot as well as the lighting on the spot.


Welles was accused of spreading himself too thin...he believed in doing everything...and he disdained Directors who would sit in a chair and yell action.

He also lost all funding from Hollywood. I don't think he thought just being a Director was terribly challenging because he had done everything personally on his stage plays in London at such an early age.

He said he loved being a Director because he could be creative but it wasn't challenging enough by itself.

We use the word auteur now. Welles was it...writing, directing, cinematography, etc. He thought Directors should have the technical skills to film a movie and should be able to put on the whole production themselves like a stage play - wear all the hats...not just direct cinematographers where to point the camera and let assistants coach the actors.

I think his point was, we think Directors do way more than they really do. As if they made the entire movie without assistants, editors, accomplished cinematographers who have their own vision, story-board men, etc.

I think Welles was so smart he wanted to dabble in everything and when Hollywood turned their back on him, he turned his back on Hollywood.

Still the best long take in movie history and he did it 60 years ago.

People would think it was awesome now if it just came out...like, how did they do that? Without computers?





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