Thursday, January 3, 2008

Why Are You A Filmmaker?

Posted by Mark Dufresne
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Over the years I've found that my talents all point
to filmmaking. It is the most natural fit for me.
I'm happy to have found filmmaking, because it's
freed me to dream big again...
something that I haven't done in a while.


Posted by Paul Gutrecht
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I've been thinking lately about why we go to movies in the first place. I think we like to be entertained, engaged, and challenged in a story-telling environment: it's dark (we're released from our own bodily limitations), and whether we want to know the people around us or not, we are about to experience something with a group of other people (if we're in a theater vs. the living room). It's a story we're interested in, since we chose to be there, but what I've been thinking about is the other story getting told or re-told as you watch a movie.

The only actual motion in a movie theater is the flashing of many frames of film or video at such a fast rate that the illusion of fluid motion is created in our minds. That rapid flashing in combination with the audio create the fluid experience of the story unfolding before our eyes, but it's really unfolding behind them in our brains.

And when the story is good, we feel a connection to the story. Hard to say what that is, but maybe "connection" refers to how the story of the movie, written, directed, performed, edited by someone else and now undfolding in our brain, is stirring up our own memories of experience, dreams, desires, and so on, so that while we "watch" the movie we paid good money to see, we are also connecting on another level to painful and happy experiences, wishes and plans of our own making.

So that when "all is lost" in a movie, we relate to it in some way, and when the "final battle scene" is engaged, we connect on some level with our own battles, and a "new equilibrium" is reached, we compare it to where we went that one time when we were challenged in our own lives in one way or another.

So, I have made a few shorts, and hope to make a feature or two, in an attempt to stir that connection between the story projected and those of the people watching it, maybe to inspire them, to invigorate them in some way with the notion that others have had comparable (or not-comparable, but relatable) experiences and resolved them in this way or that way. So that when the audience leaves the big dark room with all the other people we don't know, we leave with the commone experiene of the movie and our own experience of the movie in relationship to the narrative unfolding within each one of us.



Posted by Carlo Pangalangan
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I make films because there is nothing else that I enjoy doing more.And I have little patience for anything else; repetition usually bores me, but an activity as repetitive as shooting several takes or editing the footage down to the a final cut. And there's nothing more satisfying then being able to have a finished film.

I also love to make films because I love seeing the audiences different reactions and interpretations to my work. I love how audiences can accept events happening on the flat screen as a reality, something I unfortunately can't experience with my own films.


Posted by Gina Levy
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Why...

I make films because it is both challenging and fulfilling. I have encountered other challenging endeavors--rock climbing, long distance running, quantum physics, advanced chemistry. But in contrast to those, filmmaking demands self-expression and creativity. From nothing, I create a story, a series of words and images that communicate a plot and generate emotion in the audience.

I love filmmaking because it requires me to master a broad array of skills. I need to develop/write compelling stories, collaborate with actors and crew, negotiate with vendors, have a singular vision, possess an aesthetic sensibility, artfully employ music to augment storytelling, build an emotional arc of a story while shooting out of sequence, master the rhythm of editing to take my audience for ride, figure out a way to make a living, understand how lenses, camera format, framing influence story telling and communicate all this clearly to my collaborators and my audience: so many skills and so much knowledge are necessary to become a master filmmaker.

And it requires perseverance. I stumble... I create something that doesn't work, and then I must go back to rewrite, to reshoot, to rework, to make the work work. I must constantly figure out what I don't know and how I can learn more to improve my skills and execution.

But when I am successful, I have manifested a visual and audio experience for people that takes them on a singular and compelling journey. I have realized something that no one else could have created as it comes from my unique experience and understanding of the world. And sometimes I am able to create something that deeply moves people, that takes them to a world they would never have entered, that shows them a different way of seeing things that are right in front of them.

That is why I do it...because it is both extremely hard and extremely rewarding.


Posted by Antony Berrios
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Asking a question about why I make films is a complex question.
Not very simple to answer, it's almost like asking why do I breath.
So in some ways for me to make films is to live.
For me it has nothing to do with making money or being famous. It's
not as shallow as that.
For me film is an artistic expression such as painting or composing music.
It's a radical convergence of luck, art and patience.

Some make films to be famous.
Others try and try to say something profound but in the end really
have nothing profound to say at all.
There is of course room in the big gooey pot of filmmaking for everyone.

And in the end no one is more right then the other. That's what makes
it an art form.
One might like Nora Ephron while others prefer
Gaspar Noe.

"The most difficult thing in the world is to reveal yourself, to
express what you have to. As an artist, I feel that we must try many
things - but above all we must dare to fail. You must be willing to
risk everything to really express it all."

-John Cassavetes


Posted by Sean Hood
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I make films to explore inner life. I make them to visualize a character's internal conflict, fear, and desire - and then project those private thoughts into external space. I'm more interested in symbolism than realism, dreams than documents, and personas than politics. So, the movies I love tend to be haunting, moody, and intense. I make films (try, work, fail, despair, hope to make them) so that someone might watch and say, "Yes. YES! That's it!" So that they might recognize some ineffable, numinous SOMETHING that they always knew was there but had never seen - and then somehow be changed for watching it.

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