Film Directing 127: Day One

Film Directing 127: Day One

Watch your actors like newborn babies

Your first day on set as a director will undoubtedly be memorable.

Every day of film production requires you to have a plan. The question is: can the scheduled work be completed in the allotted time?

Whatever happens, you’ll walk away knowing a lot more about your actors, yourself, and the challenges of directing.

Read More

Film Directing 123: Show and Tell Meetings

Film Directing 123: Show and Tell Meetings

Keep production running smoothly with no surprises

Show and Tell meetings bring together the various elements of the images you plan to create. They also help you avoid unwanted surprises during principle photography.

Everyone on the filmmaking team wants to deliver their best work. Clear, concise communication and decisive leadership from the director is a must. Effective show and tell meetings begin with the director. Vagueness and uncertainty are not helpful and will likely lead to delays and disappointments on set.

Get all your ducks (and seahorses) in a row!

Read More

Film Directing 116: The Director's Assistant Director

Film Directing 116: The Director's Assistant Director

Treat your Assistant Director like Gold

The first assistant director and their team is the engine that keeps your production running. Treat them like gold. They are worth it!

Your best chance at getting good performances from your actors and having an organized shoot that runs smoothy – on time and on budget – is to have an informed assistant director. Planning and managing all the moving parts of a film production and having everything in the right place at the right time is like a paramilitary operation.

Your show will only be as good as the teamwork and communication between you and your first assistant director. They are your most precious partner – because they make your creative plans come to life.

Read More

Film Directing 114: The Director's Creative Partnerships

Film Directing 114: The Director's Creative Partnerships

Synergy is the goal

Bringing a film to life – and making it good – relies heavily on the script and the director. But the director is not working alone. There are many creative partners who align with the director, and two are of critical importance in pre-production and principle photography – the director of photographer and the production designer.

Working alongside the director, these two creative keys are responsible for crafting the visual images.

Read More

Film Directing 112: The Director's Frame

Film Directing 112: The Director's Frame

Good films need intentional frames

An engaged audience reacts to the director’s choices in every frame. Focus, light, movement, composition, and shot content are factors for every director to consider when constructing a frame.

Ideas for frames grow and multiply through your director’s prep. The writer, John Steinbeck, said it best — 'Ideas are like rabbits. You get a couple and learn how to handle them, and pretty soon you have a dozen.'

Read More

Film Directing 105: Blocking the Scene

Film Directing 105: Blocking the Scene

Blocking fundamentals for the beginning director

“Blocking’s up!” is the announcement you hear on set when the director, director of photography, and actors gather to walk through the dynamics of a scene and how it’s going to be shot. Blocking is essentially the choreography between the actor(s) and the camera.

There can be many moving parts to the blocking puzzle. Everyone who contributes to the shot needs to know what’s in the frame, what’s happening – and when it’s happening.

Read More