Tuesday, February 10, 2015

The 15 Most Innovative Documentaries from The Last 5 Years


innovative documentaries

Innovation is nothing new. Almost since its conception, documentary has been reinventing itself, and many conventions of the genre, that we take for granted, were borne out of innovative evolutions of the form. Perhaps a development happening right now will become an expectation of future non-fiction films. Most attempt to find some kind of truth, however constructed or indirect, and this search is arguably what sparks changes.
The age we live in seems less certain of fact than any other, thanks, in part, to the immediate fact-finding power, and simultaneous contradictory evidence that constitutes the internet. It is unsurprising that a genre defined by documenting reality becomes ever more unstable in an era of uncertainty and mistrust. This list shows that as filmmakers reach for originality, honesty, and artistic truth, they are expanding the mode of documentary more radically than ever.

15. Stories We Tell (Sarah Polley, Canada, 2012)

Stories We Tell

From the beginning there is something peculiar about Stories We Tell, a sense of unease about what is shown, and a feeling of almost intoxicating nostalgia. Sarah Polley’s film tells the recent history of her own family, and mostly focuses on their memories of her mother, Diane, who died tragically early.
Polley hopes to bring her mother to life in some way, remembering her through home-movie footage and interviews with relatives and friends. Each person is another layer of opinion and perspective that contradicts the last, another ripple moving outward from the truth at the centre, distortions of the secrets her mother kept.
Truth is the red herring in Stories We Tell, and Polley baits the eager viewer with its illusion. The abundance of archive footage seems too convenient, somehow too relevant to the story, as if pre-packaged for future documentary material.
When it is revealed that mock archive footage of the family has been merged with the real home-movies throughout, the film’s ruse is unveiled. But rather than abuse the viewer’s commitment to the story, disarming them in this way proves just how unstable the truth can be in any documentary, and any narrative. Self-reflexivity is not uncommon in modern documentary filmmaking, but rarely is it explored in such an intimate context.

14. Cave of Forgotten Dreams (Werner Herzog, Germany, 2010)

Cave of Forgotten Dreams (2010)

Peering into the Chauvet caves, in the south of France, is like taking a step back in time. Discovered in 1994, the caves have been sealed and preserved for more than 20,000 years, and what was found inside is remarkable. Somehow undamaged by time or nature are long walls full of cave paintings and engravings, thought to around 30,000 years old; the earliest known pictorial artworks created by humans.
They are nearly all animals, mostly horses, lions, mammoths and even the figure of a woman, and the pictures have survived with brilliant clarity. Despite limited access to the cave, Werner Herzog was allowed to film inside for a short time, and his documentary does justice to the awe-inspiring images.
Cave of Forgotten Dreams provides the opportunity to see the murals, which so few people will ever actually be able to do. The camera lingers over every panel, and with Herzog’s insightful narration, the film becomes an absorbing, almost hypnotic exhibition of these ancient artefacts.
Unusually, for an observational film of this kind, Herzog released the film in 3D to enhance the experience of the caves. Something that might otherwise be documented factually is brought to life by Herzog, who imagines the artistic processes of our ancestors, and the cinematic precedence in their representations of motion.

13. Tabloid (Errol Morris, USA, 2010)

Tabloid

Errol Morris is no stranger to innovation in documentary. His 1988 film, The Thin Blue Line was groundbreaking in its use of reconstructions, and its role in reversing the verdict of a murder trial. Tabloid proves that more than two decades later, Morris is still just as inventive.
The documentary retells the story of an American woman, Joyce McKinney, a former beauty queen who became a tabloid sensation in the UK in the 1970s, for tracking down and kidnapping the man she loved. A string of other, equally bizarre stories kept her in the public eye, including the cloning of her pet dog, Booger, and her public persona appears increasingly absurd and intriguing.
However, Morris’ innovation is not the material itself, but how he chooses to engage it. He conducts interviews using his own invention, the “Interrotron”, a two-way optical device that means interviewees can stare directly into the camera, and see a video feed of the director, asking the questions like a face to face conversation.
The result is an intensity quite different from the average documentary. Looking into the camera lens is nothing new, but to have a face looking back at them gives the interviews a much more conversational feeling; a new attempt at finding documentary truth.

12. Exit Through The Gift Shop (Banksy, UK, 2010)

exit_through_the_gift_shop

At first glance you would be forgiven for assuming that Exit Through the Gift Shop was a film about Banksy, the controversial and illusive figure who spearheaded a cultural movement that put street art on the map. You would only be half right.
This documentary instead gives the spotlight to Thierry Guetta, an amateur French filmmaker who tries and fails to make a documentary about Banksy and the rise of street art. Unimpressed after seeing a long-awaited cut, Banksy opts to take the footage, himself, and piece together a better film, sending Guetta on an art project of his own.
Exit Through the Gift Shop is at once a short history of street art on film and, in its final act, a record of Thierry Guetta’s unmerited, but extremely successful transition into artistic acclaim. This is no mockumentary, it all really happened, but the clue is in the title. Banksy’s film works as a critique of the commodification of art, and the Guetta portion of the film is thought to be a hoax, a fake artist set up by Banksy to prove the gullibility of the art world.
Dubbed a ‘Prankumentary’ by one critic, Exit Through the Gift Shop is, essentially, a Banksy installation, a satirical experiment to test the limits of art-world hype.

11. 20,000 Days on Earth (Iain Forsyth, Jane Pollard, UK, 2014)

20,000 Days on Earth

One of the most inventive music documentaries of recent years, 20,000 Days on Earth, manages to be as eccentric as its star, Nick Cave. The film is a day in the life of the enigmatic musician, exploring the charms and habits of a music career that is now in its fourth decade, but to call it a ‘rockumentary’ would be too simple. Narrated and co-written by Cave himself, this film delves into the nuance and creativity of his persona, while simultaneously exposing its contrivance.
The sincerity in the film’s portrayal of Cave carries a healthy dash of poetic license; obviously staged encounters with those close to him appear scripted at times, and playfully improvised at others.
Through their creative choices, directors Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard show the instability of memory and recollection, with words and images building into psychedelic montage, as if Cave were pouring out his brain onto the screen. It plays out like a documentary reconstruction, where he plays the lead role, and his erratic creative processes bleed into the film’s structure.
Even viewers unfamiliar with Cave will be intrigued by his character, not to mention the inherent narcissism in such an inward-looking approach, but just how much can be gleaned from his self-composed candour is up to you.

10. A Story of Children and Film (Mark Cousins, N. Ireland, 2013)

A Story of Children and Film

Mark Cousins is featured twice on this list, and with good reason. As a filmmaker he recurrently questions the definition of documentary, often with innovations that seem so personal to his character that they could not be generic. As a continuation of The Story of Film: An Odyssey (2011), the 15-part series that charted film history from its beginning to the present day, Cousins applies a similar format to A Story of Children and Film.
In this feature length documentary he returns to the childhood perspective that was so prominent in his earlier film, The First Movie (2009). Throughout cinema’s relatively short life, Cousins gathers examples – from all over the world, and from the mainstream to the obscure – where children took centre-stage.
Other documentaries have studied film in depth but rarely with such involvement and verve. Through lyrical, insightful narration, he considers the minute details and nuances that may have previously been overlooked. The film studies and appreciates the power and charm of innocence on-screen, where performances seem untainted by control or self-consciousness.
Cousins also films his own niece and nephew, using their behaviour as interesting jumping-off points, from which explores varying perceptions of childhood in cinema. This device and the sometimes surprising transitions from film to film, from one idea to the next, characterise the director’s idiosyncratic style. The format is engrossing and could conceivably be applied to any strand of film study.

9. Planet of Snail (Yi Seung-Jun, South Korea, 2011)


Planet of Snail

Planet of Snail is a story of togetherness and mutual dependence. The film centres on Young-Chan, who has been deaf-blind for most of his life, and his wife, Soon-Ho, who suffers from a spinal deformity. Their relationship is quite unique and utterly inspiring.
Young-Chan suggests that he lives and even dreams with the speed of a snail, and the film, unsurprisingly, moves at a meditative pace. Changing a light bulb for Soon-Ho is one example that becomes an extended sequence in the film, patient and arduous but all the more thrilling to see their delight in succeeding. What would be a minor task for most is a towering obstacle here, only overcome through their collaboration and care. Soon-Ho is his eyes and ears, typing finger-Braile onto his hands, and sometimes even feet, to communicate.
Director, Yi Seung-Jun’s innovation is subtitling this correspondence, to allow the viewer into this world of touch-communication. This is no whirlwind romance; the film gradually captures moments of compassion and quiet intimacy, and Planet of Snail becomes poignant, complex and moving, in a way that few documentaries have ever attempted.

Read more at http://www.tasteofcinema.com/2015/the-15-most-innovative-documentaries-from-the-last-5-years/#PbIKgcQSeJuD98bU.99

The 37 Best Websites For Filmmakers

From: https://www.nyfa.edu/student-resources/the-37-best-websites-for-filmmakers/

There are thousands of websites out there for filmmakers. Some of them are a waste of your time, others offer awesome services and resources. So we asked our film school students to share with us their favorite filmmaking websites. Here is our list, in no particular order, of the 37 best websites for filmmakers.
Association of Film Commissioners International – With over 300 Film Commissions on six continents, there’s almost always an AFCI member office nearby to help you navigate local laws, customs and procedures.
Art of the Guillotine – Online film community for film editors. Connect editors and future editors with ideas and techniques that make films great as well as connect them with each other.
BIGSTAR Movies – The site offers distribution, networking and a monthly short film contest.
Baseline Intelligence – The service provides a variety of pre-packaged reports on popular topics for movie producers, independent filmmakers, corporate financiers, and other entertainment entities.
Cinephilia and Beyond – A fantastic collection of resources on all things cinema: screenplays, interviews, videos grouped around themes, films or directors.
Creative Cow – An excellent source of info on video production, with a lot of professionals and production experts hanging out in the comments and ready to answer any question you may have.
Drop.io – Use drop.io to privately share your files and collaborate, thinks screenplays, film productions and animations, in real time by web, email, phone, mobile, and more.
Detonation Films – Detonation Films is dedicated to putting the fun back in filmmaking by establishing a new paradigm between digital media and online entertainment. And also by blowing stuff up.
DVcreators – Training and resources for digital video makers.
DVXuser – An online community for filmmaking.
Earth Protect – With over 2,000 videos online about things you care about. You can start a blog, forum or find you favorite non-profit.
ExploreTalent – Auditions and job listing board.
Filmmakers Alliance – Helping independent filmmakers achieve their goals since 1993.
Filmmaker IQ – As well as technical tutorials and guides on the process of filmmaking, Filmmaker IQ explores the ‘whys’ of filmmaking just as much as the ‘hows’.
Film Riot – Ryan Connolly’s critically acclaimed tutorial site which provides a fresh and funny take on filmmaking how-tos.
Freesound – A collaborative database of Creative Commons licensed sounds.
Hollywood OmniBook – From agents to extras to screenplays for sale, the Hollywood OmniBook is your one stop source for connecting with Hollywood.
Go Into the Story – Given that telling stories lies at the very heart of filmmaking, this is essential reading.
IMDb – The “Internet Movide Database” says it all.
IDA – The International Documentary Association is the ultimate authority on all things related to documentary filmmaking.
indieProducer- A social networking site for Hollywood filmmakers
IndieTalk – An excellent platform for indie producers to chat shop and share tips, tricks and tales from the field
IndieWire – Geared towards both indie fans as well as indie filmmakers
InkTip – Find good screenplays and professional writers. Access is free to qualified producers, directors, agents, managers, and name actors.
John August – Useful information about screenwriting.
Mandy.com – International TV and film production resources.
Making Of – Natalie Portman intervies industry professionals on filmmaking.
MovieMaker Magazine – The nation’s leading magazine on the art and business of making movies and the world’s most widely read independent movie magazine.
ProductionHub – The Community search site for film, television, video, live event and digital media production.
Post Lab – The Post Lab is a good port of call for indie filmmakers looking for advice and tips on post production.
reTooled – Ever needed tutorial-style advice on Premiere Pro or After Effects, or wanted to streamline your production workflow? reTooled is the place for you.
Script Mag – One of the largest online communities for writers and filmmaker alike.
Student Filmmakers- Searchable community of filmmakers – both new-and-emerging and professional – talents in the film and video industries.
The Film Collaborative – If you’ve completed your film or getting close to it, check out the Film Collaborative for help on how to best distribute your film and find an audience.
Tom Cruise’s Blog - That’s right, Tom Cruise has put out a surprisingly brilliant list of resources over on his personal blog (or, at least, his team has). Although the list is mainly geared towards actors, there’s plenty of crossover here.
Twitch – Unrelated to the livestreaming service of the same name, Twitch is a depository for indie films and the discussion thereof (has a strong focus on world cinema.)
Videomaker – One of the earliest filmmaking magazines still going strong after nearly 30 years, now fully digitized.

Monday, October 13, 2014

Why Short Films Are Rejected from Festivals

Why Short Films Are Rejected from Festivals and Reasons You Should Make a Short Before a Feature

You finished your short film and/-it's the perfect calling card. It embodies you as a director: your range of styles, the twists and turns of your scriptwriting skills, and your ability to create high production value on pennies. In short, you’ve made it awesome. Unfortunately, the programmers at your favorite film festival disagree. You cry on your keyboard, eat a roll of raw cookie dough, and shout "Why?!" to no one in particular. Maybe that's a tad dramatic (or is it?) but nevertheless, I think everybody can agree that it's frustrating not being able to find out why your film got chopped. In the videos below, HollyShorts Film Festival Co-Founder Daniel Sol talks about why shorts might get rejected from a festival, goes into detail about how they program their festival, and mentions why you might want to make a short before a feature. 


Saturday, September 13, 2014

10 FILMMAKER APPS YOU NEED TO HAVE


filmmaker apps - cover photo

App Creators have Tapped into the Production Industry to Provide Must Have Filmmaker Apps for your Everyday Set Needs:

Smart Phones have become an every day necessity on set these days.  Let’s be honest, in this field we are obsessed with amazing cameras, new lighting technologies and sound equipment that would blow your mind.  Why would we settle for less with our cell phones or tablets?  App Creators and Industry professionals have teamed up to create an entire line of phone apps for filmmakers today.  Everyone wants to be the one to pull out the newest app on set and really impress the crew.  Whether you are a PA that needs to organize their releases, an AC that wants to make sure their GoPro was rigged up properly, or a Director that wants to get their shot list together, you’re going to want to get in on these apps stat!

1. Digital PA (Apple)

How many times has a release inexplicably disappeared between the time you got the signature and when you walked through the PO door?  That was only 12 steps, how could it have disappeared?!  Those days are over my friends.  Get this app and you can organize releases in a way that will make your Coordinators head explode.Filmmaker Apps - Digital PA

2. Sun Seeker/Sun Droid

Sun Seeker (Apple) is an app that will help you locate the sun and show you the solar path hour by hour.  With over 40,000 locations to choose from on this app, you will be able to pinpoint your perfect shot in any set location in the world.
filmmaker apps - sun seeker
Sun Droid (Google) is very similar to the Sun Seeker app, but is exclusive for Droid phones.  It will help you pinpoint sunrise and sunset times, length of day, and show you the path of the sun, moon or any planet through the sky.
filmmaker apps - sun droid

3. Kodak Cinema Tools (Apple/Google)

This app has something for everyone.  With it’s Sunrise/Sunset calculator, you can get that perfect aesthetic shot.  Take the guesswork out of the equation with the Depth of Field Calculator.  What’s the TRT?  Just enter in the specifics and the app calculates for you.  What’s a vectorscope?  Learn your filmmaker lingo with the apps glossary of terms.
filmmaker apps - kodak cinema tools

4. GoPro App (Apple/Google)

Filming some B-Roll around town?  Want to make sure your shot looks good?  Well, unless you’re on the roof with the GoPro, you should probably get this app.  This app gives you remote control of all the camera functions.  You can take a photo, start/stop recording, adjust settings, see what the camera sees with live preview, playback photos and videos, and share your favorites via email or social media… all from your phone!
filmmaker apps - go pro

5. Cinema Forms (Apple)

An Assistant Director and Production Coordinators dream.  This app comes with 13 essential forms, with 90 more to choose from in the library.  In your hand you have the ability to create and organize call sheets, shot logs, various release forms, location forms, contact sheets and more!  You can also save these forms as PDF and share them via Dropbox.  With the AirPrint feature, you can even print these forms from your iPad!

filmmaker apps - cinema form

6. Shot Designer (Apple/Google)

With this app you can create a full blown camera diagram in seconds.  You can see how a scene will play out, and show the crew with the animation feature.  While you are creating these diagrams, the shot list is auto-creating!  The Directors Viewfinder integration allows you to bring in lens-accurate camera angles.  The app comes with a MAC/PC version so you can see your work on your computer when you get home from set.  This app brings Shot Lists, Camera Diagrams and Storyboards together so you have a comprehensive view of what your production is going to look like, not just in your minds eye but on your phone for everyone to view.
filmmaker apps - shot designer

7. Wrap Time (Apple)

How many times have you started filling out your time card and not only do you not remember what your call time was two days ago, you’re having a hard time remembering what today is?  That’s what happens when you work 14 hour shifts for 13 days straight!  This app allows you the ability to input your call time, meal time and wrap time as you go, making filling out your time card that much faster and easier.  The program will calculate your pay, meal penalties or overtime depending on the work information you input.  There are even capabilities to input Grace Periods, Kit Rentals and Second Meals!
filmmaker apps - wrap time

8. TeraView (Apple)

In some instances (Reality/Docu-Follow), Video Village is not an option.  This app allows Producers the ability to sit in the production van while viewing the camera feed directly on their phone!  All you need is a Wi-Fi connection and you are good to go.
filmmaker apps - teraview

9. Movie Slate (Apple)

Lost your dry erase marker or clapper board?  You know what, throw the whole slate out altogether, because with this app you will no longer need it!  Movie Slate is an AC’s best friend.  You can log footage, take notes as you shoot, set timecode and even sync timecode wirelessly to compatible cameras, sound recorders and LTC generators!
Movie Slate also has optional in-app plugins:
MultiCamera Plugin – With this optional in-app purchase, you can log data and shot notes for up to 26 cameras!
Sound Plugin – Sound Mixers can log all sound department meta data and quickly generate Sound Reports with this optional in-app purchase.
filmmaker apps - movie slate 2

10. AJA DataCalc (Apple)

Whether you are a Media Manager, AC, Assistant Editor or Editor, this app will definitely come in handy.  If you are in the field or the edit bay, you can easily compute your data capturing requirements or storage consumption.  With the scroll of your finger, you can browse file format configurations.  You can input durations in days, minutes, seconds or precise time code frame counts.  You can even specify the frame rates, compression type, frame sizes or even sample rates and bits per sample for audio purposes.
filmmaker apps - AJA datacalc

The days of putting your phone away on set are long gone.  These apps are amazing investments that will not only make your day easier, but will totally impress your supervisor.
If you like this list, stay tuned for Round 2!  Know of any amazing apps that we missed?  Feel free to comment below with your personal favorite filmmaker apps.

Friday, September 05, 2014

The Top 5 Female Character Stereotypes & 1 Tip To Avoid Them


From: http://www.londonscreenwritersfestival.com/the-top-5-female-character-stereotypes-1-tip-to-avoid-them/

By Lucy V Hay

Strong female characters. Everyone wants one, it seems. Until you write one of these:
  1. A Kickass Hottie
  2. A [Negative Adjective*] female
  3. A depressed and/or absent mother
  4. A “tart with a heart”
  5. A facilitator of the lead male’s emotions
NEWSFLASH: All of these female characters are BORING. Why? Because that’s all we ever seem to get as script readers, filmmakers or consumers, that’s why!
I’ve said it before at my site Bang2write multiple times, but I’ll say it again here: human beings prize novelty.  That’s just the way it is. As a writer and/or filmmaker you can fight that – and lose – or you can start thinking about how your characters are DIFFERENT to “all the rest”.
But stop right there!
Don’t kneejerk and go to the OPPOSITE end of the scale, either. That’s how we ended up in this mess in the first place, with “strong female characters” ending up invariably just “men, with boobs” or as a plot device for a male character’s justifications – or worse, gratification – as he does all the cool stuff going for **that goal** … of his.
But this is just it. To stand out?  You don’t want a “great female character” … You want a great character, who happens to be female.
But how to do this? Answer: Stop seeing your character as FEMALE FIRST. The best female characterisation comes down to this:
Personality first; gender second.
Gender is (usually) an important part of a person. But it’s not everything about that person. Yet it’s personality, not gender, that should act as the catalyst for that characters’ desires/goals, as well as their actions in driving the story forward. Writers seem to get this when they write their male characters, but very often end up writing “the girl character” in their screenplays. You know, the one that’s defined by her “femaleness”. Ack.
But guess what – it’s not even just the male writers who do this, either. Female writers do it too. In ten years of script editing, I have seen NO correlation between gender of the writer and “good” or “bad” female characters in their work. Writers make the same mistakes, whether they are male or female themselves … But by that same token, ANY writer has every chance of writing a well-drawn, authentic character regardless of their own gender. Well, d
uh.
Truly great female characterisation is rarely about role reversals for the sake of it, or going all out to be supposedly “ground breaking”. The best female characterisation I have read in screenplays or seen on screen is left of the middle: those great female characters are whole & rounded, no matter what their ambitions are; what they do for a job; who they spend their time with; what level of education they have; where they’ve traveled or whatever else you want to write into their character bios.
But equally, don’t strive to make all female characters ACTUALLY “good”, either. This is patronizing and ultimately foolhardy, since drama is conflict. There’s a strong chance you won’t want your female characters to behave logically or well all the time, else there will be no movie. That’s not to say every female character needs to be ditsy or a seductress with an Evil Plan, but she does need to feel authentic and “real”. Do you or the women in your life behave perfectly, 24/7? I know I don’t.
And forget “female empowerment”. Personally, I think resting the whole cause on the shoulders of one screenplay or a single movie is unrealistic. I think it’s better to think of female empowerment as a cumulative build up: a “drip, drip” effect, if you like. Movie making is a business first, art second. So let’s support the movement by getting behind female filmmakers and consuming movies with those great characters **who happen to be female** in them.
So, think again about those “usual” characters I mention at the beginning of this post … Maybe your female character *is* able to kick ass; maybe she has a tragic backstory; maybe she ignores or disappoints her children; maybe she’s a stripper or sex worker; maybe she is able to tap into the lead male’s psyche … whatever. Just make sure that’s not ALL she does.
Put your female characters under the micro
scope and think left of the middle. Take an element of your character and twist it; give us details of WHO she is and WHY – don’t reduce her to a single role function. In short:
Don’t be the “usual”. Don’t be boring.

lara

UPDATE - Rhainna Pratchet, tasked with rebooting Lara Croft added “With the reimagining of Lara Croft we were attempting to bring more texture and depth to her character by exploring a period of her life that players hadn’t experienced before. We know that Lara Croft is brave, resourceful and resilient, but we wanted to show where that came from and how it evolved, and let players be part of that journey. It wasn’t a story about being female, it was a story about being human and the enduring nature of the human spirit in the face of adversity.”
BIO: Lucy V Hay is a script editor, novelist and blogger who helps writers via herBang2write consultancy. Lucy is one of the organisers of London Screenwriters’ Festival and also the Associate Producer of Brit Thriller DEVIATION that features a female protagonist.
*Usually depressed and responsible for the death of someone else (usually a sister), the negative adjective used most often to describe female character archetype number 2) is “guilt ridden”.

Spielberg, Godard, Herzog, & More Offer Cinematic Wisdom in Wim Wender's 1982 'Room 666'



Room 666
If you could get a large group of some of cinema's greatest directors in one room, what would you ask them? Well, director Wim Wenders got that opportunity while at the 1982 Cannes Film Festival, and subsequently made a documentary about it. 16 iconic directors, including Jean-Luc Godard, Steven Spielberg, Werner Herzog, and Rainer Werner Fassbinder, were asked a series of questions about the future of the film industry, as well as the art form itself, and their answers became an incredible 44-minute video compendium of cinematic knowledge. Check it Wenders' Room 666 after the break.

This video was shared by The Film Stage last year as a roundabout way to commemorate the 31st anniversary of Rainer Werner Fassbinder's death, which occurred less than a month after the filming of this documentary. However, each director that appears in Room 666, which was in fact filmed at Cannes in room 666 at the Hotel Martinez, were given one 16 mm reel (about 11 minutes) to give their insight into filmmaking as art, the state of cinema at the time, and where they believed it was headed -- the main question being, "Is cinema a language about to get lost, an art about to die?" 
It's especially interesting, because we are now living in and experiencing the future they were talking about. In fact, French director Romain Goupil talks about how film always seemed "prehistoric" to him, and how video was going to make the then (and now) cumbersome process of telling a story much easier. Spielberg's interview is interesting, too, in that it seems as though the Hollywood system of film investment hasn't changed since 1982. He laments how studios really only want to invest in "home run" pictures -- maybe "third base" pictures, but very rarely anything less. They want films that appeal to mass audiences -- not "films about your grandfather."
And, as a quick side note, Herzog, after he takes off his shoes and socks (because you can't give an interview with them on), imagines a day when you'll be able to do some crazy stuff with technology -- like order a meal using the buttons on your phone or your computer.
In case you want to follow along as each director speaks, here's a list of them in the order in which they appear:
  • Jean-Luc Godard
  • Paul Morrissey
  • Mike De Leon
  • Monte Hellman
  • Romain Goupil
  • Susan Seidelman
  • Noël Simsolo
  • Rainer Werner Fassbinder
  • Werner Herzog
  • Robert Kramer
  • Ana Carolina
  • Maroun Bagdadi
  • Steven Spielberg
  • Michelangelo Antonioni
  • Wim Wenders
  • Yilmaz Güney
Feel free to share your thoughts about any of the topics brought up in Room 666 below!