She tells her students to begin by writing a one-sheet description of the project. This description will not be perfect or final, but it will set the filmmaking process into motion. Briefly sketch your themes, story, characters, and the filmmaking style you would like to use. (A good way to start choosing a style is to list the names of a few existing films that use a style that feels right to you, for this film.)
After you’ve written the one-sheet description of your intended film, ask yourself:
* Who do I want to interview?
* What locations do I want to visit and perhaps shoot?
* What activities do I want to capture?
* What research do I need to do?
Similar:
Quantity leads to quality - Austin Kleon
The Assignment #StarTrek #DS9 Rewatch (Season 5, Episode 5) Keiko is not herself after a t...
Microsoft is once again asking Chrome users to try Bing through unblockable pop-ups
Interesting use of A.I. in a radiology journal
Looks like somebody’s webmaster accidentally preloaded a headline that would be easy to ed...
What Deathbed Visions Teach Us About Living
Hi,
I am one of the readers, I have to say that I am enjoying to read your posts!
:-)
Dan