Annette Bening Says…

So many of today’s films have tons of technology.  This can be extremely cost efficient (for instance when you use a blue or green screen to put you on the moon or any other exotic location) but it also means that more and more, everything is ruled by technology which puts huge demands on an actor’s concentration.  Annette Bening says “You have to be ready when they are”.  But how you get  yourself “there” before its time to shoot your scene will depend on what kind of actor you are.  Every one is different.  Some like to goof around with their co-stars while others need to stay in the “zone”, still another person my have to go off by themselves entirely.  The important thing is to know what works for you because when the moment comes you need to be ready to connect to everything that’s important: the other characters, your subtext and your objectives.

 “I remember hearing someone say, that good acting is more about taking off a mask than putting one on, and in movie acting, certainly that’s true. With the camera so close, you can see right down into your soul, hopefully. So being able to do that in a way is terrifying, and in another way, truly liberating. And I like that about it”.

Annette Bening

Do you have any special techniques that help you stay focused when technology is getting in your way?

Trusting the Actors

Jonathan Demme, the Academy Award winning director of such iconic films as Silence of the Lambs, Beloved and Philadelphia has a simple philosophy when it comes to directing actors.

“I love putting the movie in the hands of the actors.  I am so in awe of what they do”.

If you’d like to know more about why this fascinating director has such high regard for what actors do, (not all directors feel this way) then check out his interview at Lincoln Center from 2012.

Jonathan Demme

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To Improv or Not to Improv

Some actor’s love improv and wouldn’t think of rehearsing a role without out incorporating it on at least some level into the backstory and or subtext of their character.  Personally, I think playing a scene “wrong,” meaning choosing an opposite subtext to what you think the script writer has written, can work beautifully and add an unexpected element of surprise and depth to a scene.  Other actor’s like Michael Richards, who played Kramer in Seinfeld says he would improvise physical business but never dialogue.

“Its my job to bring the character to the language”.

What do you think?  Do you use improve in your performances and if so, how?

 

What Sean Penn Wants

Sean Penn, in my opinion one of America’s leading actors, wants one thing from a director…  He is an actor who is not afraid to take risks.  I mean, did you see his brilliant work in the 2011 film This Must Be the Place?  He was fearless on so many levels – and it worked.

“What I want from a director is courage.  What I don’t want from a director is too much chatter.”

– Sean Penn

What makes you feel safe enough to take big risks?

 

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The Drama of the Gifted Child

I first learned about this book when I read Truth by Susan Batson.  She makes studying this slim little journey in auto-psychoanalysis a pre-requisite to her working with any actor.  It was brought up again as a valuable tool for actors by Giles Foreman in his Instinct & Intimacy Masterclass.  The Drama of the Gifted Child: The Search for the True Self by Alice Miller is only 136 pages long but its truly profound in its revelations about what drives us as individuals.  Since we as actors have to first imagine how we would feel as another human being, we have to begin with an understanding of what our own motivations are and that’s what this book gives you.  It is invaluable when it comes to understanding  yourself and the person you are trying to create.  It also helps with creating a backstory, understanding objectives and super objectives and even shadow movements, those little ticks and gestures we all make that reveal our inner life.  Its a very readable little book that I highly recommend available in English or German.

BILLY CRUDUP at the Soho Grand after a screening of his new film, Thin Ice, New York. Photo Sabine Heller  SABINE

Quote from Billy Crudup

“You can learn the right questions to ask in developing a character.  You ask yourself where they’re from, what they want, what their relationships are like, what their decision making process is in life and the tools they use to get what they want.  Rather than using adjectives – he’s angry here — he’s sad here — you give the character motivation to pursue something, and as you build the character you give them the tools for going about getting what they want”.

— Billy Crudup

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Danny Boyle’s 15 Golden Rules of Filmmaking

1. A DIRECTOR MUST BE A PEOPLE PERSON • Ninety-five percent of your job is handling personnel. People who’ve never done it imagine that it’s some act, like painting a Picasso from a blank canvas, but it’s not like that. Directing is mostly about handling people’s egos, vulnerabilities and moods. It’s all about trying to bring everybody to a boil at the right moment. You’ve got to make sure everyone is in the same film. It sounds stupidly simple, like ‘Of course they’re in the same film!’ But you see films all the time where people are clearly not in the same film together.

2. HIRE TALENTED PEOPLE • Your main job as a director is to hire talented people and get the space right for them to work in. I have a lot of respect for actors when they’re performing, and I expect people to behave. I don’t want to see people reading newspapers behind the camera or whispering or anything like that.

3. LEARN TO TRUST YOUR INSTINCTS • Ideally, you make a film up as you go along. I don’t mean that you’re irresponsible and you’ve literally got no idea, but the ideal is that you’ve covered everything—every angle—so that you’re free to do it any of those ways. Even on low-budget films, you have financial responsibilities. Should you fuck it up, you can still fall back on one of those ways of doing it. You’ve got Plan A to go back to, even though you should always make it with Plan B if you can. That way keeps it fresh for the actors, and for you.

4. FILM HAPPENS IN THE MOMENT • What’s extraordinary about film is that you make it on the day, and then it’s like that forever more. On that day, the actor may have broken up with his wife the night before, so he’s inevitably going to read a scene differently. He’s going to be a different person.
I come from theater, which is live and changes every night. I thought film was going to be the opposite of that, but it’s not. It changes every time you watch it: Different audiences, different places, different moods that you’re in. The thing is logically fixed, but it still changes all the time. You have to get your head around that.

5. IF YOUR LAST FILM WAS A SMASH HIT, DON’T PANIC • I had an obsession with the story of 127 Hours, which pre-dated Slumdog Millionaire. But I know—because I’m not an idiot—that the only reason [the studio] allowed us to make it was because Slumdog made buckets of money for them and they felt an obligation of sorts. Not an obligation to let me do whatever I want, but you kind of get a free go on the merry-go-round.

6. DON’T BE AFRAID TO TELL STORIES ABOUT OTHER CULTURES • You can’t just hijack a culture for your story, but you can benefit from it. If you go into it with the right attitude, you can learn a lot about yourself, as well as about the potential of film in other cultures, which is something we tried to do with Slumdog Millionaire… Most films are still made in America, about Americans, and that’s fine. But things are changing and I think Slumdog was evidence of that. There will be more evidence as we go on.

7. USE YOUR POWER FOR GOOD • You have so much power as director that if you’re any good at all, you should be able to use that to the benefit of everyone. You have so much power to shape the movie the way you want it that, if you’re on form and you’ve done your prep right and you’re ready, you should be able to make a decent job of it with the other people.

8. DON’T HAVE AN EGO • Your working process—the way you treat people, your belief in people—will ultimately be reflected in the product itself. The means of production are just as important as what you produce. Not everyone believes that, but I do. I won’t stand for anyone being treated badly by anyone. I don’t like anyone shouting or abusing people or anything like that. You see people sometimes who are waiting for you to be like that, because they’ve had an experience like that in the past, but I’m not a believer in that. The texture of a film is affected very much by the honor with which you make it.

9. MAKE THE TEST SCREENING PROCESS WORK FOR YOU • Test screenings are tough. It makes you nervous, exposing the film, but they’re very important and I’ve learned a great deal from using them. Not so much from the whole process of cards and the discussions afterwards, but the live experience of sitting in an auditorium with an audience that doesn’t know much about the story you’re going to tell them—I find that so valuable. I’ve learned not so much to like it, but to value how important it is. I think you have to, really.

10. COME TO THE SET WITH A LOOK BOOK • I always have a bible of photographs, images by which I illustrate a film. I don’t mean strict storyboards, I just mean for inspiration for scenes, for images, for ideas, for characters, for costumes, even for props. These images can come from anywhere. They can come from obvious places like great photographers, or they can come from magazine advertisements—anywhere, really. I compile them into a book and I always have it with me and I show it to the actors, the crew, everybody!

11. EVEN PERFECT FORMULAS DON’T ALWAYS WORK • As a director your job is to find the pulse of the film through the actors, which is partly linked to their talent and partly to their charisma. Charisma is a bit indefinable, thank God, or else it would be prescribed in the way that you chemically make a new painkiller. In the movies—and this leads to a lot of tragedy and heartache—you can sometimes have the most perfect formula and it still doesn’t work. That’s a reality that we are all victims of sometimes and benefit from at other times. But if you follow your own instincts and make a leap of faith, then you can at least be proud of the way you did it.

12. TAKE INSPIRATION WHERE YOU FIND IT • When we were promoting Slumdog Millionaire, we were kind of side-by-side with Darren Aronofsky, who was also with Fox Searchlight and was promoting The Wrestler. I watched it and it was really interesting; Darren just decided that he was going to follow this actor around, and it was wonderful. I thought, ‘I want to make a film like that. I want to see if I can make a film like that.’ It’s a film about one actor. It’s about the monolithic nature of film sometimes, you know? It’s about a dominant performance.

13. PUSH THE PRAM • I think you should always try to push things as far as you can, really. I call it “pushing the pram.” You know, like a stroller that you push a baby around in? I think you should always push the pram to the edge of the cliff—that’s what people go to the cinema for. This could apply to a romantic comedy; you push anything as far as it will stretch. I think that’s one of your duties as a director… You’ll only ever regret not doing that, not having pushed it. If you do your job well, you’ll be amazed at how far the audience will go with you. They’ll go a long, long way—they’ve already come a long way just to see your movie!

14. ALWAYS GIVE 100 PERCENT • You should be working at your absolute maximum, all the time. Whether you’re credited with stuff in the end doesn’t really matter. Focus on pushing yourself as much as you can. I tend not to write, but I love bouncing off of writing; I love having the writers write and then me bouncing off of it. I bounce off writers the same way I bounce off actors.

15. FIND YOUR OWN “ESQUE” • A lesson I learned from A Life Less Ordinary was about changing a tone—I’m not sure you can do that. We changed the tone to a kind of Capra-esque tone, and whenever you do anything more “esque,” you’re in trouble. That would be one of my rules: No “esques.” Don’t try to Coen-esque anything or Capra-esque anything or Tarkovsky-esque anything, because you’ll just get yourself in a lot of trouble. You have to find your own “esque” and then stick to it.

Judith Weston Advises Directors & Actors

Judith Weston

Judith Weston, veteren acting coach of actors and directors has some sage advice.  Her first rule is one I try and live by:  “Acting is not pretending. To be in the moment, actors – and directors – must liberate themselves from doing it right.”  But how do you do that?  Unlike many others, Judith offers concrete tools to try and unearth the most interesting and truthful response.  “One of my favorite problem solving techniques is this.  When you can’t think of the right answer, think of three wrong answers.  I promise it will “unstick” you whenever you are stuck.”

If you like what you Judith has to say, you should read her two books, Directing Actors: Creating Memorable Performances for Film  and Television and Film Director’s Intuition: Script Analysis and Rehearsal Techniques. They’re both filled with more advice that you can absorb in one reading.  But watch this short interview with the woman herself and you’ll see what I mean.  In less than 5 minutes she unveils some real gold nuggets of wisdom geared to make you a better actor and or director.