.comment-link {margin-left:.6em;}

blimps are cool

Tuesday, January 17

Fuck you guys, I'm talking here [aka Why I Write]

[Warning: the following post is incredibly narcissistic and, superficially, has little to do with writing. However, my narcissistic side contends that it has everything to do with writing. Go figure. You have been warned. Seriously.]

[Deleted out of sheer embarrassment]

So I quietly have to fess up that I want to make movies. I always say it understated like that cause its far less embarassing than saying ' I Want To Direct Movies '. Say that when you actually work in the Biz and you'll be laughed at - "You and everyone else, kid". So he goes on: "What about movies motivates you to want to make them?"

So I had to really fess up:-

"I want to direct them and probably write them too cause most writers suck***".

I can't so he was entirely surprised.

"But what motivates you to want to do that"

"Everything. I'm not just motivated by one thing, I can't be, I get bored. Making movies is like a spectra of myriad motivations." (How's that for redundant)

"..."

We went on and I tried to explain it. I failed and it sat with me for a while, so this is my attempt to answer the question.

Here it comes... The Good Stuff:

Why (I Think) I Wanna Make Movies:



At their best movies capture the gaps in the words.


(Badly expressed, but whatever, kinda proves me point)

I spend all my time in thought, often deeply, densely layered in words. Movies allow me to break free of that cell. There are emotions and feelings and narratives and thoughts that we struggle to express with words. They are exist apart from such a logic construct as language.

Look at Bill Murray in Broken Flowers (d. Jim Jarmusch, 2005). We never know how he's feeling, he certainly never says how he's feeling, he's alien to us... yet its a completely moving performance. It just bypasses all the barriers of the brain and slithers right into your subconscious.

Look at the last shot? How could a screenwriter EVER EVER EVER EVER write something like that with all its layers and nuances and complexities and... simplicity? Pages and pages and pages of description detailing the minuate of his expressions and it'd still never come close to that.

Wow.

Think Terrence Mallick, Wong Kar Wai, Stanley Kubrick, David Fincher etc, Six Feet Under... etc. etc..

But on a basic level, I think that's how all cinema works (to lesser and greater effect). Look at something like Jaws or even the Matrix. It just taps into the brain and we *understand it*. Yes, it uses a complex system of semiotics... but its more than the some of its parts.

I'm not saying screenwriting is invalid, I spend too much time thinking about writing for me to think that. Its a fundamental component of the synergy of cinema: writing, photography, music, sound, performance, design, montage, sculpture, fashion etc. etc. Together, they produce a medium which can express what none of them individually can.

To me, the joy of shooting of production is discovering all those moments which make the film come alive. You can storyboard and rehearse all you want, but when push comes to shove, its the MOMENT which matters in front of the camera... A single moment of being.

... and that's what interests me and why I find it endlessly fascinating as a medium. All that I want to say, all I want to explore is about embracing that.

That is why I write, in the hope that eventually it'll help me finding moments of truth... non-intellectualised truth...

Tarvkosky once said in Sculpting In Time that (paraphrasing here): "Science and art are the same, their purpose is to help us understand the world".

My Boss also said 'You're good at lots of things, but you're not exceptional at anything". I got really pissed off because while it is it also ignores that being good at lots of things can be exceptional in itself.

I see patterns and connections and depths where others can't... I'm not the worlds best writer or photographer or composer or sound designer or actor or designer or editor or sculptor or costume designer or whatever... but I understand, instinctively, how these things connect... and that (I hope) is what makes me do this filmmaking thing and will do it well.

[Wow. How about that for trying to talk yourself up? Arrogant prick...]

I feel better now. Time for some Xbox to shut up brain.

Hmm. Do I send this? Hmm. If I don't send this now, I never will, so screw it, here goes. I did warn you poor bastards that got this far. Sorry guys.

UPDATE
Screenplays are the beginning of the framework of the movie. I don't think thats depressing. I think that's pretty freaking awesome. If you've ever had the pleasure of watching actors workshop your work, its an awesome kick. They bring so much to it that is beyond your petty control freakishness.

If you want everything to be exactly as you've written it, just write a novel.

* I love that adjective in a business context, it just means so little while pretending to say so much. It's the Da Vinci Code of Adjectives. "Stuart Willis, one of the world's leading bloggers". Am I lying? No. Arguably I am a leading blogger, but in what am I leading? Footnotes? Stuart Wilils, leading bloggging proponent of digressivng footnoes indicated by incrememented asteriks (@ asteriks = ( $asteriks + 1). told you tcsh sucks).
** I made that up.
*** Except of course you, dear reader.

6 Comments:

  • I was about to call Winston Wolf to help you out, but I see you are still sane at the end of your post (read: rant). Well, sane relative to you.

    You’re dead on (somewhat depressingly) about the role of the screenwriter. At the end of the day, the director is really the “writer” of the movie. (In fact, you may have posted that at my site.) Nevertheless, it’s his vision that becomes the film. I suppose the more brilliant your screenplay, the more it will show up in the film. It sounds like the way your brain is working, you really need to “make the movie.”

    By Blogger Adam Renfro, at Tue Jan 17, 02:40:00 am AEDT  

  • Wow.

    By Blogger Damien, at Tue Jan 17, 06:39:00 am AEDT  

  • Thanks for the concern (?). I'm actually qute sane, its just that sometimes I need to rant. Normally I write these things to paper or into dated texts file and let them be. This time I decided to make it a blog entry, as an experiment.

    In all honesty, I could probably chop off the first 2/3rds of the post and it'll still say the same thing.

    In some ways, the director is the writer of the movie. They guide the synergy, but I think films actually transcend simple authorship in many ways. Again, Broken Flowers would have been a very very very different film without Bill Murray. Why should he not be considered a co-author of the movie? It'd be nothing without him.

    Eh, I don't get the obsession with auteurism.

    By Blogger stu willis, at Tue Jan 17, 08:54:00 am AEDT  

  • As you know unproduced newbie here, but whilst the argument, (only a small one, about whether the screenplay is a blue print or not) will continue, to me, what a screenplay can do, in conjunction with the director, etc, is inspire those actors to produce those moments like you describe in your post.

    Your writing, your thoughts, your ideas combine to give the actor a basic idea of the character, and then hopefully this will form the basis of what the actor can do with it.

    An actor can interpret how dialogue should be spoken many ways, hopefully the script when written correctly will help guide him.

    Just my 0.02.
    cheers
    Dave.
    PS enjoyed the rant :)

    By Blogger Grubber, at Tue Jan 17, 04:08:00 pm AEDT  

  • Grubber -

    Glad you enjoyed the rant.

    I think a script can guide actors but sometimes I think more interesting results can happen when they pick a 'wrong' interpretation.

    By Blogger stu willis, at Sat Jan 21, 04:39:00 pm AEDT  

  • Very true, I would have loved to have seen Anthony Hopkins take on a more Cheech and Chong persona in Remains of a Day :)

    Would have been interesting!

    But I do agree, wrong interpretation can bring something to it the writer did not envisage.
    cheers
    Dave.

    By Blogger Grubber, at Mon Jan 23, 05:34:00 pm AEDT  

Post a Comment

<< Home