Directing the Camera
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.66 (830 Votes) |
Asin | : | B00H03VH0W |
Format Type | : | |
Number of Pages | : | 504 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2016-12-29 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
Bettman has also directed numerous rock videos and multiple episodes of primetime television.. His book, First Time Director, made the Los Angeles Times bestseller list. Gil Bettman is a director and a professor. He recently completed his fifth feature film, Go There Once, Be There Twice, a documentary recap of the life and times of rock star Sammy Hagar. He teaches at Chapman University in the Dodge College of Film and Media Arts
He recently completed his fifth feature film, Go There Once, Be There Twice, a documentary recap of the life and times of rock star Sammy Hagar. About the AuthorGil Bettman is a director and a professor. His book, First Time Director, made the Los Angeles Times bestseller list. He teaches at Chapman University in the Dodge College of Film and Media Arts. Bettman has also directed numerous rock videos and multiple episodes of primetime television.
"An Important Read For Any Working or Student Director" according to BresciaJ1887. While doing prep work for my first two feature films I read many books and articles about the importance of camera movement in regards to creating your vision as a director. This book by Gil Bettman will undoubtedly serve as my camera movement bible for my third feature (and fourth, fifth…). What Bettman manages to do in this book is convey not only why we move the camera, but HOW best to move the camera given the circumstanc. Wayne Errol Bowen said Nice hints for teachers as well. Some interesting insights backed up with clips to actual scenes from real movies that are analyzed and broken down in the book. I learnt quite a bit. A book I will probably re-read a few times until it all becomes automatic. Nice hints for teachers as well.. I highly recommend this book for any serious student of film I highly recommend this book for any serious student of film. And if you are a film lover, then you should get this book.
Bettman’s “Five Task” approach enables the aspiring director to quickly grasp this difficult element of directorial craft. The first half of this book is devoted to teaching a systemized approach that can be used to design the very best moving shot for any dialogue scene, no matter how complex or long. In the second half the reader is taught how to shoot action sequences using moving and static cameras and the gamut of lenses to achieve the magic trick essential to shooting action — making stunts that are highly controlled and neither violent nor dangerous look completely mind-blowing.