All Seasons

Season 2014

  • S2014E01 Mother (2009) - Telephoto Profile Shots

    • April 16, 2014
    • YouTube

    A brief analysis of one aspect of Bong Joon-ho's great film Mother (2009). WARNING: MAJOR SPOILERS. For educational purposes only.

  • S2014E02 The Imposter (2012) - Looking into the Lens

    • April 25, 2014
    • YouTube

    A brief analysis of Bart Layton's The Imposter (2012). WARNING: SPOILS EVERY GODDAMN THING.

  • S2014E03 The Spielberg Oner - One Scene, One Shot

    • May 6, 2014
    • YouTube

    One overlooked aspect of Spielberg is that he's actually a stealth master of the long take. From Duel to Tintin, for forty years, he has sneakily filmed many scenes in a single continuous shot.

  • S2014E04 Wolf Children (2012) - The Lateral Tracking Shot

    • May 16, 2014
    • YouTube

    Looking for a unique lateral tracking shot? Consider this example from Mamoru Hosoda's excellent film Wolf Children (2012). NO SPOILERS.

  • S2014E05 Edgar Wright - How to Do Visual Comedy

    • May 26, 2014
    • YouTube

    If you love visual comedy, you gotta love Edgar Wright, one of the few filmmakers who is consistently finding humor through framing, camera movement, editing, goofy sound effects and music. This is an analysis and appreciation of one of our finest comedic voices.

  • S2014E06 Martin Scorsese - The Art of Silence

    • June 14, 2014
    • YouTube

    Even though Martin Scorsese is famous for his use of music, one of his best traits is his deliberate and powerful use of silence. Take a glimpse at fifty years of this simple technique from one of cinema's masters. SPOILERS for Shutter Island (2010), Superman (1978) and Man of Steel (2013)

  • S2014E07 Michael Bay - What is Bayhem?

    • July 3, 2014
    • YouTube

    There are filmmakers we love and then there's Michael Bay. Even if you dislike him (as I do), Bay has something valuable to teach us about visual perception. This is an exploration of "Bayhem" — his style of camera movement, composition and editing that creates something overblown, dynamic and distinct.

  • S2014E08 Satoshi Kon - Editing Space & Time

    • July 24, 2014
    • YouTube

    Four years after his passing, we still haven't quite caught up to Satoshi Kon, one of the great visionaries of modern film. In just four features and one TV series, he developed a unique style of editing that distorted and warped space and time. Join me in honoring the greatest Japanese animator not named Miyazaki.

  • S2014E09 A Brief Look at Texting and the Internet in Film

    • August 15, 2014
    • YouTube

    Is there a better way of showing a text message in a film? How about the internet? Even though we’re well into the digital age, film is still ineffective at depicting the world we live in. Maybe the solution lies not in content, but in form.

  • S2014E10 Robin Williams - In Motion

    • September 9, 2014
    • YouTube

    Robin Williams was a genius, but he was also a dedicated craftsman who explored how an actor could express character through movement. Join me in honoring this tiny facet of his work.

  • S2014E11 David Fincher - And the Other Way is Wrong

    • October 1, 2014
    • YouTube

    For sheer directorial craft, there are few people working today who can match David Fincher. And yet he describes his own process as “not what I do, but what I don’t do.” Join me today in answering the question: What does David Fincher not do?

  • S2014E12 The Silence of the Lambs - Who Wins the Scene?

    • October 14, 2014
    • YouTube

    In drama, two characters walk into a room. Each wants something from the other. The question of the scene is: who gets what they want?

  • S2014E13 Snowpiercer - Left or Right

    • October 28, 2014
    • YouTube

    Characters make choices which they cannot take back. The question is: how do you show it visually? Here’s one solution from Snowpiercer. Warning: SPOILS ENTIRE FILM.

  • S2014E14 Jackie Chan - How to Do Action Comedy

    • December 2, 2014
    • YouTube

    Some filmmakers can do action. Others can do comedy. But for 40 years, the master of combining them has been Jackie Chan. Let’s see how he does it. The 9 Principles of Action Comedy 1. Start with a DISADVANTAGE 2. Use the ENVIRONMENT 3. Be CLEAR in your shots 4. Action & Reaction in the SAME frame 5. Do as many TAKES as necessary 6. Let the audience feel the RHYTHM 7. In editing, TWO good hits = ONE great hit 8. PAIN is humanizing 9. Earn your FINISH

Season 2015

  • S2015E01 The Bad Sleep Well (1960) - The Geometry of a Scene

    • January 28, 2015
    • YouTube

    One of Akira Kurosawa’s many gifts was staging scenes in ways that were bold, simple and visual. I’m working on a longer essay about him and this piece didn’t make the cut, so I’m releasing it as a short standalone video.

  • S2015E02 Drive (2011) - The Quadrant System

    • January 30, 2015
    • YouTube

    One of the many pleasures of Nicolas Winding Refn’s “Drive” (2011) is that the shots feel both tightly composed and weirdly unpredictable. Even though most of the images follow a simple quadrant system, Refn puts plenty of subtle touches within the frame.

  • S2015E03 Akira Kurosawa - Composing Movement

    • March 19, 2015
    • YouTube

    Can movement tell a story? Sure, if you’re as gifted as Akira Kurosawa. More than any other filmmaker, he had an innate understanding of movement and how to capture it onscreen. Join me today in studying the master, possibly the greatest composer of motion in film history.

  • S2015E04 F For Fake (1973) - How to Structure a Video Essay

    • March 31, 2015
    • YouTube

    If you want to make video essays, there’s no better film to study than Orson Welles’ 1973 masterpiece, F for Fake. There are a million lessons to take away from it, but today, let’s see what it has to teach us about structure. NO SPOILERS.

  • S2015E05 Lynn Ramsay - The Poetry of Details

    • May 7, 2015
    • YouTube

    What can one detail tell us about a scene? If you’re Lynne Ramsay: absolutely everything. Today I consider the poetic possibilities of cinema and one of our finest contemporary filmmakers.

  • S2015E06 In Praise of Chairs

    • May 29, 2015
    • YouTube

    One of the great things about detailed production design is that it pays off in unexpected ways. So today I explore the weird possibilities of that most common of objects: the chair.

  • S2015E07 Chuck Jones - The Evolution of an Artist

    • July 16, 2015
    • YouTube

    If you grew up watching Looney Tunes, then you know Chuck Jones, one of all-time masters of visual comedy. Normally I would talk about his ingenious framing and timing, but not today. Instead, I’d like to explore the evolution of his sensibilities as an artist.

  • S2015E08 Vancouver Never Plays Itself

    • September 9, 2015
    • YouTube

    Perhaps no other city has been as thoroughly hidden from modern filmmaking as Vancouver, my hometown. Today, it’s the third biggest film production city in North America, behind Los Angeles and New York. And yet for all the movies and TV shows that are shot there, we hardly ever see the city itself. So today, let’s focus less on the movies and more on the city in the background.

  • S2015E09 Buster Keaton - The Art of the Gag

    • November 21, 2015
    • YouTube

    Before Edgar Wright and Wes Anderson, before Chuck Jones and Jackie Chan, there was Buster Keaton, one of the founding fathers of visual comedy. And nearly 100 years after he first appeared onscreen, we’re still learning from him. Today, i’d like to talk about the artistry (and the thinking) behind his gags.

  • S2015E10 Memories of Murder (2003) - Ensemble Staging

    • December 30, 2015
    • YouTube

    How do you emphasize to the audience that something is important? Well, you could always cut to a close-up, but how about something subtler? Today I consider ensemble staging — a style of filmmaking that directs the audience exactly where to look, without ever seeming to do so at all. NO SPOILERS. Eight Ways to Get the Audience to Look at a Character: 1) Let Them Speak 2) Make Them Brighter or Bring Them Closer 3) Let Them Move (Especially Hands or Eyes) 4) Put Them in the Center of Frame 5) Turn Them Towards the Lens 6) Separate Them from the Group 7) Isolate Them by Moving the Camera 8) Have Other People Look at Them

Season 2016

  • S2016E01 Joel & Ethan Coen - Shot | Reverse Shot

    • February 25, 2016
    • YouTube

    How do you film a conversation? Most likely, you’re going to block the actors, set up the camera, and do shot/reverse shot. But where do you put the camera? What lens do you use? And how do you cut back and forth? Today, I consider the Coen brothers — Joel & Ethan — and see how these choices lend a particular feel to their version of shot/reverse shot.

  • S2016E02 How Does an Editor Think and Feel?

    • May 12, 2016
    • YouTube

    For the past ten years, I’ve been editing professionally. Yet one question always stumps me: “How do you know when to cut?” And I can only answer that it’s very instinctual. On some level, I’m just thinking and feeling my way through the edit. So today, I’d like to describe that process: how does an editor think and feel?

  • S2016E03 The Marvel Symphonic Universe

    • September 12, 2016
    • YouTube

    Off the top of your head, could you sing the theme from Star Wars? How about James Bond? Or Harry Potter? But here’s the kicker: can you sing any theme from a Marvel film? Despite 13 films and 10 billion dollars at the box office, the Marvel Cinematic Universe lacks a distinctive musical identity or approach. So let’s try to answer the question: what is missing from Marvel music?

Season 2024

  • S2024E01 The Sustained Two-Shot

    • August 26, 2024

    What do you do when you’ve got two actors, a bunch of dialogue, and only enough time to get one camera angle? Consider one of the oldest tools in the filmmaking toolbox: the sustained two-shot.

  • S2024E02 What Would Billy Wilder Do?

    • October 7, 2024

    In the annals of filmmaking, we have great writers and great directors, but then there is Billy Wilder – one of the greatest who did both.

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