Download e-book for iPad: The Director's Idea: The Path to Great Directing by Ken Dancyger

By Ken Dancyger

ISBN-10: 0240806816

ISBN-13: 9780240806815

As a director, you need to have an idea, a "director's idea", to form your method of the actors, the digital camera, and the script. With this transparent proposal your movie should be deeper and greater, and you'll be in a position to differentiate--and accordingly make the choice--between useful directing and nice directing. utilizing case stories of recognized administrators as real-world examples of "director's ideas", the writer has supplied the speculation and the perform to aid administrators instantly enhance their paintings.

*Improve your paintings and make your movie deeper, extra layered, and extra effective

*Book is a smart combination of concept and perform

*Case experiences of well-known administrators carry the ideas to existence

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Having lost a brother in the war, he wants to prove he is as worthy and committed to family and country as was his brother. His problem is that, although he is a good rider and shot, he simply cannot kill another human being. This is his dilemma. No such dilemma for his three mates. They are rugged and manly and they miss their families, but they have no problem killing. We know little else about them. Officers tend to fall into two categories: The English officers are rigid or eccentric, and the Australian officers are able and risktaking, feeling and pragmatic, which the English and German officers are not.

All live in the white world of power and have no understanding of true powerlessness and the black that represents life and death in Dachau. The director’s idea of black and white frames the events of the narrative such that we see each event and each character as residing in one world or the other. When Father Henri chooses to return to Dachau, he is remaining spiritually intact and embracing the blackness of the world he and his fellow priests occupy at Dachau. For him to accept the blackness means to never replace his spiritual wholeness with the material The Director’s Idea: The Path to Great Directing benefits of a world that is power oriented, the white world.

The spy quickly becomes the indispensable hero of the upcoming campaign against Beersheba. But, to do so, the major enlists the nurse mentioned earlier to write the forged love letter of a wife to her officer husband, a letter that is in short order planted to mislead the Turks about the location of the upcoming offensive. This narrative turn of events is as rapid and simplified as all the other narrative events in the film. Wincer’s approach is to tell the narrative in a simplified and rapid manner, an approach that will not undermine the overall intent—to present the romantic heroism of the Australian Lighthorsemen regiment.

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The Director's Idea: The Path to Great Directing by Ken Dancyger


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