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Interviews with screenwriters, DPs, directors, and other film professionals conducted by San Diego State University film major Isaiah Solotaroff.

Zack's Film Talks at SDSU Isaiah Solotaroff

    • Tv en film

Interviews with screenwriters, DPs, directors, and other film professionals conducted by San Diego State University film major Isaiah Solotaroff.

    Sam Levy, Cinematographer

    Sam Levy, Cinematographer

    This episode of Zack's Film Talks at SDSU is hosted by Libsyn.
    My guest is cinematographer Sam Levy. As DP for Greta Gerwig's 2017 film Lady Bird, Sam here gives a master class in his craft.
    Using Lady Bird as a case study, he talks about each step of his job: from making a 110-page shot list for the film to screening the rough cut in Technicolor and doing the color timing—going frame by frame to make sure all the colors are set.
    He also touches on:
    the tools of his trade, including graph paper for drawing the set and shot-blocking diagrams varying the grammar of shots in a film coming up with a blueprint of the emotional arc of the story being told the differences between shooting in color and black-and-white the work of cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki (The Revenant) Sam studied comparative literature at Brown University and took Leslie Thornton's 16mm filmmaking class there. 
     
    Episode edited by Chris Burke.

    • 23 min.
    Nate Mook and Gabe Dinsmoor, producers

    Nate Mook and Gabe Dinsmoor, producers

    This episode of Zack's Film Talks at SDSU is hosted by Libsyn.
    My guests are Nathan Mook and Gabe Dinsmoor, producers of the HBO documentary Baltimore Rising, directed by The Wire’s Sonja Sohn (Detective Kima Greggs).
    Sohn’s directorial debut, which has won high praise from the Baltimore Sun, Essence, Newsweek, Newsday, and WBAL, looks at Baltimore in the aftermath of the death of Freddie Gray.
    Mook and Dinsmoor talk about:
    following the documentary's nine principal characters, including community leader Genard "Shadow" Barr; youth organizer Makayla Gilliam-Price; activist Kwame Rose; Dayvon Love and Adam Jackson, who created the Baltimore think tank Leaders of a Beautiful Struggle; Melvin Russell, the Baltimore Police Dept.'s Community Partnership Division chief; and Police Commissioner Kevin Davis. dealing with the arrest of a cinematographer and cast members in the midst of shooting the documentary  editing 600 hours of footage down to 90 minutes how director Sonja Sohn "let circumstances speak for themselves" rather than going in with a fixed perspective  Listen to Sonja Sohn at Salon.com.
    Episode edited by Chris Burke.
     
     
     
     
     
     

    • 38 min.
    Michael Green, screenwriter

    Michael Green, screenwriter

    This episode of Zack’s Film Talks at SDSU is hosted by Libsyn.
    My guest is Michael Green, who wrote Blade Runner 2049 with Hampton Fancher.  
    Michael was raised in Mamaroneck, NY, and went to Stanford University. He wrote for Sex and the City and is the co-creator of American Gods.
    In this episode, Michael talks about:
    the importance of reading why it's good to go to the movies, as opposed to just watching them how he once made two stacks of film scripts—ones he felt were better than his, and those he felt he could do better than—and spent time studying and learning “by dissection” from the best JohnAugust.com—a screenwriting website/podcast he highly recommends Green Lantern and his early fascination with comics the “constant battle” he undergoes between creating original projects and working on adaptations  To prep for Blade Runner 2049, Michael read the great noir novels. We collected a few lists here: https://www.amazon.com/Hardboiled-America-Lurid-Paperbacks-Masters/dp/0306807734, http://www.mensjournal.com/expert-advice/best-old-school-noir-novels-20160217, https://www.barnesandnoble.com/blog/50-must-read-noir-detective-novels/.
     
    Full interview transcription:
    Hello, and welcome to Zack’s Film Talks at SDSU, a film podcast featuring interviews with screenwriters, directors, cinematographers, and more. This is Episode 1.
    My guest today is screenwriter Michael Green, who co-wrote Blade Runner 2049. Michael talks about the importance of structure in a screenplay, and he warns writers not to become paralyzed by research. Our conversation was recorded November 9, 2017.
     
    ZS: Hey, Michael, how are you?
    MG: Hey, great.
    ZS: Thank you so much for doing this, by the way.
    So was there a particular moment in your life when you knew you wanted to be in the film industry or just screenwriting in general?
    MG: … That question comes up from time to time, because people will often look for creation myths in writers and writing. Unfortunately, writers and writing tends to be a much less romantic profession—much more a slog. But what I can definitely track in myself is a persistent love of television and film. Even times when I wanted to be a doctor or a comedian or carpenter or doctor or any of the other things that seemed appealing, I did all that fantasizing while watching way too much TV and wanting to go to the movies. That’s where my passion lay. And I just got very fortunate that I had a moment of brain connection that perhaps I should do what I loved, and also even more fortunate that I was given the opportunities to do so.    
    ZS: Great. So is there anything in particular that gives you inspiration as a screenwriter?
    MG: I think any screenwriter that doesn’t read a lot is probably not tapping into their best potential or inspiration. Reading has always been what makes for more writing—and going to the movies, and watching television shows that are great and wonderful. These days going to the movies as opposed to just watching them at home—they’re very different experiences. … [I]n television, [watch] the show on-air the way the audience would see it. So if it’s a network show … watch it on the air with commercials. …
    ZS: Yeah, I definitely agree. I think going to the movies is probably just the best way to watch anything. It gives you a completely different experience than just watching it in your own home.
    MG: Absolutely. It’s an indulgence. But one should indulge, especially if that’s your art.
    What’s the last movie you saw in a theater?
    ZS: It was actually Blade Runner.
    MG: Oh! Good answer! I will take that!
    ZS: It was great, by the way.
    MG: I strongly recommend that the next movie you see be Murder on the Orient Express. …
    ZS: So you mentioned reading in one of your answers. I saw that you—I read the Hollywood Reporter interview where you said that when you started writing you made two stacks of scripts: one that you thought your work was

    • 24 min.
    Andrew Dodge, screenwriter

    Andrew Dodge, screenwriter

    This episode of Zack's Film Talks at SDSU is hosted by Libsyn.
    My guest is Andrew Dodge, who wrote Bad Words, the spelling bee movie starring Jason Bateman, which Bateman also directed.
    Andrew worked as a story editor at Columbia Pictures for a decade and studied at the University of Southern California.
    In this episode, Andrew talks about:
    getting bad grades in high school what it was like to hear his words coming out of Jason Bateman’s mouth the “first period”/ketchup scene in Bad Words how many projects he juggles at once an R-rated comedy about a leprechaun he’s writing for Peter Dinklage …and looking forward to seeing LeBron James in Space Jam 2, a project he’s attached to as writer—an official nonofficial introduction is floating around online, but we may have to wait a while for the movie. For now, here’s Quad City DJ’s theme song from the original. Andrew gives specific, practical advice for screenwriters starting out. (One montage per film is enough!) And keep writing, he says. “You’re always going to get better if you’re always writing. If you’re talking about writing, you’re not going to get better. If you are writing, you’re going to get better.”
    Episode edited by Chris Burke.

    • 27 min.

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