How Director David Gordon Green Reverse-Engineered ‘Nutcrackers' Plus Major Movie Monologues
In this episode of No Film School, hosts GG Hawkins and Jason Hellerman explore the craft of cinematic monologues and discuss how these powerful moments can elevate films. They also sit down with director David Gordon Green, whose latest holiday family film, Nutcrackers, debuts on Hulu. David shares his process of crafting a heartfelt and improvisational movie built around four real-life brothers, discussing how his indie roots continue to shape his creative approach.
In this episode, No Film School’s GG Hawkins and Jason Hellerman discuss:
- The craft of writing and performing memorable movie monologues
- Iconic monologues from The Godfather, Network, Cabin in the Woods, Scent of a Woman, and more
- David Gordon Green’s process of reverse-engineering Nutcrackers around its young, untrained stars
- Why David values improvisation and naturalism in his filmmaking
- Advice for indie filmmakers about creating economically viable films while staying true to their creative vision
Memorable Quotes:
- “When you’re writing a great monologue, you’re giving actors a reason to want to say those words and embody that character.” (4:21)
- “The movie became just a sculpture of things I want to see.” (22:54)
- “There’s only one you, and you have to be that as loud as you can.” (45:00)
Resources:
- The 25 Best Movie Monologues
- Watch Nutcrackers on Hulu
- GG Hawkins' Instagram: @LostinGraceland
- Jason Hellerman’s Twitter: @JasonHellerman
- David Gordon Green’s IMDb: David Gordon Green
Find No Film School everywhere:
- On the Web: No Film School
- Facebook: No Film School on Facebook
- Twitter: No Film School on Twitter
- YouTube: No Film School on YouTube
- Instagram: No Film School on Instagram
Send us an email with questions or feedback: podcast@nofilmschool.com
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Hosts & Guests
Information
- Show
- FrequencyEvery two weeks
- Published29 November 2024 at 04:33 UTC
- Length53 min
- RatingExplicit