There are more Ken Burns effects than photograph panning.
There aren’t many documentary filmmakers who are household names, but Ken Burns is one of them. He’s arguably the most famous documentarian, in fact, in part because of the phenomenal success of his 1990 miniseries The Civil War and also because his name is affixed to a photo-panning technique he’s known for (in a more complex manner), which is officially part of Apple video production software.
Burns is also one of the few nonfiction film directors whose multiple projects are set up and revealed many years in advance, as if he was working for a studio plotting out mega-franchise tentpoles. He’s currently booked at least through 2021, with a new miniseries out this fall, The Vietnam War, and future series on country music, Ernest Hemingway, Muhammad Ali, and a sort of sequel to The Civil War on the Reconstruction era, each at some level of development.
Filmmakers of all stripes have a lot to learn from Burns, who earned his first Oscar nomination 35 years ago with his first film and who has become an icon for a certain style yet has never been committed to such conventional limitations. Whether you want to make docs or sci-fi epics that borrow from docs (like Insterstellar‘s use of Burns’s The Dust Bowl footage) or something else entirely, you should find the six tips below to be inspiring and helpful.
Storytelling is Storytelling
When Burns recently broke from his wheelhouse to make the verite documentary Address, he shared some storytelling tips with Fast Company as a way of showing that the film wasn’t that different to direct than anything else he’s done. Here’s part of the advice on finding a story that “moves you”:
“The elements of storytelling are always the same. You’re just drawn to a good story, whether a small one or a big one…This is not my style, but I’m not completely unfamiliar with it — I experimented with it in school 40 years ago. It was a very steep learning curve, but the elements of a good story are there in whatever form they arrive in.”
Last year, he offered a handful of tips to students at Rowan University, including one on how storytelling is universal. As quoted by NJ.com, he said:
“I’m friends with Steven Spielberg. The laws of storytelling are the same for both of us. But I often say to him, ‘You can make stuff up. I can’t.’ There’s as much drama in what is, and what was, as there is in anything the human imagination can come up with.”
1 + 1 = 3
As for the key to good storytelling, Burns subscribes to the mathematical equation of “1 + 1 = 3” rather than the simple “1 + 1 = 2.” It has to do with the whole being greater than the sum of the parts. See him explain the formula, as well as how all film stories are the manipulative sum of 24 lies per second, plus more, in this video interview produced for The Atlantic in 2012:
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