Give Matt Reeves a preexisting property, and he’s probably going to give you back a smart movie that is personally satisfying to himself and to his audience. Whether it’s a remake, a sequel, an adaptation, or an overly familiar genre, he can make it his own (lately, and as a director, anyway — don’t @ me about Under Siege 2: Dark Territory). What is his secret? It might be in the combination of the following filmmaking lessons.
Watch Them, Make Them
Reeves is a cinephile filmmaker. He loves movies, he watches many in preparation for his projects, he gets his own advice from the likes of Steven Spielberg and Francis Ford Coppola, and he’s a fan of DVD commentaries (he’s also a fan of social media celebrations of perfect shots). Reeves turned his love of movies into a love of moviemaking at an early age, producing amateur 8mm films inspired by Planet of the Apes and Star Wars. He even met his longtime friend and collaborator J.J. Abrams when they were both 13 and submitting work to a local public access short film showcase.
The way to learn how to make movies is to watch them and to make them. When I was a kid you could make 8mm movies, and now more than ever you can do them on your phone, edit them on your computer. The access to the technology for a filmmaker and a visual storyteller is right there, in your hand. So, that is really what you need to do to learn how to become a filmmaker.
This recent Twitter exchange with a fan shows that he still believes in the advice:
Just start doing it. Your iPhone, a handicam. Make a lot, and watch a lot, and figure out what you love…
Stemming from that idea of just doing it, Reeves revealed in a 2014 Reddit AMA (shared with his regular music score composer, Michael Giacchino) what he believes you need in order to take your amateur interests further into a professional career:
I think if you want to be a filmmaker that you need to find a story that you have to tell, and then you’ve got to go out there and tell it any way you can, even if it means making it yourself and paying for it yourself and you just have to let people see what you’re passionate about. And I think the most important trait that a director or filmmaker can have is tenacity. You have to decide you’re going to stick at it, until you get there.
The same year, he gave similar advice to film students during a junket interview (alongside Dawn of the Planet of the Apes and War for the Planet of the Apes star Andy Serkis) for College Web Media:
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