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Thursday 30 November 2017

6 Filmmaking Tips From James Franco

By Christopher Campbell

The director of ‘The Disaster Artist’ on how not to have a disastrous filmmaking career.

Actor-turned-filmmaker James Franco is such a busy, multitasking multi-hyphenate that we like to joke about him having clones. As far as we know, he does not, and it truly is possible for one person to do all that he accomplishes on camera, behind the camera, on the page, in the classroom, and everywhere else his interests take him. Below are six tips for at least one of those jobs he’s mastered.

Go to Film School

A lot of filmmakers these days recommend skipping film school. You can just go out and make something and learn by doing, they believe. The resources are cheaper and more accessible than ever, after all. But Franco sees benefits in film school, which he attended later in life after making a name as an actor. Now he pays it forward by teaching filmmaking to others.

One important part of the film school process, he says, is showing your work to others and having it evaluated. Here’s a video from 2011 of Franco talking to poet Frank Bidart about why he disagrees that film school has become obsolete:

Challenge Yourself

One of the filmmakers Franco has worked with and been inspired by is Danny Boyle, whose diverse filmography is the basis for this other lesson from the Filmmaker list:

“Good directing comes from a great challenge. What I see in Danny Boyle is somebody who picks subjects that push him, technically and formally, to try new things. So if you look at his body of work, each subject in each film is different. It’s made in a different way, and part of that comes from the subject. So for example, our movie, ‘127 Hours,’ how do you film a man isolated in a canyon and make that feel dynamic? He had to discover it. And a lot of it was discovered as we made it.”

Da DngSurround Yourself With Great Collaborators

More than any other area for advice, Franco focuses most on the importance of collaboration. When recommending film school, it’s partly so you can find your gang of future collaborators. When addressing his needs as a director, especially when he’s also acting in the project, he stresses having people he likes and can trust on both sides of the camera. You can’t have an ego or block out constructive suggestions or feedback or act like a tyrant.

In the video below of a recent Q&A following a screening of The Disaster Artist, he says:

“When you act and direct yourself — and I have a show on HBO now too, ‘The Deuce,’ where I play two characters, twins, and direct — you need great producers and collaborators around you. Otherwise, you’re just stuck in that mode of like acting and then running to the monitor and watching… It’s just like, if you have the people around you that you’ve worked with and you trust and everybody’s in sync, that you can all just depend on each other and you could just sort of go play musical chairs and it’s very fluid.”

Watch In the Shadow of Women

Lastly, here’s an easy tip that simply requires watching a movie. Franco used to write a movie column for IndieWire (in collaboration with himself, in the form of someone called “Semaj”), and early last year he recommended Philippe Garrel’s 2015 romantic drama In the Shadow of Women, particularly to anyone becoming a filmmaker:

“I t’s not just the story that is cut down to the essence — it’s the way it’s shot, the dialogue, the acting style, everything is minimalist…Every aspiring filmmaker should watch this film to see how much bang they get out of an economic approach. You don’t need tons of coverage, explosions, guns, or even complicated backstory to make a compelling movie…I’m going to recommend this movie to all my graduate film students. They should all aspire to making a first feature as concise and as powerful as this one.”

What We Learned

If you see The Disaster Artist, you’ll notice that Franco is working with many people he’s worked with time and again over decades. He can not stress enough his reliance on having a comfortable set with friends and trusted collaborators. But he also stresses the importance of working hard, so collaboration isn’t something necessarily to lean on. You have to do this out of a love for the craft and the challenge.

Of course, it also probably doesn’t hurt to be handsome enough to get your foot in the door as a movie star and be inherently organized enough to multitask so much to get everything done you want to do.

Additional research and reporting by Natalie Mokry.

The article 6 Filmmaking Tips From James Franco appeared first on Film School Rejects.

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