?url? http://johnaugust.com/archives/2009/media-mcgyverism?/url?
From johnaugust.com
(a ton of useful information about screenwriting)
quote:
On Friday, I was asked to speak at a film school graduation. This is what I said.. . .
The traditional function of a graduation speaker is to congratulate you on your accomplishment and challenge you to do your best work in the years ahead. So let me do that. Congratulations, youre done! Now, go out and do your best work in the years ahead!
Now that thats done, I want to talk for a few minutes about what the hell youve gotten yourself into. I mean, a film degree. Now? In this economy? A lot of you have friends and family in the audience, and I know theyre really happy for you. But secretly, theyre thinking, Jesus.
So what Im going to say is as much for them as it is for you.
We call this film school, but really, thats only for lack of a better term. You dont really shoot much film. You dont dip it in chemicals. You rarely touch it. Rather, what you do in a school like this is learn how to tell stories with words, pictures and sound.
And quite luckily, thats what the world needs. Two examples.
A friend of mine writes for a major newspaper. And when she was done covering the presidential election, her bosses handed her a videocamera and told her that every piece she delivered now had to include a video component for the website. She needed to be able to shoot it, edit it and deliver it.
Another friend writes for a major magazine. In addition to her story assignments, shes now required to come up with web features, like little Flash slideshows that can be easily monetized. She also finds herself suddenly on-camera, hosting arrivals at movie premieres, and dealing with all the requisite technical stuff.
Theres not a word for the kind of school that teaches you how to do all this. But the word thats missing is probably a lot like film school. They send you out of here not to be a specialist, a cardiothoracic surgeon, but rather to be a generalist, a media MacGuyver.
You may think youre going to be a screenwriter, a director or an editor, but the odds are youll be all of those things on different projects at different times.
The one thing you wont be is an amateur. I want you to banish that word, because you need to treat everything you do from the moment you walk out the door as a professional. This is now your job.
That means doing your best work at all times, even when it doesnt seem to matter. You may feel like youre not getting graded. You are. Its just that no one is telling you what score you got.
And lets talk about your classmates. You probably have some good friends and some people you kind of hope to never see again. While you were in the program here, you had to rely on them. Your professors put you in teams. You got along, you fought, whatever. That doesnt stop. No one makes a movie by himself. So if by next weekend, youre not reading one of their scripts, or helping on something theyre shooting, somethings wrong. Trust me that five years from now, the most successful person in this class will be the one who worked the hardest for other people.
My last piece of advice is probably the one most likely to induce insomnia. Every night when you go to bed, ask yourself: What did you do today to get closer to your goals? Thats a hard question to ask. Feel free to beat yourself up, because no one else will anymore. Thats the best and worst thing about graduating its the end of the systematic evaluation of your progress.
You need to stop wondering what youre going to do, and focus on what youre going to do next. Starting now. Congratulations, and good luck.
Brian Dzyak
Cameraman/Author
IATSE Local 600, SOC
http://www.whatireallywanttodo.com
http://www.realfilmcareer.com
Brian Dzyak
Cameraman/Author
IATSE Local 600, SOC
http://www.whatireallywanttodo.com
http://www.realfilmcareer.com
This should be required reading for all coming to this forum.
(the purpose of this post is to bump this thread past the two dozen meaningless stale threads that somehow ended up on top due to some spamming issues)
Hmm... well it would seem my self-determinist philosophies are congruent with the speaker here. Haha! That's good to know.
Definitely a good idea to check in on your goals... reminds me: I should get back to my homework!
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http://vimeo.com/corax
I'd like to see a survey of sorts that discusses how effectively "filmschools" teach the basic message being imparted in the speech posted above.
In other words, do the majority of filmschools, workshops, and other programs (classes, DVDs, books, etc) merely "sell a dream" or is there an honest attempt to let students/aspiring "filmmakers" know the realities of the arena they presumably wish to make a living within?
Brian Dzyak
Cameraman/Author
IATSE Local 600, SOC
http://www.whatireallywanttodo.com
http://www.realfilmcareer.com
Brian Dzyak
Cameraman/Author
IATSE Local 600, SOC
http://www.whatireallywanttodo.com
http://www.realfilmcareer.com
INT. SCHOOL OF CINEMA-TELEVISION---MORNING, THE FIRST DAY OF CLASS
four hundred new FILM STUDENTS turn eager faces to the senior PROFESSOR, who rises to speak.
PROFESSOR
"Put up your hands if you want to Direct."
Four hundred film students put up their hands.
PROFESSOR
"Now everybody put them down, except for one."
Four hundred film students don't know what to do.
He pauses before the kill.
PROFESSOR
"And that's if your lucky."
exerpt from "What they don't teach you at Film School"
I would hope this happens at EVERY Film School. It's the instructors responsibility to inform kids of the uncertainty of the prefession they have chose. But I would hope the kids already knew that! I sure as Hell knew that when I started school.