76 Cover Story: 60 Shooting 24p Hi-Def Jean-Jacques Annaud In plain language here are tht' pr s a.ml cons of \Vith a le\\' of international ,ucce~se',Jean-JacLjues shooting your next film in 24p HI-Ocr. BY ANDY ROSE Ann3ud might juSt be the 1I10st t:Ul10ll' director you 64 Time-tested Non-Digital Effects don't know. Following the surce~ of Il.is high-protllt' e,lrn to maxil1li7e the production value of your EllelllY at tile Cilles. all that may finally change. digiul film with a fe\\' non-digital tricb. BY PHILLIP WILLIAMS BY JOHN GASPARD & DALE NEWTON 30 Behind The Backgrounds 68 Wayne Wang's World Ever wondered what goes into creating those I c's stuck to "tJlllily values" in many past films. but eye-popping backgrounds on big-budget features; director Wavnt' \Vang pushe.' the envc.lope a bit with Chances art' good tint the ba.ckground you're his <:I'otic ., Ii,. (";('//1('1' or Iii,. IHIIM. BY PAULA SCHWARTZ :tdl1liring \V~lS created through digital technolo~'y. BY SCOTT ESSMAN 72 Art of the 34 A Tale of Two Screenwriters Writer/Director At tht' world's most prestigious scrcenwritlnt' Allison Anders, 'brtStopher rom petition, winning isn't everything. Here, a I i holl Nolan,Jame' Gray and Fellowship fil1Jlist ;1I1d winner compare notes on their Jonathan los'iter tJlk about experienct's. BY DOUG ATCHISON & JOEL B. STRUNK the p )WCr ,tnd pres ure' of being a writer!director. 40 First Time's a Charm BY JEREMY ARNOLD 'creenwriters who've scored big their tirst time out reveal the S~'crets of their succeS'. BY SUSAN KOUGUELL 84 ewWays to Sell Your 44 It Came From Roger Corman For -1:5 years. hi" reign a< tht' kiug of "c'ConOl1lic" indie Screenplay Tired ofbangin<> on doors 11l0viemakillg h.l.s goue unrivaled. At 7='. Iz'oger Connan and taking meetings thar i~ still going strong-churning out flhm as Ljuickly (and get your screenpby cheaply) as pos~ible. BY ANDREW HAMLIN nowhere cJo,er to "sold:>" 48 Lessons From the Roger Corman The answer may be as School of Moviemaking closc' ,t~ the Internet. BY JEREMY ARNOLD Roger ormall h,ts been I1wlltoriug young movit'nl.1kers throu<>hout hi, ctren HcT··. p;ht "studellts' t,tlk about 86 Copyright ,(ll1ll' of the lessons they've learned. BY BEVERLY GRAY Protection in the 52 Why I Loved Filming In... Digital Age There's nlon; to North Alllnica thall Just New York, LA LOI1:'timc cript consultant Linda and Vancouwr. Here's why l1l()vielllakers of all budget' Scg"r ,,1)" that the IntcrI1t>r offers ,m: choosing lesser-known looles. BY DAVID GEFFNER plagiarists .l wealth of opportunity. How can you safegu~trd )'our \\ork' BY KAREN HOLLY & SUSAN STROH 8 MM Notebook 28 How They Did It 88 Advertiser Index THE OPERATOR 13 Letters BY JON DICHTER 89 East-West Indies 14 Home Cinema 50 Shorts 89 Classifieds JOHN BOORMAN'S GULP 94 Mixed Reviews POINT BLANK BY JASON REITMAN BY RUS THOMPSON 82 Documentary 96 Frame-By-Frame 18 Ask Mr. Hollywood KEEP THE RIVER BY ERIC SHERMAN BY DOV S-S SIMENS ON YOUR RIGHT 98 Crossing the Line BY ELAYNE TAYLOR 24 Festival Beat STANLEY KRAMER, SUNDANCE, 88 Call For Entries JASON ROBARDS SLAMDANCE, SARASOTA, BY PHILLIP WILLIAMS FT. LAUDERDALE What They Learned From AT 75, THE MASTER MENTOR ISN'T FINISHED REINVENTING HIMSElF YET by Beverly Gray N HIS EArl-LY H LF CE UIl-Y ill the movie busi­ Ford Coppola, Peter Bogdanovich, Martin SCOl'sese, Jonathan ness, Roger Corman has been lllany things to mallY people. I)enul.Ie, Ron Howard,Joe Danre,John Sayles and James Cameron. Making his debut as a movie director in 1955, he graduated Corman's fi:eewheeling low-budget operation has also spawned fi'om campy 1l1Onster movies to elegant adaptations of horror important actors Gack Nicholson, Peter Fonda), writers (Robert tales by Edgar Allan Poe. As the I960s wore on, he captured Towne) alld producers (Gale Anne Hurd).And there arc also scores the rebdl.ious spirit of the youth revolution with such trendsetting of Corman veterans who have made their mark as editors, cine­ films as "JIle Wild A I (l{cls and '/17e Ti·if!. Beginlling in ]':J7U, his New matographers,line producers, makeup artists, distribution specialists World Pictures became :\ popular alterl13tive to the Hollywood and marketing mavens. This writer is proud to number herself studio system, blending aerion, sex, humor and "message" into hip among the Roger Corman alumni who now populate every t1VI entertainments like nealll Race 2000. Film buffs may also renwmber corner of the film mdustry.As actor David Carradine once said, "It's Hel t113t over al O-year period, Corman was North America's premier almost as though you can't have a career ill this business without Fil distributor of foreign language classics by Ingmar Bergman, having passed through Roger's hands for at least a moment." tvv Federico Fellini and other European masters. A letter from Roger Corman is perhaps chiefly famous for having opened the Hi Bergman, expressing delight that his Cries alld Whispers had fou.nd door to so UlallY moviemaking talents. But what is sometimes over­ HI its \vay OIltO the screens of AmeriGHl drive-ins, is still displayed looked is tbe fact that he otfered far more than opportunity. ba prominently on Corman \ oflice wall. At his best, he was a moviemaking teacher par excellence, which is fiJ Over the dec:\des, thousands of young moviel1lakers have found why I own a leather jacket emblazoned with the words "Roger ro :\ home at Corman's production companies, New \X/orld Pictures Corman School of Fum." The late writer-director Howard R. pt and Concorde-New Horizons. (The lllOSt recent name ch:\nge­ Cohen reflected: "Roger's the only person I'V(' met in this business pI to New Concorde--sLlggests that Corman, who turned 75 on who will tell you everything he knows, all his secrets, and hold 51: April 3, has not yet finished reinventing himself.) The list of major nothing back. He'll let you know his tricks."This generosity ofspirit lu directors nlenrored by Corman is IegendalY it includes Francis is a (lr cry from the cheapness that is (quite justifIably) part and k parcel of the Corman image. Gale Anne Hurd, who went on to A produce such blockbusters as The Termillalor and Armageddon, paid Corman directed Peter Fonda and tribute to her former boss in saying, "He's the only person I've P Dennis Hopper in the counter-culture known in the industry who wanted his proteges to succeed, and I hit The Trip (1967) perhaps have even more impressive credentials than his own." When he started out, Corman was hardly known as a master c teacher.Totally unschooled in the craft of fil III, he soaked up tech­ niques fi'om experienced crew members like Floyd Crosby, an Oscar-winning cinematographer who made Corman's J\.1onsler from the Ocean Floor only two years after shooting High Noon. The actors in Corman's early stock company were as green as he was. Jonathan Haze, whose 30 Corman ftlrns included the leading role in Lillie Shop (!{ Horrors, said that "we all learned together." What Haze remembers from those days is the fact that Roger was always "open to advice from everyone, even those who knew less than he did." But other performers came away with lessons that have stayed with them. Beverly Garland, who on Corman's orders was pumped full of painkillers after badly spraining her ankle during an action sequence, learned that the show must go on.And because of Corman's habitual impatience on the set, Dick Miller ofvvhat Hill got from Corman was a lesson in tailoring script~ to the situ­ ation at hand. Tlke the case of Pir Srop (1969), which was the last fIlm made by the respected Irish actor Brian Donlevy. Became I orIlevy was having tax problems and needed cash, Corman otlered him S3,OOO for three days' work. Hill explained "YOLI had to write the script in such a way that you felt [Donlevy] appeared all the W~lY through the movie. People were t~llking about him, and he was in and out, but actll­ aJly you crammed all his work into three days." Corl1J~lIl also taught Hill how to use attractive sets to make a low-budget pi ture like The Terror look bigger and more expensiw. Says Hill, "If you have a good set, developed a valuable knack f()I' being ;\ one-take actor. you really wam to use it. So lI1stead ofputting his actors up against Perhaps the first director to benefit r1'OlJ'] Corman's tutelage was a waiL IRoger] would bring them way out so you would get a lot Mo!1te HeJLn1<1n, who in later years became known for the cbtinc­ ofdepth behind them and see a lot of the set, as much as possible." rively austere 'li"o-Lal/e B/ackrojJ. Hellman's directorial debut was By the time Jonathan Demme directed his fIrSt Corman fLlm, Iknsr FOIII H'lIl1lrerl em'I', a '1959 quickie made under Corman's Caged I-kill (1974), Roger had codified his moviemaking philosophy Fillllgroup banner. It was Connan's Idea to save t110ney by shooting illto wlut has become known as "the director's speech." Generations t\Vo films (the other was Ski Ti'oop Allack) back-to-back in the Black of young moviemakers have heard Corman go through his list of Hills of South Dakota, using esseI1ti~dly the same cast and crew.
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