NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTIONS FOR FILMMAKERS

By in News
on Saturday, January 1st, 2011

Are you short a New Year’s resolution? Feel free to borrow one of the ones below.

1. Amplify your voice. You have a voice. Make it bigger in 2011. Spread it wider and connect it to more people. If you are working within your own little crew, spread out. If you’ve gotten into a pattern of relying on the same agents or producers or colleagues, enlarge the perimeter of that circle. If face-to-face is your preferred medium, get out more. Do you email or text too much? Call people more. (This one was suggested by Ira Deutchman via Twitter.) If you’re an online presence, define the ways you’ll be able to reach more people and do them.

2. Improve your social. Review your online practices and make them better. Do you blog? Blog more. Or blog less, but more meaningfully when you do. Is your online voice scattered and diffuse? Make it laser-sharp and specific. Or, are you repetitive and one-note? If so, mix it up. Does your Twitter voice “work”? If not, make it better. Is your posting frivolous? Figure out how to make it a bit more pragmatic and effective. Too dry? Loosen it up.

3. See the Essential 100. Great films are nourishing. There are treasures for the present in the past. Don’t get caught up with only the newest — make 2011 the year you fill in the cracks of your cinephilia. An easy way to do this is to watch all the films in the Toronto International Film Festival group’s “Essential 100.” It’s a list of classics selected by critics, curators and audiences published alongside the opening of its new Bell Lightbox facility. For most readers of this blog, I’d imagine committing to what you have’t seen on this list would mean adding less than one film a week. The top ten: The Passion of Joan of Arc (pictured), Citizen Kane, L’Avventura, The Godfather, Pickpocket, Seven Samurai, Pather Panchali, Casablanca, Man with a Movie Camera, The Bicycle Thief.

4. Work for a friend. Take a page from Lucas McNelly and his Kickstarter project — don’t just obsess about your own work, make yourself crew for someone you know. UPM, do locations, cast, take sound for a project of someone other than yourself. Commit to the level of your free time. If you’re not working and can manage it, work on a no-budget feature. Or, perhaps just do a weekend short. You’ll not only help another project make it out into the world, but you’ll also re-ground yourself in filmmaking basics while meeting new people who might assist you out at some point. (And while you decide who you’ll work for, consider supporting McNelly at Kickstarter in its final six days. He’s raising $12,000 to support himself while he spends a year working on other people’s projects. In his own words: “So my plan is to spend a year on the road, traveling around the country and working on indie film projects. I’ll explore the idea of mobility in a creative professional. Just how mobile does our digital lifestyle make us? Does it even matter where we live anymore? How can a creative professional thrive outside of NYC and LA?”

5. Make more than you did last year. I’m talking about work, not money. How much did you make last year? One film? Make two. Six shorts? Make seven. Don’t worry about format. If you made one feature last year and it looks like it will be two years of development before the next, make two shorts instead. Commit to just shipping.

6. Make one piece in a different form. Have you only made features? Make a webisode. Are you a narrative filmmaker? Make a doc. Do you only do long-form? Make a short doc or web video instead. Get out of your comfort zone for at least one piece.

7. Read more. At his conversation in Toronto this year with Errol Morris, Werner Herzog said that you can’t be a filmmaker without reading. And no, not scripts. Books. So, in 2011, read more. (If you want to take more of Herzog’s advice, you can read these titles from his Rogue Film School: Virgil’s Georgics, Ernest Hemingway’s The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber, The Warren Commission Report, Rabelais’ Gargantua and Pantagruel, The Poetic Edda, translated by Lee M. Hollander (in particular “The Prophecy of the Seeress”), Bernal Diaz del Castillo True History of the Conquest of New Spain.)

8. Review your productivity and alter your creative behavior. Conduct a review of your own best practices, the circumstances and behavior that lead to your greatest level of productivity and/or creativity, and more purposefully engineer the creation of those moments. If the best work you’ve ever done was at a mountain retreat when you were unplugged from the world, do that again. Do you need to go to an office, a library, a Starbucks? Are you better in collaboration with someone else? Do you need more structure? Or less? Does being plugged in all the time create a kind of false productivity? If so, remember to take regular walks around the block or trips to museums and let your mind roam.

9. Learn a new skill. Both beginning filmmakers and veterans could do well in this economy to enlarge their skill sets. If you run a blog, learn SEO. Learn more about mobile platforms. If all of your scripts are features, read some television scripts and learn how they differ in form. Learn to edit. Learn to shoot with a DSLR. Learn to podcast. Learn something new.

10. Change your viewing practices. Do you watch a lot of movies? If so, then your viewing practices may be up for a review. Via Twitter I asked folks what their resolutions were, and Eugene Hernandez replied with, “See more movies on the big screen, old ones as well as new ones, in a theater with an audience.” That’s a good one. For me, it’s to stop three-screening and concentrate more on what I watch at home. In other words, turn off the Blackberry and iPad while the movies run.

What are your New Year’s Resolutions? What would you add to this list? Feel free to comment below…. and Happy New Year!

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  • http://twitter.com/TonyComstock Tony Comstock

    #11 Get out of the business and do something fun.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=612736887 William Speruzzi

    I think I might need to print this out and hang it in front of my computer. I feel like every new year I’m starting all over again which is probably not a bad thing. Thanks for the inspiration.

  • http://prettypictures.com Mm

    Thanks Scott. These are resolutions any filmmaker (or artist really) can incorporate.

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  • Chooxism

    just what I needed. Thanks a lot. Choox kema- Nigeria.

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  • http://twitter.com/elizabethkarr Elizabeth Karr

    Scott, you hit it out of the park with these suggestions. Summing it up as Focus, Passion & Action. And being conscious of choices we make with our precious Time. Happy New Decade!

  • http://www.filmmakermagazine.com Scott Macaulay

    Thanks, everyone — really appreciate the kind words and hope you all have a great 2011.

  • http://www.facebook.com/robertamunroe Roberta Munroe

    Awesome post Scott.

    I’d add to that list of books:
    1. The War of Art: Steven Pressfield
    2. Lynchpin: Seth Godin

    Both are must reads for artists of all walks of life!
    Best
    Roberta Munroe
    Author, How Not To Make A Short Film: Secrets From A Sundance Programmer

  • Smith, John

    Just the insperaton I needed, thanks a bunch:)

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  • Anonymous

    Great post Scott, especially encouraging filmmakers to work in a form different than their usual one and improving their social. Will help them and their audience.

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  • Ron Merk

    Dear Scott,
    This is a great list. But please add an eleventh resolution, since many professional filmmakers feel like it’s the eleventh hour in our business, and we keep asking everyone to “show us the money.” While it’s great to make art, let’s remember we have to eat and pay the bills, too. We need to work hard to find a new model that will take advantage of all the technology that we have now, and find ways to make films and a living at the same time. Call me old-fashioned, but this is not a hobby for me, it’s my life and my living. Happy New Year! Ron Merk

    • http://www.filmmakermagazine.com Scott Macaulay

      Hi Ron, thanks for the comment. You know, I think that’s up to each person. I think there are a lot of people who make independent film and media for largely personal reasons but who are cajoled by the indie industry into thinking that they should be operating within more of a business context. But, they don’t develop their work and produce it along those lines — they only try to put on a business cap when the film is finished. For those who need to eat, pay the bills, make films and a living, yes, agreed — a good resolution would be to be more business-like about your filmmaking practice… even if that means sometimes not making the film in the end.

  • Wa1den

    Help encourage more young people to take an interest in learning the art of filmmaking, to give them a voice to reach people around them. There’s never been a time when the wherewithall to produce media content was so much within the reach of anyone who seriously wants to try it. I think many who don’t get very excited about any of the traditional career fields would find it fascinating to work in producing films & media content.

    • http://www.filmmakermagazine.com Scott Macaulay

      Thanks — very nice addition to the list.

    • http://www.filmmakermagazine.com Scott Macaulay

      Thanks — very nice addition to the list.

  • http://twitter.com/ClinicMedia Clinic Media

    A great list of filmmaking resolutions that is also relevant to others working in the arts.

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  • http://www.facebook.com/rookietv Rookie Chi

    Dude this is great, I would like to add one more though. “Take your own projects more seriously.” The average outsider will never do it for you, so if they see that your serious and passionate about your film making/work, then their requests will follow along with a certain amount of respect as well. Keep up the splendid work man. I love where your going with this.

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  • Anonymous

    In this year this one is great.. I agree this one.. Its inspired me a lot..
    Aluminium Kozijnen

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  • Saslife

    I just came accross this magazine and just reading the first few lines I’ve been motivated. I am trying to make that first step out of the corpoate world and pursue my passion, what I went to school for, FILM! Does anyone have advice on how to boost my confidence? :)

    • http://www.ekimnamwen.com ekim namwen

      my advice saslife- don’t read filmmaker magazine. it’s not a confidence booster. it’s an elitist publication intended to make people like you and i feel inferior and jealous b/c we aren’t a part of their little myopic filmmaking clique. find publications from filmmakers working outside the system, they’re your best bet at finding confidence.

      sincerely,
      ekimnamwen dot com

      • Zak Forsman

        hi mike.

        • http://www.ekimnamwen.com ekim namwen

          oh, i’m not mike. i just like signing in as him. the internet is great that way. we can all pretend to be somebody we aren’t. you should try it. it’s fun and quite simple.

  • http://www.ekimnamwen.com ekim namwen

    i would add #11- don’t listen to the dinosaur gatekeepers and tastemakers that are out of touch with the real world and stuck in their own little myopic elitist bubbles.

    sincerely,
    ekimnamwen dot com

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