Selected Product: | Directing Actors: Creating Memorable Performances for Film & Television Paperback Author: Judith Weston Publisher: Michael Wiese Productions Release Date: 1999-07 ISBN-10: 0941188248 ISBN-13: 9780941188241 List Price: $26.95 Average Customer Rating: | | Film Directing: Shot by Shot: Visualizing from Concept to Screen (Michael Wiese Productions) ISBN-10: 0941188108 ISBN-13: 9780941188104 List Price:$27.95 The Five C's of Cinematography: Motion Picture Filming Techniques ISBN-10: 187950541X ISBN-13: 9781879505414 List Price:$29.95 In the Blink of an Eye Revised 2nd Edition ISBN-10: 1879505622 ISBN-13: 9781879505629 List Price:$13.95 On Directing Film ISBN-10: 0140127224 ISBN-13: 9780140127225 List Price:$14.00 The Film Director's Intuition: Script Analysis and Rehearsal Techniques ISBN-10: 0941188787 ISBN-13: 9780941188784 List Price:$26.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Directing Actors: Creating Memorable Performances for Film & Television by Judith Weston (ISBN-10: 0941188248, ISBN-13: 9780941188241). At this time we have not yet written a review for Directing Actors: Creating Memorable Performances for Film & Television by Judith Weston (ISBN-10: 0941188248, ISBN-13: 9780941188241). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com This is essential reading for anyone interested in directing or acting. Judith Weston's brilliance is to recognize that directors, actors, writers, and technicians are involved in a process that is at essence a collaboration. In order for them to have the best shot at creating something true and meaningful, they must share a language and a method of exchange that fosters creative cooperation. Weston rightly sees the director as the central figure in inspiring the energy of a production's harmony. She advises the prospective director on every aspect of a stage or film production, showing how the director can draw the best performances possible from actors. 'Directing Actors' is a great tool for the film makers kit | Customer Rating: | Directing Actors: Creating Memorable Performances for Film & Television This is an excellent book that I highly recommend for any film maker either directing actors for the first time or for more experienced directors to gain a greater insight into the world of acting. I am a trained and experienced actor who has ventured into Directing and have found the book deadly accurate about what is going on for actors on a film or TV set. From the first script read-through to working on the shoot there are very practical and sensible tips and hints to make your directing duties much more efficient and focussed. The 'script analysis' techniques are very empowering putting structure into what can be a very hit and miss affair otherwise. Put this book in your tool kit and read it all the way through then again at each stage of production as you go(great bedside reading before each shoot day). This book is inspirational, readable, practical and helpful. | Buy this book now! | Customer Rating: | | If you are even thinking that this book might be of some interest to you, I can assure you it will change the way you work -- all for the good. Weston has boiled down and focused the art of getting a performance in a clear and brilliant manner. What else can I say, why are you still reading this - buy it. Simple. | Simple techniques that WORK! | Customer Rating: | | Judith Weston has outlined for the director (of any performance, not just film) quick and effective ways to communicate and elicit the performance you want... at the very least, you will get something different. I am an actress who has had the privilege of working with Judith and her directors. I have seen the process in action. I've used it. When someone has truly applied the techniques that this book recommends, it doesn't matter if the actors have just started, or if they're old pros, with vastly different methods, the performances are fresh. The performances change. The performances improve! READ THIS BOOK! | No other book on acting or directing comes close | Customer Rating: | | This book isn't just for directors. It is an invaluable resource for actors as well. I've taught film and video acting for a number of years and never found a book that was worth having students read even part of. Until this one. Unlike most books on acting which focus on techniques that may work great on stage but are worse than disastrous on film, Judith Weston goes under the surface of acting and directing to the core of what a close-up camera needs to see. That, in a nutshell, is "lending the character your unconscious," so that absolutely nothing looks (or is) fake or "pretend." Even more importantly, she provides down-to-earth, extremely effective techniques for directors that support and demand genuine, affect-free performances. She discusses the creative process of the director at a level that is not idiosycratic or based on her personal "style" (as so many books for directors and actors do). Her advice is both common-sensical and deeply insightful, it's what every good director knows but often can't articulate consistently enough. Don't miss this book if you work in film or video, whether you are a director, actor, teacher, editor, DP, AD, or even a gaffer. After reading Weston, you will see every aspect of the actors performances more truly and clearly, and find yourself finding new ways to get the most out of every second on screen. One of those books that changes your life by telling you what you already knew more clearly than you ever thought it could be said, and giving you fresh new ways to put it into practical use. Highest recommendation. | the best book on directing actors | Customer Rating: | This book teaches the most important skill a director can possess: getting great performances from actors.
She breaks things down into logical bits and helps you avoid many common mistakes directors make, such as giving unplayable directions, giving too many directions, talking too much, etc.
She writes with wisdom, insight, and humor.
If you're a director or a wannabe director, do the world a favor and read this book so the world has better performances to watch.
This book is the best kept secret in show business. An even more valuable secret is her workshop, which she teaches regularly in L.A. as of this review (Spring 2006). |
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