Learn the craft of video and filmmaking and develop the right skills through a focus on storytelling and collaboration from the esteemed authors of Filmmaking in Action .
Filmmaking in Action is the Platonic ideal of what you would read if you knew absolutely nothing about filmmaking. If you have picked up so much as a mote of technical knowledge beforehand, it will not be very useful to you. But the real challenge is how unbearably dull and tedious this is. Even the process of reading one chapter a day feels nearly unbearable because the book is so dull and so full of cliche. Though it is true that it's difficult to make a comprehensive book about the craft of filmmaking because the experience of it is always going to be incredibly personalized, Filmmaking in Action tends to lean so heavily towards broadness and repetition that much of the value that might be gleaned from this book is lost. The comparison that immediately comes to my mind is Sidney Lumet's Making Movies. Lumet's book describes his own specific experience of filmmaking, and he's very straightforward about this. However, his book was written to teach young filmmakers how to be intuitive. Most technical filmmaking can be taught very quickly, so Lumet describes what qualities he picked up over the years that made him a successful filmmaker, qualities that cannot be taught, but which can be acquired by aspiring young artists. Filmmaking in Action is too general to give any insights like that, and the final book could largely be swapped for the instructions that should come with most filmmaking equipment.
This book assembles the collected wisdom of leading filmmakers from all disciplines. If you want to be (or simple understand) a filmmaker - this is the place to start.
I was given this book by Adam with a nice inscription at the Raindance TIFF industry party with many of the contributors on hand - a great night!