* Uniquely brings together a critical study of film, with the practical ways in which filmmakers can apply the same practice to their own filmmaking - drawing on aesthetics to create brilliant and effective storytelling.
* Draws on technical skills and a critical interest to provide advanced students of filmmaking with a textbook that addresses directly how they can create powerful films by using creative decisions.
* Unlike the competition, this book is pedagogically and practically focused, whilst using critical and theoretical content to explore the more practical aspects of filmmaking.
Will Hong is an Assistant Professor of Digital Media Production at the State Univeristy of New York at New Paltz. He spent two decades in the film and television industry in New York City working on short and feature-length independent films, music videos (including from artists Weezer, Alicia Keys, Black-Eyed Peas, Modest Mouse), numerous TV spots and promos for such clients as ESPN, Phillips-Van Heusen, HBO, Kenneth Cole, Macy's, HGTV and MTV, reality television shows (HouseHunters International), as well as corporate (silver Telly Award winner) and associated web-based content. He has taught the fundamentals of storytelling and filmmaking at The Lee Strasberg Theater and Film Institute, the New York Film Academy (NYC), the Dalton School, and Marist College in Poughkeepsie, NY.
Title: Crafting the Scene: Lessons in Storytelling from the Masters of Cinema
Author: Hong, Will
ISBN: 9780367608811
Binding:
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publication Date: 2022-06-02
Number of Pages: 198
Weight: 0.3501 kg
'Will Hong's excellent Crafting the Scene: Lessons in Storytelling from the Masters of Cinema fills a gaping hole in many curriculums. It is a rich, exhaustive exploration of the role of individual scenes from a film that touches on both how they work on their own as scenes worth studying but also how they fit into the film in a big picture kind of way.'
David Greenberg, University of the Arts
'Will Hong's excellent Crafting the Scene: Lessons in Storytelling from the Masters of Cinema fills a gaping hole in many curriculums. It is a rich, exhaustive exploration of the role of individual scenes from a film that touches on both how they work on their own as scenes worth studying but also how they fit into the film in a big picture kind of way.'
David Greenberg, University of the Arts