
They came out about a week ago, but if you haven’t already watched them — you should. In an absolute stroke of brilliance, The New York Times Magazine decided to get fourteen A-list actors in front of a camera for short, silent single-take scenes. It’s called “Fourteen Actors Acting“. (Click the link to follow to it.)
For all of you that went through film school — especially working with a Bolex and 16mm B&W Reversal — a lot of these will feel familiar in the best way. They’re just like those exercises and assignments you had to suffer through while trying to get a grasp on the medium, the ones you overexposed or had your actor-friend drop out at the last minute only to be replaced with your roommate’s drunk friend — only these are perfect little exercises, perfect little displays, and fourteen actors — including Matt Damon, James Franco, Chloe Moretz, Natalie Portman, Javier Bardem and Tilda Swinton — who all seem to understand how less translates to more.
They can remind you why you like this crazy stuff in the first place.
This entry was posted on Sunday, December 12th, 2010 at 11:54 am. It is filed under Adam, blog, writing and tagged with 16mm, Black and White, Bolex, Chloe Moretz, Film, Film School, Javier Bardem, Jesse Eisenberg, Matt Damon, Michael Douglas, Natalie Portman, The New York Times Magazine, Tilda Swinton, Vincent Cassel.
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