Directing, Visual Storytelling

Creating a director’s look book for your film is a very important step.

It will help your team be more effective and improve your storytelling.

Part of knowing what you want is taking the time to deeply explore all facets of your film. Creating a look book will help you with that, in addition to being a crucial reference.

As the decision-maker of the film, you must take the time to know what you want. By being ready to make definitive decisions, your set will run smoother, your team will execute your vision more seamlessly, and you will finish the project with a result closer to what you originally envisioned.


How a look book helps you in pre-production

I’ll start by covering how the visual reference helps you as you are planning for your shoot, as a director.

Firstly, when you break down your film into categories, you will have to consider each of them. If one of your folders is empty, it makes you think, ‘why haven’t I considered any of this? Do I not care about these elements? How do they matter and how might I use them?’.


With new awareness of what you’re missing, you can now begin filling that creative gap and be more intentional as you go through your prep.

1. Making a look book makes you consider the atmosphere and tone of your film.

A great way to do this is to look through Google images and pick out things that stand out to you. You can also do this with film and television show clips, taking screenshots of things that stand out to you as possibly fitting your film’s message.


I usually start by looking at sections of my film that have similar tones.

(I do not own the copyright to the photos in the above screenshot)

As you can see, there’s a pattern emerging in the tone of these photos I’ve gathered. I had a general sense of what I was looking for, but in my search, I was able to narrow the vague vision into my head into concrete examples of what I liked and discard ideas in my head that didn’t work or no longer fit the vision.


2. Making a look book causes you to consider options you hadn’t thought of before.


It is very easy to get stuck on one particular train of thought. For me, once I’ve gone down a mental path and I think I like where it’s going, I can have a hard time thinking in a different direction. Sometimes, the options you haven’t thought of can be the best ones.

It is worthwhile an exercise to force yourself to refresh your mind and return to planning at another time. That way, you can look at your film from a different perspective.

A way to do that is searching for images and inspiration for your visual reference.

I’ll bet you will stumble on something out there in the vast internet that will make you go ‘Aha!’. After all, I know I certainly can’t think of every possible option when I’m working. It’s just too much to consider at once.

Along those lines…

3. Making a look book gives you a chance to consider techniques used by others.

This is similar to the things ‘you didn’t think of’, but I’ll touch on it anyway.

When you are going through the web or any other resource looking for inspiration, you are likely to stumble upon techniques and methods employed by both great and obscure directors and filmmakers.

Learning from those who came before is a good strategy. You don’t always have to reinvent the wheel, since someone else may have already found a great way to communicate to the audience. Use the past 100 years of visual storytelling tradition to your advantage and don’t be afraid to try out the techniques of other filmmakers.

For example, I pulled this screenshot from Mad Max: Fury Road because I thought the lighting fit the mood I was looking for.


4. Making a look book will help you explain specific creative choices to your team.


Going through this process will not only give you the opportunity to discover what tone and atmosphere you desire for the film, but you will inevitably find specific elements and examples from your references.

These are specific elements you can point out to your team, such as ‘I want practical lighting on the floor like this during the emergency mine scene because it will give a sci-fi touch to a mine location in the film which would otherwise seem to be in the same world in which we live now’.

All you need to do then is point to the reference photo you’ve provided. It’s as easy as that.




How a look book helps you on set

Once you are on set, the time you spent in pre-production will make all the difference. I’ve said it before – the visual planning process a director uses (doesn’t use) will make or break it. If you don’t invest in pre-production, you’ll regret it.

Your look book now does several things for you when you are on set.

1. Your look book helps your team understand your vision.


Your look book and your explanation of your vision are practical and actionable information for your team.

During the shoot, they can take this info and run with it, finding a solution and path to execute your vision. It also brings them closer to your mental wavelength and they will better understand your intent. Not only that, but your teammates may make great suggestions that are better than your original idea because they understand your vision.


Basically, the look book is another opportunity to communicate to your team what it is you are trying to do, and effective communication is the key to a team’s success.

2. Your reference gives your team freedom to act.

Your reference gives your team a sense of what tone you are looking for. Assuming they have the necessary skills, they will have the freedom to try techniques you didn’t think of – or may not even know exist.

At this point, since they know what you want, it doesn’t matter much how they achieve it. What matters is the end result.

They can reference your look book to answer their questions. Your team can act autonomously since they know the big picture and don’t need to consult you for every little decision.


If things are going smoothly, all they will have to do is ask if you like the end result. If yes, you move on. If not, you provide feedback and move forward from there.

3. Your reference allows your team to identify possible problems and solutions.

As a director, there will be many times where you will not know whether your vision is possible, practically speaking.

As a director, there will be gaps in your knowledge. You may have a camera move or lighting style you are looking to achieve that actually isn’t possible as you envision. Or, it’s possible, but the practical constraints of the budget just won’t allow it.

This is another great thing your look book will help with. It allows your team – in discussion with you and while looking at the reference – to identify where those gaps in your vision may exist.

Your team can let you know where problems may arise and how to deal with them. This is an important step to go through with your team and one you always want to deal with before you get on set whenever possible. The more problems you knock out before you get on set, the smoother your shoot will be.

Above all, the more your team is coordinated and working seamlessly, the better your film will be.

The US military knows this well and often puts on shows of efficiency and coordination. The military culture applauds this togetherness as a virtue, and as filmmakers, we should have this same mindset.



How to create your director’s look book

First, I created a folder for my project. I already have a folder for my project on Google Drive. This is where I organize many of my files and how I collaborate with my team. You may have another way, but I think the principles still apply.

1. Create a visual design folder.

Within that folder, I create one specifically for all of my visual brainstorming. I exclude anything about sound design, music, or other topics. I create another set of folders for those.



2. Break down the visual design by category.

You can break down your folders however you like. I suggest organizing it however it makes the most sense to you. What is logical and easy to navigate for me might be a headache for you; that’s fine.


The key is to give your visual design folder enough organization so that you and your team can make easy sense of it.

Some logical organization might be, for example:

Breaking set design ideas into folders for your major locations.

Breaking costume ideas into folders for major factions or primary characters.


Breaking the film into its key locations for your lighting and moods.


Whatever works for you – go for it.

3. Start putting inspiration into the folders.

Find stuff from just about anywhere you like and put it in your folders. Movies. TV shows. Google images. Links to clips on YouTube. Whatever will help you and your team.



Your references will help your team greatly. For example, all these references gave my concept artist plenty to work with. He was able to create some great concepts for our futuristic slave miners’ outfits for our post-apocalyptic / sci-fi film “Broken”.


Because of my references for the long-escaped brethren of these miners, he was able to create more art for our production. Having the references and a clear vision made the experience much more pleasant overall.


4. Notate what you like about the items in your folder.

You don’t necessarily have to make a written note, but you should have a sense of why you put an image in your folder. You should be able to specify what about that image you see is important for your film. Without this information, your team will find it more difficult to translate the image into anything helpful for you in executing your vision.


Whether it’s one tiny element of the image that inspired you, or you like the overall mood of the image, you should be able to articulate this to your team.


A summary of lookbooks and their benefits:

1. The lookbook helps you in pre-production by: making you think about your film’s general tone and atmosphere, consider options you hadn’t thought of before, allowing you to consider techniques used by others, and helps in identifying specific inspirations.

2. The lookbook helps you in production by: giving your team the freedom and information to act independent of you and allowing your team to identify possible problems before they occur.

3. How to put the visual reference together: create a folder for your project, create a visual design folder, break down the folder by category, put inspirational images into the folders, and make note of what you like about the image.


It’s just a tool.

Don’t allow the process of making this reference to bog you down, slow you down, or keep you from getting things done. Don’t allow it to become a distraction. It is just a tool, so use it until it is no longer helpful, then move on.

If it doesn’t work for you like it does for me, modify the tool and apply it according to your needs.

As always, I hope that you find this information helpful. Break a leg.

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Movie Reviews

Year: 2018

Genre: Drama

Directed: Brad Anderson

Stars: Jon Hamm, Rosamund Pike, Dean Norris, Shea Whigham, Larry Pine, Mark Pellegrino, Idir Chender, Ben Affan, Leila Bekhti, Alon Abutbul, Kate Fleetwood, Douglas Hodge

Production: Bleecker Street

 

It’s been a minute since I’ve seen a spy story as tactile and as fascinated with its own inner workings as Beirut. To my recollection the last time I’ve seen something in the ballpark was adapted by a John le Carre novel a la The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1965) and Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (2011). Though, the look and feel of Beirut is more reminiscent of the little seen and underappreciated Brad Pitt movie Spy Game (2001), where the young protégé of a retiring CIA agent is taken political prisoner. Much like that movie, which was also written by Tony Gilroy, Beirut elects to make things personal which by in-large is a good move and makes the difference.

 

Set primarily in 1982, Jon Hamm stars as Mason Skiles, a former diplomat whose retirement from the State Department came after a family tragedy in the titular city. Now a drunk, negotiating local labor disputes, Skiles is once again put in a position of intrigue when a former friend (Pellegrino) is kidnapped by a terrorist splinter group. Asked by name to negotiate a deal, Skiles finds that there’s a lot more at stake in the war-torn capital of Lebanon than first meets the eye.

 

First and foremost Beirut is a historical fiction with emphasis on the fiction. Many of the major events highlighted by the movie have been altered to fit into an abidingly old-fashioned story about old friends, familial ties and inter-departmental pi**ing contests. Larger events certainly shape these personal conflicts but the political significance of said events take a backseat to create a tighter story, imbue Skiles’s character arc with pathos, and connect Rosamund Pike in way that makes us question whether she exists in this story for good or ill.

 

In a movie that actively emphasizes the strength of soft power; I personally feel this is the right tact. The film swims in a murky soup of ever changing motives and realities that, even when dumbed down may prove baffling. It’s also far more grounded than some of Tony Gilroy’s other screenplays (cough cough, the Bourne movies, cough cough) which is great for gritty realism and fleetingly interesting for foreign policy wonks, but not immediately engaging for audiences in Peoria.

 

Thankfully Jon Hamm as our protagonist proves immediately engaging – a master’s class in intelligence and poise. His Skiles is an unwilling hero in a classic sense, but when he stumbles into his first fight-or-flight moments, something in him switches on. He exhibits a natural talent in the art of arbitrage and it’s obvious that he not only takes joy in his work but seems almost addicted to it. The beginning of the film has him in the bottom of a bottle of alcohol, the end of the film has him proudly strutting, looking for the next challenge and happy to be in his element. Could he then, at that moment be considered a symbol for American interventionalism? The epilogue seems to suggest so.

 

But of course with a movie so old-fashioned and so caught up in the personal stakes of our hero, Beirut reveals a fatal flaw in its lack of diverse viewpoints. French actor Idir Chender plays the only Lebanese character of any significance and his motivations are put into a small enough box as to come across as petty. Much ado is made about Beirut turning into a warzone where before it was “the Paris of the Middle East,” yet very little attention is given to how exactly it became that way. It’s actually kind of unpleasant to consider that if you were to count the minutes of screen time, more attention was given to the Israelis, the Palestinians and the Americans than the actual people living in Lebanon i.e. the Lebanese! And a quick Google search reveals I’m not the only one uncomfortable with this.

 

Still, given the time period Beirut is supposed to be set in, the absence of voices arguably proves its own form of self-criticism. I wouldn’t put it past director Brad Anderson (who also directed episodes of Treme, The Wire and Fringe), that he made the confluence of white voices angling for influence very purposeful. As if to say the chaos that consumed Lebanon between 1975 and 1990 could have been grappled with, had the country not been used as a pawn in shortsighted geo-political games.

 

I don’t know – perhaps I’m grasping at straws to justify Beirut’s larger oversights. I’m personally of the opinion that when a movie uses intelligence and craft as opposed to explosions to propel a spy story, it should be supported. I’m of the opinion much of the controversy could have been avoided if they just called it something other than Beirut… Don Draper Among the Ciders, perhaps?

 

Final Grade: B-

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