Write! Shoot! Edit!: The Complete Guide for Teen Filmmakers
By (Author) Deborah S Patz
Michael Wiese Productions
Michael Wiese Productions
1st September 2017
United States
General
Non Fiction
791.430232
Paperback
210
Width 133mm, Height 203mm
Today's digital technology allows teens to produce short films with enviable accessibility. But there is a darker side to this technology: the expectation to live and share your life online, to become an instant success with your first creations.
Imagine being free to experiment and play with the medium, with a mentor beside you helping you craft solid, professional work that never looks like a home movie. Industry pro Deborah Patz is that mentor. Much like writers pen journals they don't publish (aka writing practice, as taught by Natalie Gold-berg), Write! Shoot! Edit! mentors teens in first filmmaking, crafting complete, scripted movies in a safe place free from public exhibition and scrutiny, experimenting with the medium, and discovering one's own visual storytelling voice.
Deborah Patz has been a professional in the film industry since the mid-1980s, with a filmography that spans family and children's programming, science-fiction extravaganzas, and feature films of various budget sizes. She started making movies when she was 9 years old, pioneered a filmmaking course at her high school (because it didn't have one), and even taught the teacher how to process film (so he would include it in the course). After receiving a BFA in Film Production from York University, and years of working on productions for Disney, Lucasfilm, Alliance / Atlantis, Nelvana, MCA / Universal, and the IMAX space team, Deb penned her first books: Surviving Production and Film Production Manage-ment 101 (known as the "Swiss Army knife" of production management), both published worldwide by MWP. Based on her books, Deb has designed and instructed numerous courses, seminars, and workshops in Canada, the USA, and the UK, and has worked with young teens to help them make elaborate, scripted home movies. She is now an MFA candidate in Creative Writing at the University of British Columbia (with a specialty in Children's and YA), and continues to work in film finance and teach filmmaking work-shops for teens.