James Cameron lecture-my notes! - Tree of Souls - An Avatar Community Forum
Tree of Souls - An Avatar Community Forum
Tree of Souls has now been upgraded to an all-new forum platform and will be temporarily located at tree-of-souls.net. This version of the forum will remain for archival reasons, but is locked for further posting. All existing accounts and posts have been moved over to the new site, so please go to tree-of-souls.net and log in with your regular credentials!
Go Back   Tree of Souls - An Avatar Community Forum » Avatar » General Avatar Discussion
FAQ Community Calendar

 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Prev Previous Post   Next Post Next
  #1  
Old 04-29-2010, 08:05 PM
Iknimaya's Avatar
Iknimaya Iknimaya is offline
Numeyu
 
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Columbus, OH
Posts: 86
Send a message via AIM to Iknimaya Send a message via Skype™ to Iknimaya
Default James Cameron lecture-my notes!

(I typed this up late last night after I got back to my apartment from the lecture. It was such an inspiring talk. The whole thing lasted about two and half hours, and I ended up taking around 10 pages of notes!)

James Cameron came to The Ohio State University to give a lecture at the new Ohio Union this evening. The event was held in the Grand Ballroom. How "grand"? Grand enough to comfortably seat a sold-out show of 2,000 people. I got there a half hour early, and I was able to get a seat near the middle, but more towards the front. There was a small stage with a lectern and two large projection screens on either side-these were used to project footage of Cameron for those in the back of the room. Finally, the lights dimmed and familiar music began playing... But there was a technical problem and no video! It stopped suddenly, and everyone laughed/cheered, but then it started again-working properly this time. The video was a rather long "trailer" of Cameron's film works, all epically cut together to soundtracks of the various movies. There were fun and interesting parallels made between scenes like the Terminator firing a gun vs Jake firing his rifle and the mech suit from Aliens vs the AMP suit. After a solid round of goosebumps, the reel ended and the man of the hour walked up to the stage and received a standing ovation.

The following are my notes from the lecture.


First film job at age 26
Grew up in a small town of about 1500 people
Always out in the woods collecting bugs, snakes, etc, taking samples of algae and looking with a microscope-a budding scientist
The source of his two driving factors: curiosity and creativity
1960's: loved science, voracious reader of sci-fi books
-at this time (60's) it seemed he was living in these sci-fi worlds
-man on the moon
-exploring deep ocean
-anything seemed possible

In high school, "The term nerd wasn't invented yet..."
-founder and president of the science club
-only other member was a Czechoslovakian girl who couldn't speak much English
-biology teacher helped/urged him to start an art/theater club/program
-This is where he learned that small groups of highly motivated people can be really effective
-They were all self-taught, all took equal part in writing, acting, directing plays

In college, a Physics major
-science as a quest for understanding
-bad at Math, so he switched to English
-wanted to write/illustrate sci-fi novels (this was before the graphic novel that we know today)
-was an avid painter
-realized that school couldn't teach him to write; he needed real life experience, so got a job
-worked as a truck driver, tool fabricator, mechanic, high school janitor
-nights and weekends were spent writing and painting, "All nighters were my way of life back then."
Moved to L.A. with some friends, started making short films

2001: A Space Odyssey was a "religious experience" for him (I think we can all relate to this!
On Saturdays, he would head to the USC Film Department
-heard they had the best program around for film/cinema
-on Saturdays, would study in the Film Dept's library
-Xerox papers, books, etc
-Go home and put it all in black binders on the shelf
-"Basically I got a graduate level education for the price of the xeroxes."

Then, STAR WARS happened
-These were all the images that had been in his head for years
-Thought, "I can do that"
-Quit his job, raised $20,000 "from tax-shelter dentists" to make a sci-fi film
-built a set in the living room, maxed out the credit card
-wife thought he had finally gone crazy
learned that people will help if you share your vision and purpose with them

Leadership
-Difference between a natural leader and a good leader
-learned the hard way
Work ethic
-assume you can beat the brilliant guys by shear force of working harder
"Divine ignorance"
-"We didn't know that we 'shouldn't be able to do something,' we just did it."
-Often able to do something if you don't know the limits, like when you're new at something

First real movie job: "Battle Beyond the Stars" October 1979
(Battle Beyond the Stars - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)
-Total B-movie kitsch, "Biker babes from Mars stuff"
-Got a job in the model shop from a friend of a cousin who had a boyfriend who knew someone who was a carpenter for the film... (something like that)
-It was a b-movie, but it was a REAL MOVIE-getting paid to do something he would do for free!
"When opportunity knocks, be prepared"
Convinced the director the film needed a front projector to tie the actors in with the model work
-convinced the director he was a master projectionist
-hired his friends to help
-already had the knowledge: the old xeroxes
-fabricated and built the projection machine
-working on this film 5 days and people already thought he knew what he was doing (He didn't!)
"Be bold, but be prepared. Sometimes the door of opportunity opens only a crack and you have to leap through before it shuts."

2 years later...
Terminator
-As a director, found that you have to know the answers-even if you don't
*take risks*
All films are risks
-they have to be completely new and different; audiences don't want to watch the same thing
-but they have to make money
New technology can make it different, set it apart

1988 The Abyss
One shot that "couldn't be done"-an alien creature made of water
-turned to an all new technology; computer animation
-first soft-skinned technique
-loved to see people's reactions to this "dream imagery"
-they knew it couldn't BE real, but it LOOKED so real, like a dream
-discovered the power of CG

Terminator 2
Took it to the next level, rather than just one scene of computer graphics, make a prominent character
-T-1000 "The liquid metal dude"
-it was risky
-At $160 million, it was the most expensive movie yet made
-Made half a billion dollars "a lot of money at that time." (laughs)
What made it stand out?
-The shock of the new
Learned the value of risk and reward

Founded a new company; "Digital Domain"
-all-digital filmmaking
-began working on projects that became the industry standards of today, and replaced the old standards

1995-Decided to challenge the team at Digital Domain
-They hadn't made a film yet, which was the whole point of the company
-Cameron wrote a story with lots of creatures and aliens, and he called it AVATAR
Was looking for the "holy grail" of CG technology; render of close-up human emotions realistically
-this project demanded they find the solution
-Soon realized the challenge was impossible at that time-"boldness tempered by careful analysis"
decided to wait until technology caught up

waited 10 years

Titanic
-super risky
-a 3 hour film
-a "chick flick"; people in period dress, etc
-everybody dies at the end
Everyone thought it would be a flop
-was over budget
-mocked by the press: "We all know how it ends!"
Stayed focused, hunkered down to make a great movie
-In the editing room, he taped a razor blade to the edge of his monitor, with a note attached: "Use in case movie sucks"
-"Luckily I didn't have to use it!"
The first weekend, it made $28 million-not big
-that went up the next weekend "That doesn't happen."
-and up again the next weekend "That NEVER happens"
Ended up #1 for 15 weeks "still a record" and it made $1.8 billion, that's "More than any other movie by a factor of 2."

Rewind a bit...
-Saw a TV special about the Titanic, was interested in the robotic vehicles-they looked like sci-fi robots
-thought it would be an interesting contrast to period dress
An avid SCUBA diver
-thought, I can pay for a dive to the Titanic with a movie budget!
-led by his curiosity and love of exploration
-6 months later, was filming
-this was a *real* exploration
-his love of science calling back...

Became interested in deep sea exploration
Started a documentary company
-went on 6 expeditions
-made 4 films
-did full archaeological survey inside and out of the Titanic
-did 60+ submersible dives, about half to the Titanic
-having a great time doing it!
-working with real scientists
-began refining the 3D camera

2000
Partnered with an engineer to build a new, smaller, HD 3D camera system
Personal vow: next film will be in full 3D
-only problem: not enough theaters had 3D projectors
2002
DLP projectors could be modified to do 3D with only one projector
Problem: 'chicken and the egg' issue with the studios and theaters
-no studio will finance a big 3D film unless the theaters can support it
-no theaters will get 3D equipment without a big film to play on it
Disney, to their credit, released Chicken Little in 3D, causing 85 theaters to get the technology in around 2004
Decided he needed to make *THE* big 3D movie, and told the world to start getting ready for it
__________________
"I shut my eyes in order to see"
-Paul Gauguin
Reply With Quote
 


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


Visit our partner sites:

   



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:30 AM.

Based on the Planet Earth theme by Themes by Design


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2022, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
All images and clips of Avatar are the exclusive property of 20th Century Fox.