Christopher Nolan on "Following" - Conversations Inside The Criterion Collection

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  • Опубликовано: 14 янв 2025

Комментарии • 639

  • @ItsWilheim
    @ItsWilheim 8 лет назад +578

    I dunno about anyone else here, but this is one of the most inspiring films to an aspiring filmmaker/filmmaker starting out.

    • @ruly8153
      @ruly8153 4 года назад +3

      The guy movies worth millions
      You’re not special just cause you aspire to be like him

    • @chili24137
      @chili24137 4 года назад +9

      Yep, this and primer.

    • @MrJamesC
      @MrJamesC 4 года назад +33

      @@ruly8153 He didn't say that

    • @monkey363
      @monkey363 4 года назад +23

      Ruly manatee how dare someone be inspired by a work of art

    • @kali6651
      @kali6651 4 года назад +7

      @@ruly8153 Damn. You're kind of a fucking dickhead, you know that?

  • @ImNotThere93
    @ImNotThere93 10 лет назад +201

    Mr. Nolan changed how I view film. My all time favorite director.

  • @bodge360
    @bodge360 10 лет назад +86

    I feel like he would be a brilliant therapist, just listening to his calm voice explain his directing really mellowed me out

  • @gothamknight2201
    @gothamknight2201 7 лет назад +153

    17:31 Nolan talks about Sound and how important it is
    23:31 I need to learn this. I gotta stop thinking about imaginary future projects when i haven't even thought about how I'm realistically going to make my first feature film.

    • @gabevillarrealedits
      @gabevillarrealedits 5 лет назад +10

      Gotham Knight did you happen to make that feature yet?

    • @pranav_sh25
      @pranav_sh25 Год назад

      did you make your first feature yet?

    • @TheConstructiveCritic888
      @TheConstructiveCritic888 3 месяца назад

      Just checking in. Have you started it yet? If not, don’t be discouraged. Baby steps. Just keep working towards your goal.

  • @garruksson
    @garruksson 10 лет назад +251

    My personal favorite director! The prestige is my favorite movie of all time

  • @JackHoward
    @JackHoward 10 лет назад +177

    Incredibly interesting.

    • @oscar_jacques
      @oscar_jacques 10 лет назад +1

      You following Ryan Connolly's feed? That's where I saw it.

    • @MartinHayfield
      @MartinHayfield 7 лет назад

      look at you now, you interviewed this interesting man yourself

    • @nikidon99
      @nikidon99 7 лет назад

      Okay Jack we get it you love him and got to interview him 😂😂

    • @uchihagaeshi1169
      @uchihagaeshi1169 4 года назад +1

      @@nikidon99 But he hadn't in the past.

  • @OOUGGE
    @OOUGGE 10 лет назад +298

    Memento is a masterpeice

    • @liampredmore9375
      @liampredmore9375 10 лет назад +24

      My favorite movie of all time, absolutely amazing

    • @SamirPatnaik
      @SamirPatnaik 10 лет назад +1

      i guess a movie has not been that way before.. Mindblown

    • @nutmaster652
      @nutmaster652 7 лет назад +7

      OOUGGE one of the most ingenious films i've ever seen, i don't know where him and his brother come up with the concepts for his movies

  • @ZthaIncredible
    @ZthaIncredible 10 лет назад +35

    Nolan is not the greatest director of all time, but his film record is speaks for itself. The man has never made a bad film, in fact I would argue that all his films are worth seeing given how short life is.

  • @moviemanwill
    @moviemanwill 9 лет назад +268

    Following is, no joke, one of his best films.

    • @jeffreyferreira3811
      @jeffreyferreira3811 7 лет назад +13

      Dark Knight Rises, and I would argue Interstellar

    • @fluteisland
      @fluteisland 6 лет назад +11

      The Prestige

    • @omerresnikoff3565
      @omerresnikoff3565 5 лет назад +2

      @Gunnar Thorstenson better than inception (I actually believe that), dunkirk, insomnia, all batman films except the dark knight and interstellar (ok, a good movie for the special effects and scientific achievements, but, coming from a mathematician, the overall story is just... ok)

    • @Angyali
      @Angyali 4 года назад +8

      It was close to be a good film, but the main characters choices felt too naive and clumsy to me.

    • @SaurianStudios1207
      @SaurianStudios1207 4 года назад +2

      Inception, The Dark Knight and Memento are his 3 masterpieces, the rest are really good but not masterpieces.

  • @LaneCarter
    @LaneCarter 9 лет назад +156

    Fantastic! It's great to hear such a widely renowned director talking about how he covers things up with editing. Such an honest interview. He doesn't seem pretentious at all.

    • @aini9528
      @aini9528 7 лет назад +1

      Can u elaborate a bit? My english is not so good..

    • @LaneCarter
      @LaneCarter 7 лет назад +15

      Verkkariritari I just meant that Chris seemed pretty humble about the whole filmmaking processs. It's encouraging for an aspiring filmmaker like me because it lets me know that I don't have to be a mega genius to make films.

    • @RobotHau5
      @RobotHau5 4 года назад +2

      @@LaneCarter Well he also added that he wasn't formally trained, which may have been to his benefit. You're right tho! This also made me feel comfortable with the little I have, and I think that's his overall message with this. Do the best with what you've got, but continue to learn what could make it better without breaking your back (budget).

  • @alphacause
    @alphacause 10 лет назад +33

    Its always a treat to hear an individual, who is so highly regarded for the art he produces, to speak about the details of his craft. Thank you for this.

  • @auggiecontreras8068
    @auggiecontreras8068 Год назад +6

    I'm 45. I was once fascinated enough by a guitar, that I practiced playing it for 2 or 3 months. Once I tried to learn Spanish, that lasted 2 or 3 months. Dido for painting and gardening.
    It absolutely blows my mind how people can get obsessed with something like film making (or art, or music, or programming) and it literally lasts their entire lives. Very fascinating breakdown of Christopher Nolan ❤

    • @TheConstructiveCritic888
      @TheConstructiveCritic888 3 месяца назад

      What keeps a filmmaker going is thinking that the next one will be their best film ever. I don’t care if you’re Spielberg, Scorsese, or Nolan. You think to yourself, “they haven’t seen anything yet.”

  • @dindinmooshi1356
    @dindinmooshi1356 10 лет назад +38

    really love his style and thinking.

  • @kickdogseal
    @kickdogseal 5 лет назад +19

    Following is THE movie that aspiring filmmakers should watch on repeat.

  • @arnoldrivas4590
    @arnoldrivas4590 9 лет назад +67

    I've found a copy of this film and watched it. Very well done. And was also surprised this was his first feature film before Memento which I also loved. Add to the fact Nolan never went to film school? Wow. Perhaps after Interstellar which I have yet to see he might go back to the small film format just to get a breather from the big blockbusters before making another one. But who knows. Nolan clearly knows what films he wants to film and what stories to tell. More power to him.

    • @wildcard749
      @wildcard749 9 лет назад +11

      He also writes or cowrites the screenplays

    • @jayv8068
      @jayv8068 9 лет назад +4

      +Arnold Rivas filmschool is not important at all

    • @arnoldrivas4590
      @arnoldrivas4590 9 лет назад +1

      Jayden V then what use does it have?

    • @jayv8068
      @jayv8068 9 лет назад +3

      Arnold Rivas wasting your money

    • @arnoldrivas4590
      @arnoldrivas4590 9 лет назад

      +wildcard749 And that is also a plus for me.

  • @HenOutOfHen
    @HenOutOfHen 10 лет назад +95

    i feel smarter just listening to him talk

    • @HenOutOfHen
      @HenOutOfHen 4 года назад +3

      Oves Du exactly, that’s why I said it...Sooo... what are you pointing out?

  • @chiztrix
    @chiztrix 10 лет назад +60

    Amazing director. All his movies have been great so far and I'm sure Interstellar won't disappoint.

  • @orr971
    @orr971 10 лет назад +8

    Such an amazing person. You can see how he understand and knows everything about every aspect of what he does. So brilliant and pleasant and polite and humble.
    Chris Nolan is the best director in the world. Climbed his way from a low budget film to enormous films.

  • @infamousroy4421
    @infamousroy4421 4 года назад +11

    He is basically Albert Einstein of film making.
    He didn't learnt film making, filmatography embraced him be a medium to broadcast it's eloquent beauty.

  • @MelanieAnneAhern
    @MelanieAnneAhern 7 лет назад +9

    Such a brilliant, humble man. He doesn't look down on budget filmmakers, but truly just appreciates a story well told. That's what it's all about.
    I bet if you gave a lot of people twice the budget of what he spent on this film, they wouldn't come out with a product half as good.

  • @benparsons8161
    @benparsons8161 8 лет назад +7

    15:53 The clock he sets on the table in "Following" is the same clock that is burned in "Memento".
    Also, notice that Cobb, one of the characters from "Following" shares the same name and similar characteristics (criminal, manipulative) as DiCaprio's character in "Inception".

  • @asdwaetd
    @asdwaetd 8 лет назад +36

    no other directors can do sequels lije christopher nolan, nolan did batman begins, and then did a masterful piece The Prestige, then he went back and did the dark knight, then he did inception, then went back and did TDK rises. no other director can do that, i mean even james cameron is shooting avatar back to back, nolan created one of the best trilogy and in between also produced two masterpieces of cenima the prestige and inception, he is the most versatile director right now

    • @RobotHau5
      @RobotHau5 4 года назад

      It's interesting that he made The Prestige after Batman Begins. "Theatricality & Deception" was taught to Batman in the first film, and it was a theme in The Prestige. Later Bane makes reference to it in the TDKR.

  • @bruh_rick
    @bruh_rick 10 лет назад +12

    Felt like I just had a film class after viewing this interview
    learned so much

  • @Everyday_prophetic
    @Everyday_prophetic 7 лет назад +8

    I love interviews like this where they edit out the interviewers questions and allow the interviewee to really expand. Allows you to hear their authentic views in a relaxed way rather than being driven by an interviewers scripted narrative.

  • @elderofzion
    @elderofzion 8 лет назад +120

    dunkirk gonna be great

  • @michaelodonnell6949
    @michaelodonnell6949 10 лет назад +5

    Holy shit, thank you VICE for this. We need more of these one to ones with directors.
    Was absolutely gutted that Robert Rodriguez's El Rey network isn't making the video interviews with Guillermo Del Toro, John Carpenter and Quentin Tarantino, available in any form. Fortunately my other idol Chris Nolan decided to talk to VICE :)

  • @brorush1
    @brorush1 8 лет назад +13

    my favourite modern day director. also the way he talks about actually being present behind the lens of what he's filming a good film for me any how normally involves a psychological element of feeling like you're prying into someones life from a real medium like a camera and not just having very well set up shots that just explains the story ore cinematic objective. almost like a ghost was secretly watching them and that they carry on with there life oblivious to the camera not acting up to it just being in front of it as there life unfolds and i think someone who has the understanding from the simple end of the spectrum can then use more common ore professional camera techniques to emphasise certain parts of a film without it feeling like you're just watching a movie if you get my drift not a story made into a film but a story that happens to be filmed as if it would happen with ore without a medium to portray it i.e film.

  • @bennygaray46
    @bennygaray46 10 лет назад +18

    One of the best directors I have ever know

  • @omarcorrea
    @omarcorrea 10 лет назад +347

    Wow he's never been to film school? That's crazy.

    • @Warlicmaster
      @Warlicmaster 10 лет назад +168

      You know what's crazy? People paying money for educations when all information is avaliable in your local public library.

    • @kolajampe
      @kolajampe 10 лет назад +41

      Warlicmaster Public library??!! you not heard of youtube?!

    • @digitalintent
      @digitalintent 10 лет назад +38

      Warlicmaster I think it depends on what subjects you are trying to learn, and how fast. Also, where you want to work plays a major role. A creative field (Art, Design, Music, even Programming) requires a portfolio, so a degree is not as important. I could probably learn as much about medicine as my primary physician, but without those letters next to my name, I wouldn't be making the money.
      I'm currently teaching myself Industrial Design. It would be nice to have a teacher with years of experience show me my mistakes within 2 minutes instead of spending hours, or even days, figuring out what I did wrong.

    • @bluntedspear5772
      @bluntedspear5772 10 лет назад +3

      whats crazy is art for profit by commitee.

    • @kolajampe
      @kolajampe 10 лет назад +22

      ***** We are lucky that it didnt, he probably would have been too distracted to make movies!

  • @BlondeManNoName
    @BlondeManNoName 10 лет назад +82

    A cunning man, got to give him credit for that. Not really a director, more like... a *magician*.
    _"The magician takes the ordinary something and makes it do something extraordinary. Now you're looking for the secret... but you won't find it, because of course you're not really looking. You don't really want to know. You want to be fooled. But you wouldn't clap yet. Because making something disappear isn't enough; you have to bring it back. That's why every magic trick has a third act, the hardest part, the part we call "The Prestige"._

  • @guysimchony309
    @guysimchony309 7 лет назад +3

    So many great insights here. A director who has become one of the most successful and acclaimed of our age shedding light on his humble beginnings. Nolanites FTW!

  • @moeezS
    @moeezS 10 лет назад +9

    "Cutting in your head while you shoot"
    This is fascinating, thanks!

  • @abhigiga
    @abhigiga 10 лет назад +4

    He is one of the greatest filmakers...unquestionably. ..

  • @BruceWayne-pm6co
    @BruceWayne-pm6co 8 лет назад +21

    He's a living legend.

  • @trippin916
    @trippin916 8 лет назад +6

    I love the fact that he seems like he could talk about anything forever...

  • @ars731
    @ars731 10 лет назад +3

    I love hearing directors talk about movie making especially one that loves movies as much as Christopher Nolan

  • @abhikoolblue
    @abhikoolblue 10 лет назад +38

    I could listen him all day talking about film making. Greatest director of modern cinema.

    • @adr1ano1987
      @adr1ano1987 2 года назад

      That would be Tarantino actually

    • @abhikoolblue
      @abhikoolblue 2 года назад

      @@adr1ano1987 ok

    • @target-tk6vb
      @target-tk6vb Год назад

      ​@@adr1ano1987 🤣🤣🤣 his new movie the hollywood one was a sleeper fest, nolan movies rarely have any cursing he made movies in wide genres like biography, war, sci-fi, superhero, fantasy and most of the tarantino films are just dialogue heavy dramas

  • @lemonorange355
    @lemonorange355 10 лет назад +42

    I believe Memento is his greatest achievement. Can't wait for Interstellar!

    • @pharshalsirsat1513
      @pharshalsirsat1513 4 года назад +3

      Its 2020 man !!

    • @thewalterandryanshow
      @thewalterandryanshow 4 года назад +5

      Can’t wait for tenet
      Fuck corona

    • @taz1545
      @taz1545 4 года назад

      Lol Tenet makes memento look like a Party clown

    • @RobotHau5
      @RobotHau5 4 года назад +6

      ​@@taz1545 Honestly I loved Tenet but Momento, for me, was in a league of its own. Tenet is a major leap in terms of its concept (which I absolutely love btw), but Momento is so simple yet contains a similar (and relatable) complexity that makes it such an amazing Master Piece.

  • @WarriorsPhoto
    @WarriorsPhoto 10 лет назад +6

    Amazing hearing him talk about how he started.

  • @MarioUcomics
    @MarioUcomics 10 лет назад +12

    HOLY COW!!! Nolan gave Clerks a mention. I hope kevin Smith hears this

  • @Corndog4382
    @Corndog4382 10 лет назад +2

    Now this is the vice we know and love, this was great. Thank you.

  • @Rebassed
    @Rebassed 10 лет назад +13

    THIS GUY IS A LEGEND

  • @toorawsteven
    @toorawsteven 10 лет назад +7

    all his movies are so freakin good!!

  • @Paperbagman555
    @Paperbagman555 10 лет назад +1

    Vice, this was a fantastic video/conversation. You've done tremendous work this time, I hope to see more of these director videos in future.

  • @ufozencom
    @ufozencom 10 лет назад +2

    I saw this film, "Following" around 2001 I think it was. It blew me away...

    • @Jake-kn3xg
      @Jake-kn3xg 10 лет назад +1

      It does doesn't it? for a debut feature too. You can see how psychology and existentialism play hard in his overall style.

  • @cavejelly
    @cavejelly 10 лет назад +1

    Very informative. Working on anything creative with this guy must be incredible joy and immensely frustrating. Sign me up.

  • @TheConstructiveCritic888
    @TheConstructiveCritic888 3 месяца назад

    What I love most about this video is you have a young Christopher Nolan who is fresh off those low budget films that is telling you how he did it and hasn’t forgotten that process.
    I’m not saying he’s entirely forgotten it, but as the decades go by and he’s accomplishing masterpiece after masterpiece on extreme budgets then I’m sure there becomes a distance.
    I worked four days on “The Dark Knight Rises.” The set was so over the top and we shot in IMAX. I remember thinking to myself “I wonder if he could ever go back and make a film on a $30M or less budget. I’d like to see him do that at this stage in his career.

  • @aguilaf123
    @aguilaf123 10 лет назад +4

    This was very inspiring. Really hope vice does this with other directors

  • @kasperrds6968
    @kasperrds6968 9 лет назад +35

    If you ask me, then the best directors we've seen, have never gone to filmschool: Nolan, Tarantino, James Cameron, George Miller, Stanley Kubrick there are far more, but this is just a few names. In fact many of those who did actually go to filmschool ended up dropping out of filmschool again. I think there seems to be a profound explanation that filmschools are too stricks and therefore eliminating the directors creative minds, while also not challeging them enough. I've seen 100 of horendous short films from filmschool students here in Denmark where I live and the worst thing about them is that they all look the same! Social realism dramas with no edge or desire to wauw the audience or be different, to stand out from the crowd.
    It's no wonder Denmark haven't produced a great director since Nicolas Winding Refn, who by the way, also never went to filmschool, he was enlisted at the Danish filmschool, but decided to try making a movie (Pusher) on his own. I don't know, but for some places, filmschool might be a disadvantage more than an advantage. At least my favorite directors didn't go to filmschool, so that's what I'll take from it - Learning by doing and don't watch never danish movies, cause they'll will bring your creativeness down as opposed to older ones who had stories to tell and desire to entertain.
    How's filmschool in the countries where the rest of you guys who watches and comments on this video lives??

    • @KevinVDoan
      @KevinVDoan 8 лет назад +5

      +K XKX its still the same in the U.S. all the film schools make their students learn things in a certain way, therefore constricting their creative process. Complete rubbish, i'm currently enrolled in school for Digital Media but not film for that reason and make films on my own

    • @ImMatrixor
      @ImMatrixor 8 лет назад +6

      +Vinny Banana Wow, you seem to love yourself quite a bit hahaha I think one of the most advantageous things about film school is being able to meet SO many people interested in film as you are. because after all, you can't make a film without an army. I do hope you have a chance to make your screenplay into a reality but I seriously hope you won't regard your crew as sheep. Know matter what, you absolutely can not make a film by yourself.

    • @jesuislepluscool
      @jesuislepluscool 8 лет назад +2

      +K XKX Well said.

    • @lisazoria2709
      @lisazoria2709 8 лет назад +6

      Film school in Los Angeles is interesting. You never know what someone will come up with. Some people are complete amateurs and only want an "easy A" so they produce really cringe worthy crap, and others are semiprofessionals who have actual experience and budget. This one guy made a sci-fi time travel film for his final and he rented a 10,000 dollar camera (not counting cost of lenses, etc.) and had his actor friend from a popular T.V. show star in it. Our professor was quite impressed and insisted he send it out to some film festivals.
      But generally the student films here aren't quite that fancy, some are, but it's a mixed bag. Some have a budget, but most don't. It's true, I don't think film school is necessary though, the important thing is the passion and desire to learn and improve.

    • @dannyscazares9354
      @dannyscazares9354 8 лет назад +4

      At some point YES Film School does constrain you to do things the way the teachers think it should be the best way to be done acording to them. But also we're talking about art, your growth depends only on you. In my case I didn't know anywone in film industry, I knew nothing about filmmaking at all, I was all alone, so I can tell you I really needed the Film School, the personal guidance to start making my way, I've known many people, and I've learn the basics, film theory, film history, semiotic studies, literature, I have watched a lot of movies, learned rules of filmmaking, rules, I believe: knowing the rules in order to break them.
      All this knowledge is knowledge you won't get in the outside but inside the academy, and as I said I knew no one, and in time you can put aside your teachers, and you will continue your journey on your own (that's the idea), out of the "three or four years of constrain" -if you will-. And let your creativity explode to the world, remember that there are some pretty good filmmakers who went to Film School: Steven Spielberg, Martin Scrocese, Francis Ford Coppola, George Lucas,... and so on.
      Not going to Film School won't make you an automatic great filmmaker, but also going to it won't make you an automatic failure.

  • @zachmorley158
    @zachmorley158 Год назад +1

    It’s actually a really engaging film despite it’s low budget quality. Extremely rare among low budget indie films

  • @duckywinks
    @duckywinks 7 лет назад +2

    As someone writing the script to my own no-budget film, this was really helpful.

  • @robair9911
    @robair9911 10 лет назад +2

    he's a big guy, for you. Bravo Nolan. With that out of the way Following is probably one of my top twenty favorite movies

  • @johnta17
    @johnta17 8 лет назад +4

    This is excellent and insightful. Thank you.

  • @sujayghose3662
    @sujayghose3662 7 месяцев назад

    Very informative..outlays the whole journey..that we all face..

  • @grahamoliver1470
    @grahamoliver1470 3 года назад +1

    I just find it funny that this interview is almost half the movie's length

  • @AndrewPRoberts
    @AndrewPRoberts 9 лет назад +3

    1:31 Messin with our minds since 1997

  • @giovannablasi5561
    @giovannablasi5561 10 лет назад

    He's such a creative and qualified director, personally one of my favourite. And damn, his voice, I'd listen to him for hours.

  • @wolfstar675
    @wolfstar675 10 лет назад +9

    Not my favorite director but he is a filmmaker that really makes you think that Cinema is still as powerful as ever there are other as well but the list is long PTA, Tarantino, Scorsese, Xavier Dolan, Michael Haneke, Linklater, Jonathan Glazer, Steve McQueen i could go on with others.

  • @popit198
    @popit198 10 лет назад

    i have seen plenty of movies, different directors, Kubrick, Nolan, Spielberg, Ridley Scott, Lucas, Copolla, Tarantino, Coen, Scorsese but i have to say that this is the best film that i have ever seen. its a piece of art.

  • @TheAFGFilms
    @TheAFGFilms 4 года назад +1

    Just saw following today! I really liked it! Christopher definitely develops his narrative and technical skills on this movie and it's truly inspiring for those who want to make a microbudget feature.

  • @KS-ce2du
    @KS-ce2du 6 лет назад +2

    3:25 first time to see him smile

  • @souljacem
    @souljacem 4 года назад

    He‘s such a nice man. Very humble and passionate about the artform.

  • @CSGDuncan11
    @CSGDuncan11 10 лет назад +1

    That was a really interesting interview, thank you!

  • @Filix125
    @Filix125 8 лет назад +4

    Respect to you sir!

  • @mahound9
    @mahound9 8 лет назад

    I love "Following" I found a copy on VHS in a secondhand store, years ago. It's up there with Mike Leigh's "Naked" as simple, brutal, elegant films. It comes together in pieces, a foreshadowing of "Memento" years later.

  • @ShinbrigTV
    @ShinbrigTV 10 лет назад +37

    Love every single movie he puts out!!! YES, even "The Dark Knight Rises", man why do people have to hate on that movie soo much. Saying it's a horrible film when they haven't even seen other comic book movies such as "Daredevil", "Catwoman", or must I say it "Steel".

    • @TheEinstienian
      @TheEinstienian 10 лет назад +28

      The people that are saying "The Dark Knight Rises sucks" are from the internet. They're the minority when it comes outside the internet.

    • @notablytheillest
      @notablytheillest 10 лет назад +1

      LOL. wasn’t Shaq in Steel?? that shiz was hilarious. but ya i agree with your point.

    • @MadPropzBaller
      @MadPropzBaller 10 лет назад +5

      TDKR was the best, i watched it 12 times just because of Bane, so epic :P

    • @Xenophlanes
      @Xenophlanes 10 лет назад +5

      MadPropzBaller Oh man, i loved all the Batmans! Nolan smashed, it just gave you this feel for the characters! it was perfect!

    • @TKoMEaP
      @TKoMEaP 10 лет назад +2

      It was my least favorite from the trilogy, but it was still a great film. I guess after Inception and The Dark Night I was expecting the world.
      I blame myself for over hyping it, I don't think anything could have met my expectations. But still, a great film.

  • @wikileaks8252
    @wikileaks8252 Год назад +2

    Nolan:Watching anime is great help

  • @louiso.4325
    @louiso.4325 8 лет назад +1

    Almost all of my favorite directors have made amazing directorial debuts (Bottle Rocket, Shaun of the Dead, Take the Money and Run, Monty Python and the Holy Grail) except Kubrick strangely enough

    • @louiso.4325
      @louiso.4325 8 лет назад

      +Connor Devore Shaun of the dead yah I was wrong, but what's up tiger lily was just woody overdubbing voices so I don't really count it as his first

  • @Unmoved12345
    @Unmoved12345 9 лет назад +7

    Highly articulate guy.

    • @kelman727
      @kelman727 5 лет назад +1

      Unmoved12345
      Yes, he’s English.

  • @MadPropzBaller
    @MadPropzBaller 10 лет назад +404

    Might just be the greatest director of all time.

    • @quayquayKris
      @quayquayKris 10 лет назад +22

      nah, martin scorsese is

    • @Teletubees1
      @Teletubees1 10 лет назад +50

      quay quayy I admire Martin Scorsese's work but he's much older than Nolan. Chris is still on the eve of his greatest projects. Give him a few decades and I'm sure he'll make some amazing movies worthy of comparison to Scorsese's.

    • @NightcoreTKFF
      @NightcoreTKFF 10 лет назад +14

      *cough* Tarantino *cough* Reservoir Dogs *cough* Pulp Fiction *cough*

    • @MadPropzBaller
      @MadPropzBaller 10 лет назад +13

      ***** Django Unchained was better than both of the movies you mentioned.

    • @NightcoreTKFF
      @NightcoreTKFF 10 лет назад +4

      MadPropzBaller Depends. Pulp Fiction and Reservoir Dogs is crime drama, while Django Unchained is Western. Anyways all his movies are amazing.Inglorious Basterds and bot Kill Bill movies are worth mentioning too.

  • @CharlieKnottFilms
    @CharlieKnottFilms 7 лет назад

    In cinematography, looking into the viewfinder, adjusting the diopter and such is exactly like drawing in the way a cinematographer sees light and 3D space, formalizes it and makes a stylistic decision on composition and value (exposure).

  • @willwalters8391
    @willwalters8391 5 лет назад

    this is one of the most valuable videos I have ever watched.

  • @invisibleother7886
    @invisibleother7886 10 лет назад +6

    GIVE ME INTERSTELLAR ALL-FREAKEDUP-READY!

  • @rabindrasasmal7445
    @rabindrasasmal7445 7 лет назад

    thank you VICE for this beautiful learning experience

  • @munkyrabbit
    @munkyrabbit 10 лет назад +1

    This was awesome. Please do more stuff like this.

  • @raizanong
    @raizanong 3 года назад

    Look at Nolan man, so inspirational.

  • @qs2668
    @qs2668 4 года назад +1

    The credits for this video were probably longer than the credits for Following

  • @madphantom92
    @madphantom92 10 лет назад

    Thank you vice for this interview.

  • @chaeyoungvideos5742
    @chaeyoungvideos5742 5 лет назад +1

    Bless us all in our filmmaking journey!

  • @rufusgreenleaf2466
    @rufusgreenleaf2466 8 лет назад

    First line "I'm a self taught filmmaker, i nevet went to film school". Says it all basically, all these people trying to get into a film school to gain skills, being self taught is the best way. I've never been to film school, i just have a regular warehouse job and i use the money i have left to buy certain camera, lighting and audio equipment, and make short films in my spare time.

  • @MarkArandjus
    @MarkArandjus 9 лет назад +2

    Nolan makes really good films. He would make great films if the scripts had another pass before production began, because too often the plot becomes Swiss cheese once you start examining the finer details. But oh well you get what you want out of his films and his approach to special effects is one of the best today.

  • @glenjimen1234
    @glenjimen1234 7 лет назад

    Brilliant interview

  • @DownHavenEnt
    @DownHavenEnt 10 лет назад +5

    Let's have one of these for Michael Bay.
    Reporter: "So Mr. Bay, how did you get into making movies?"
    Michael Bay: "A** and dynamite."
    the end

  • @AndrewGayner
    @AndrewGayner 10 лет назад +1

    Excellent video!

  • @nicolaselhani
    @nicolaselhani 10 лет назад

    amazing interview

  • @JVKINGersgamertag
    @JVKINGersgamertag 10 лет назад

    Great video, great guy and great series - thank you Vice

  • @HiddenWen
    @HiddenWen 7 лет назад

    I will admit, some of his movies might be a bit over the top, but he always succeeds in bringing that magical feeling you should expect when watching a film.

  • @amritap4146
    @amritap4146 5 лет назад +1

    Why doesn't this video have more views?

  • @korakiangen9039
    @korakiangen9039 7 лет назад

    I'm undergone a cinematic therapy treatment for my cinematic --illness !!! through this session!!!

  • @MrFox1289
    @MrFox1289 10 лет назад +1

    Great more stuff like this!!

  • @justicewillprevail1106
    @justicewillprevail1106 7 лет назад

    He’s by far my favorite director of all times.

  • @izabelribeiro1665
    @izabelribeiro1665 Год назад

    excellent video!

  • @ernestocaro9802
    @ernestocaro9802 7 лет назад

    My favourite director of all time !!!

  • @zankfilms2898
    @zankfilms2898 Год назад

    Vice making a valuable and interesting video? Wow

  • @dylanthrillmour866
    @dylanthrillmour866 5 лет назад

    Nolan moderated a screening of The Hateful Eight a few years ago and interviewed Tarantino. The difference in both guys is huge but they’re both fantastic. Same hairline too.

  • @omarkayall
    @omarkayall 6 лет назад

    Great practical filmmaking advice from a master

  • @GREENLIGHTFILMMAKING
    @GREENLIGHTFILMMAKING 5 лет назад +1

    I love the criterion collection!

  • @truefilm1556
    @truefilm1556 8 лет назад

    Great and very insightful!
    O.K.: what I thought: C. Nolan used a 16mm wind up Bolex for a lot of outdoor location shots. On IMDB it just states: Arriflex 16 BL - fantastic camera to this day, seen it in action for TV news gathering back in the day. That model is already a bit large and heavy for some of the scenes, not to mention still very expensive to buy or rent in top working condition (back in the late 1990s it still was prohibitively expensive), even though it's a (professional) model from 1968.
    Great insight about editing, lens choice, camera movement and the general approach to (budget) film making. I'm very happy that Nolan always supported and continues to support real film, but with common sense - not shying away from editing on video after telecine transfer.
    Not that I think film is always "better" than modern digital cinema (or DSLR) for cinematic story telling. I just happen to prefer it, but I fully respect people who prefer digital.
    I simply think people should have a choice - film and digital video are still very different in look, feel and approach.
    Thanks for uploading! Always loved Nolan's work - after this great video I have it 100% confirmed that Nolan is a true master film maker who earned it by building his career from the ground up.

  • @tareklegrand7747
    @tareklegrand7747 Год назад

    For me Following is his Best film. everything was about Plot and characters

  • @Forestgravy90
    @Forestgravy90 7 лет назад

    I'd love it if Following was remade with a larger budget, it's a great little script