The Secret Science of Filmmaking | Joseph Housley | TEDxBedford
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- Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024
- What’s the connection between Frodo, Luke Skywalker and Harry Potter characters?
Filmmaking has always been categorised as an art - what if you were to be told it's not quite as artsy as you may think. Joseph unmasks the secret science behind filmmaking and challenges you to alter your perceptions of art.
Joseph Housley is a filmmaker and entrepreneur. Starting his business at only 23 years old, he now runs a team based out of Birmingham, England and works with internationally recognised organisations helping them to shape their brand and stand out with video content. Joseph’s RUclips channel helps new filmmakers learn the craft.
Connect with Joseph Housley on RUclips @JosephHousleyMedia , Instagram @joseph_housley , LinkedIn @Joseph Housley and Facebook @joe.housley.9
#videoproduction #cinematography #future
This talk was given at TEDxBedford with the theme ‘Behind The Mask’ using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community.
Credits:
Editors: Rio Penn-Grice & Julian Hundy
Production Crew: Julian Hundy, Nick Parker & the TEDxBedford team
About TEDx: In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized
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The content currency of today is video, and Joseph’s obsession is the pursuit of creating outstanding, compelling and emotive video content.
Six years ago, whilst studying for a Business and Politics degree he fell into a period or depression and uncertainty, as lot of people do through their twenties he became more and confused about what he wanted to do with his life. After being flat out broke and starting a podcast, Joseph quickly realised he loved the process of media production. Fast forward four years, three offices, eight staff and a dog later, he now leads a team that create impactful videos with internationally recognised brands
across the world. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at www.ted.com/tedx
Huge thank you to TedX Bedford for inviting me to speak! Very grateful for the experience and hope you enjoy the talk and learn something new 🎥
There is a science in film! A scientific process driven winning formula, I am learning every day! Thank you Jo for sharing.
Thank you for watching - really appreciate it and pleased to hear you learnt something new!
@@JosephHousley "Learnt"? What kind of illiterate are you?
Filmakers accept the fact that there is more to learn than they already know. They accept that there are always new ideas and new ways at looking at things. Get the networking habit. There are countless opportunities. 🥺🥺🥺🥺🥺🥺🥺🥺🥺
So true - you always have to be a student of the filmmaking craft!
Great talk on the science of film making. Thoroughly enjoyed this!
Thank You Kayleigh! 😀
Haha so true about Frodo, Harry Potter, Gandalf and all the rest of the heroes .. great talk Joseph!
Thanks so much !
Nailed it Joe. Thoroughly enjoyed your talk and I hope we see different story flows that are not mainstream or industry standard format.
Cheers Satish Goda 🙏🏻
Such an interesting perspective. Was so cool to learn about this "secret science" , and I hope it inspires people to create less formulaic films and start incorporating more creativity. Loved this!!!
Thank you so much Kiran! 🎥
Great talk well done Joseph!
Thank you Gina 🙏🏻
This revealed something about film making that I never knew...there's a science to it! Thanks and well done.
Thank you , I’m glad you enjoyed it! 😊
ტკ0
You sound really inspiring
Thank you Alina 🙏🏻
Joseph Campbell cobbled together a great blue print based on other peoples ideas and work - but everything said here by Joseph is baseline writers info, known and understood by most screenwriters from their fledgling days.
Thanks for your thoughts here, I appreciate the feedback. Perhaps my message wasn’t clear enough but I never claimed the hero’s journey was a new concept. This was one element of many sections of the talk used to solidify the message that films follow a more scientific approach, informed by 100 years of data, and as such this creates a film formula throughout not only the narratives structures but the cinematography and sound design. Ultimately, this poses the question - are modern filmmakers boxed in by this formulaic and scientific approach? And does this hinder their creativity?
@@JosephHousley to be honest, I thought it was a good talk - felt the bombastic title was more at fault than the film. A little clicknbaity. Have a good week, keep up the good work.
Huge "so what factor" here. This is not a new science. The heroic journey model he describes goes all the way back to the dawn of literature and storytelling itself and is one of the foundational pillars of Western literature. - It's been formally taught for thousands of years. Look at Homer's Odyssey and The Iliad. You learn this exact formula on the first day of every Western Lit. class. This is the whole point of Campbell's work. Campbell merely clarified, codified, and synthesized it. - Not a new science! - A basic, anthropological truism, as old as humankind: humans tell stories; these are the types of stores we tell. Always have, always will. Can it be beneficial to formally study and consciously apply this knowledge to various storytelling crafts? Yes, like I said, been doing that for thousands of years!
Thanks for your thoughts here, I appreciate the feedback. Perhaps my message wasn’t clear enough but I never claimed the hero’s journey was new science. This was one element of many sections of the talk used to solidify the message that films follow a more scientific approach, informed by 100 years of data, and as such this creates a film formula throughout not only the narratives structures but the cinematography and sound design. Ultimately, this poses the question are modern filmmakers boxed in by the formulaic and scientific approach? And, does this hinder their creativity?
So tedx don't even know how to sync Mike Audio with the clip
Great but sound?
Teaching film making with a fkd up Audio
Perfect
The SOUND quality of this video is really bad.
Ummm.... did we need a ted talk to explain this? I feel like most people, who've seen 7+ films can work this out... not trying to be mean. Just wondering if Ted talks have lost all meaning
They’ve definitely lost the clean sound.
Sound is poor. Pass sorry
Why they don't use the Mic audio