Since the camera is so good at capturing everything that plays across your face and body, you don't have to learn the precise control it takes to display an emotion that can be read from the third balcony and still look good to the people in the orchestra.
I don't want to act, but my God, would I love to do this training.
Or doesn't draw focus,
Absolutely. And, if you're working with a poopiehead actor who does this on purpose, hopefully your director will help with that.
I don't want to act, but my God, would I love to do this training.
Take a stage movement class.
This distinction between stage acting and movie acting is interesting. I remember when I was a kid -- or, I guess probably 14-15 -- I saw a talk show where, on a lark, some soap actor stood up and pulled a stranger out of the audience ad did an improv scene with this person. The cameras played along, and then he sat down and went through the footage with the host and explained everything he'd done as he did it. And as he was going along, saying, "I approached her right then to make it more intense, but also to make her back up because she was casting a shadow where she was standing," I realized that I did not have enough active brain cells at any given moment to do that.
I just can't fire that many cylinders at once, you know?
(Soap actors, for the record, don't tend to get retakes or retouching, but do get closeups, so they're sort of a weird hybrid of stage acting and movie acting.)
Soap actors, for the record, don't tend to get retakes or retouching, but do get closeups, so they're sort of a weird hybrid of stage acting and movie acting.
Which probably explains SMG's described gift for finding the light.
This is an interestong discussion. For me, I can usually feel the difference between A and B, but it's sometimes hard for me to get the in-between stuff Betsy was talking about. And there are some things that are just hard for me, full stop -- in yoga, I have a terrible time telling if my back is arched enough.
Matt Damon looked like a truly pathetic overactor in Mystic Pizza, but really it was just the first time he was in a movie, and he didn't get it yet.
I realized that I did not have enough active brain cells at any given moment to do that.
Yip.
That's what I am taking out of watching Farscape, is that you need to not only say the words with emotion, you need to move in such a way that the bits of plastic around you are imbued with emotion. That's what fascinates me -- not the playing pretend (which I love), but the amount of intellectual work that has to power the playing pretend in order for it to work.
Like, when I sit down and write, I'm not (mostly) thinking about technique, because there are years of thinking about technique behind me. But the technique is there, and if I stop and think about it, I know why I'm doing what I'm doing.
Which probably explains SMG's described gift for finding the light.
t techie
Hell, I know a lot of stage actors who still can't find their goddamned light, even when it's a spot. It's beyond me. You're in the light, everything is brighter. You're out of the light, everything is dark.
t /techie
You're in the light, everything is brighter. You're out of the light, everything is dark.
They're not looking at stuff? Everything seems bright enough when they're not in the light, and they only process changes, NSM absolutes (that's me and music, for instance)?