Aaron Sorkin Got Advice from David Fincher and other Directors

Migdalia Melendez
December 21, 2017
Screen Rant

Aaron Sorkin is lauded as one of the best screenwriters of our time whose films have generated more than $350 million dollar at the box office. A seasoned writer of twenty five years penning classics such as The West Wing, and A Few Good Men, it comes as no surprise that Sorkin would get the urge to direct. At one point he was attached to direct The Social Network until David Fincher came along, and Sorkin ended up taking home as Oscar for Best Adapted Screenplay. Seven years later he was sent Molly Bloom’s autobiography, Molly’s Game, and became fascinated with the former high stakes poker queen after meeting with her.

The film adaptation chronicles Molly Bloom’s journey from Olympic skier to running a high stakes poker game in both Los Angeles, and New York. Apparently, A-List celebrities such as Leonardo DiCaprio, Ben Affleck, and Tobey Maguire were frequent players. However, things get ugly fast as soon as the Russian mob gets involved.

Producers Mark Gordon and Amy Pascal ran down a list of possible directors with Sorkin, but offered him another chance to take the director’s chair. He took it. With a tight turnaround from casting to wrapping, Aaron Sorkin’s feature film debuts on Christmas Day. Screen Rant sat down with the first time director and touched base on which director he has learned from the most, and about his quickfire dialogue.

Read the interview transcript

 

Late Night with Seth Meyers (YouTube)
December 19, 2017

DP/30: The Oral History Of Hollywood (YouTube)
December 21, 2017

A Q&A with producer Peter Mavromates and colourist Eric Weidt

FilmLight

The Netflix original series Mindhunter, from director David Fincher, has been delivered in 4K and high dynamic range (HDR).

Co-produced by Peter Mavromates and graded by colorist Eric Weidt, it is set in the late 1970s, and sees two FBI agents expand criminal science by delving into the psychology of murder. Grading took place on the Baselight X color grading system from FilmLight, alongside editorial and VFX, in Fincher’s Hollywood finishing facility.

In this exclusive interview, Peter Mavromates and Eric Weidt tell us more about how they created the desired look for the series, their collaboration with the director, editorial and VFX, and much more…

Read the full interview

studioADI: ALIEN 3. Dressing the Whippet

studioADI
Published on 6 Dec 2017
YouTube

One unused attempt at a running chestburster in Alien 3 included this adorable whippit. It didn’t quite work on camera the way that we hoped, though and the effect was scraped.

Be sure to check out some of new Fox approved Alien art pieces, available December 1st.

2017 ADG Awards Presentations. Mindhunter, Steve Arnold

Art Directors Guild

2017 ADG Awards Presentations

Category I: One Hour Period or Fantasy Single-Camera Series

Mindhunter

S1:E1 Episode 1
S1:E4 Episode 4
S1:E9 Episode 9

2013 Steve Arnold
Steve Arnold
Production Designer
steve-arnold.com

Design Presentation (PDF):

How Mindhunter Gets Under Your Skin

 

Overanalyze
Published on 15 Nov 2017
YouTube

A video essay analysing what makes Mindhunter so creepy.

Mindhunter is a Netflix original crime drama series executive produced by David Fincher set in the late 1970s in which two FBI agents expand criminal science by delving into the psychology of murder and getting uneasily close to all-too-real monsters.

Features portrayals of real-life serial killers such as Ed Kemper, Richard Speck, Monte Ralph Rissel and Jerry Brudos.

MINDHUNTER Soundtrack CD out on December 15

Jason Hill
Instagram

amazon-logo_greyMindhunter (A Netflix Original Series Soundtrack)

And at the top digital music platforms.

MINDHUNTER: Inside the mind of composer, David Fincher collaborator Jason Hill (part 1)

Kyle Kohner
November 9, 2017
RIFF Magazine

MINDHUNTER: Composer Jason Hill, of Louis XIV, never complacent (part 2)

Kyle Kohner
November 15, 2017
RIFF Magazine

How Stephen Shore’s Photographs Inspired Netflix’s Mindhunter

Alexxa Gotthardt
November 23, 2017
Artsy

In the first scene of the Netflix crime show Mindhunter, the camera trails a car through the run-down streets of small-town Braddock, Pennsylvania. We don’t know that it’s 1977, or that someone will be offed in the next five minutes—but the setting provides clues. It’s a rainy night lit only by moody street lamps and the beams of an AMC Matador police car. The nearby buildings ooze seediness.

The scene is lonely, unglamorous, and wildly intriguing. It’s also resolutely American—and whisks viewers swiftly back to the 1970s.

It’s perhaps unsurprising, then, that the show’s creators were inspired by the pioneering U.S. photographers of that decade—namely, the great Stephen Shore, whose career spent capturing backroads, motel rooms, and lunch counters across America is currently being celebrated in a retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art. “Since Mindhunter is a period piece, photography from the era was hugely helpful to all of us,” the show’s cinematographer, Erik Messerschmidt, tells me from Los Angeles.

Read the full article

How David Fincher Uses Pop Music

The Discarded Image (Julian Palmer)
Published on 14 Nov 2017
YouTube

In this video essay I breakdown how David Fincher uses popular music in films like Fight Club, The Social Network and the new Netflix series Mindhunter.