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489 results for “youth”
International Film Career Workshop -- Beyond Hollywood
When America wouldn't cast me fairly, our went to Europe and became a star in Berlin, London, and Paris. I teach you to think globally -- how to navigate international film industries, work in multiple languages, and build a career that doesn't depend on one country's approval. Marlene and I became friends because we both refused to be limited.
Zero-Budget Filmmaking Workshop -- Pather Panchali Method
I made the most acclaimed debut film in Indian history with no money, no studio, and no experience. I teach you to work with what you have: natural light, real locations, non-professional actors, and a story worth telling. We plan a short film using only resources within walking distance. Tip: Limitations are not obstacles. They are your style.
Film Music Composition Workshop -- Scoring Your Own Film
I composed the music for my later films because nobody else could hear what I heard. Indian classical ragas, Western orchestration, and folk melodies -- all serving the image. We study the sitar-and-flute scoring of the Apu Trilogy and learn to write music that enhances without overpowering. Tip: The best film music makes you forget it's there.
Graphic Design & Film Poster Workshop
I designed every poster, title card, and publication for my films. Typography is architecture. Layout is storytelling. We design a film poster from scratch -- concept, typography, illustration, and final composition. Bring a film idea or I'll give you one. Tip: A poster is a one-second film. It must convey mood, genre, and intrigue in a single glance.
Surrealist Filmmaking Workshop -- Dreams as Cinema
Logic is for accountants. Cinema is for dreamers. I teach you to build a film from images, feelings, and memories instead of plot outlines. We start with your strangest dream and work backward to a script. Tip: The image comes first. Then the meaning. Never the other way around. If you start with a message, you'll make a lecture, not a film.
Dream Journal Workshop -- Sketching the Unconscious
I drew my dreams every morning for forty years. Thousands of sketches that became La Dolce Vita, 8 1/2, Amarcord, Juliet of the Spirits. I teach you to keep a visual dream journal -- not writing, DRAWING. Your pen remembers what your brain forgets. Bring colored pencils and a blank notebook.
Sketchbook & Colored Pencil Set (Fellini's Dream Kit)
Large-format sketchbook (A3) and 72 professional colored pencils -- the same tools I used for my dream journals. The sketchbook has thick paper that handles ink and pencil. Keep it by your bed. Draw before coffee. The dreams are freshest in the first five minutes.
Sophisticated Comedy Workshop -- Charm as a Weapon
Screwball comedy, romantic comedy, light thriller -- I did them all with one tool: precision disguised as ease. We work on timing, physical comedy, the double-take, and the art of making the audience fall in love with you. Tip: Be faster than the audience expects and slower than they need. That gap is where the laugh lives.
Self-Reinvention Workshop -- Becoming Who You Choose to Be
Archie Leach became Cary Grant. A poor boy from Bristol became the most suave man in Hollywood. I teach you that persona is a craft -- voice, posture, wardrobe, and the stories you tell about yourself. We're not faking it. We're CHOOSING who to become. Tip: Dress for the role you want, walk like you already have it, speak like it's already yours.
Vintage Suit Collection (1940s-1960s Savile Row Replicas)
Four suits: charcoal flannel (North by Northwest), light gray (To Catch a Thief), midnight navy (Charade), and cream linen (An Affair to Remember). All tailored in the Savile Row style I favored -- natural shoulders, single-vent, drape cut. Tip: A suit should look like you were born in it. If it looks new, it doesn't fit yet.
Voice & Accent Transformation Coaching
My accent is mid-Atlantic -- a blend of Bristol working class and American sophistication that exists nowhere in nature. I invented it. I teach you to craft your own vocal persona: pitch, pace, resonance, and diction. Your voice is your calling card. Make it memorable. Tip: Record yourself and listen. Then record yourself pretending to be the person you want to be. The gap between them is your work.
Gladiator Combat Training -- Arena Fundamentals
One-on-one combat training with wooden practice weapons. Gladius technique, shield work, footwork, reading your opponent. Tip: Never attack first. Let them commit, then make them pay for it. We train until your body remembers what your mind forgets under pressure.
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