• 2 days ago
Sit down all you like. Just don't chug a water bottle.

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00:00Making even the worst movie is nothing short of an absolute slug, because no matter how bad or
00:05good a script might be, the sheer feat of assembling a cast and crew to shoot a film
00:10is a tireless exercise in dogged perseverance. And due to the high-stress nature of filmmaking,
00:16it's not at all surprising that most successful directors have at least a couple of concrete
00:20rules for how their sets are operated. While these rules can be as simple and reasonable as the crew
00:25turning off their phones while shooting is taking place, sometimes directors insist upon slightly
00:30more peculiar, and yes, sometimes even weird, regulations. So with that in mind, I'm Josh
00:36from WhatCulture.com and these are 10 Bizarre Filmmaker Rules You Never Knew.
00:4110. Steven Spielberg isn't present when the final scene is being shot
00:45Though you'd certainly expect the director of Steven Spielberg's repute to be an entirely
00:50hands-on filmmaker, that's apparently not quite the case, albeit for an amusing reason.
00:55Now it's no secret that the shoot for his iconic blockbuster Jaws was a near disaster,
01:00filled with malfunctioning props, over long shooting days, and an increasingly seasick
01:05and frustrated crew. Tensions were significant enough that Spielberg actually decided to not
01:10be present when the film's climactic scene where the shark is finally blown up was being shot.
01:16In fact, the director believed that the crew, who were bordering on mutinous by this point,
01:20were planning to throw him into the water when the scene was completed,
01:24and so he decided instead to take leave early. In the 45 years since, it's reportedly been a
01:29tradition for Spielberg to be absent when the final scene for any of his movies were being shot,
01:34presumably being left instead in the capable hands of his first assistant director. Still
01:39considering that Spielberg's reputation as a professional filmmaker quickly improved post-Jaws,
01:44he's probably safe from the wrath of his crew nowadays.
01:48Martin Scorsese Bans Wristwatches To Heighten Immersion
01:52You don't get to be a director of Martin Scorsese's impeccable calibre without having a few
01:57hard and fast rules about how your set is run. Though by most accounts Scorsese's sets are
02:01relatively harmonious places to be, he does nevertheless insist on one fascinating rule.
02:07Don't bring your wristwatch to set. Basically, Scorsese wants to cultivate his sets as a
02:12mobile of sorts, separated from the time and space of real life, whereby he can get the best
02:18out of his cast and crew. The idea is that people who aren't able to check their watches whenever
02:23they want, are more likely to give themselves over to the vision Scorsese is trying to create.
02:28Still, you'll definitely want to wear a watch while sitting through The Irishman, wouldn't you?
02:33Stanley Kubrick Edited His Movies With An Army Of Cats
02:36In addition to being one of the greatest filmmakers of all time, Stanley Kubrick was
02:40unquestionably one of the most eccentric. An infamous perfectionist, he'd routinely put
02:45actors through dozens of takes, and occasionally more than 100, to basically beat the artifice
02:51out of them. He also insisted on shooting all of his movies in England to be free from Hollywood
02:55meddling, and reportedly never even watched his own movies once they were completed. But perhaps
03:01the strangest of the director's professional rituals involved allowing his many cats into
03:06the editing room to lay around while he cut his movies. A noted feline lover, Kubrick at one point
03:12owned as many as 16 cats, and in order to compensate for the time spent away from them
03:17while shooting, he'd routinely let them into the editing room, allowing him to enjoy quality time
03:22with his pets while also getting work done. And you know what? This should be standard across the
03:27board. Everyone should be allowed to bring their cats into the workplace.
03:317. Alfred Hitchcock's Cameos Were Superstition
03:35Though it's no secret at all that Alfred Hitchcock made sneaky cameo appearances in
03:40most of his movies, it was ultimately far more than a playful directorial signature
03:44for attentive viewers to look out for. Hitchcock himself stated that his cameos were initially
03:50strictly utilitarian in order to ensure the screen was filled up during a given scene.
03:54But after audiences began to catch on, it became something of a compulsive
03:58superstition for the director. He said in a period interview quote,
04:02Later on it became a superstition and eventually a gag. By now it's a rather troublesome gag,
04:07and I'm very careful to show up in the first five minutes or so as to let the people look
04:11at the rest of the movie with no further distraction. End quote. While he never
04:15outright declared his cameos to be good luck charms, the fact that he included them in 40
04:20of his 52 produced movies, no matter how familiar audiences became with them,
04:25near enough confirms that he felt compelled to make a cameo, no matter what.
04:30Quentin Tarantino Insisted The Cast Say Hello To Editor Sally Menke At The End Of Takes
04:36While you might get the impression that a Quentin Tarantino set must be a high-stress environment
04:40at the best of times, the filmmaker nevertheless devised a sweet yet peculiar ritual for all of
04:45his productions until the release of 2012's Django Unchained. Tarantino would encourage
04:50his cast to say hello to his longtime editor Sally Menke at the end of a take,
04:54ensuring that some cute surprises were waiting for her when she was later shaping the movie
04:59in the editing suite. Sadly, this all came to an end with Menke's untimely passing in 2010,
05:04yet while cutting Django Unchained with his new editing collaborator Fred Raskin,
05:08Tarantino reportedly put up a sign reading WWSD, or What Would Sally Do?
05:15Charlie Chaplin Always Had A Violin On Set
05:17It's noted that Charlie Chaplin played a bunch of instruments, but he loved the violin in
05:22particular, even featuring himself playing it in several of his films such as 1916's The Vagabond
05:28and 1952's Limelight, while also keeping one on set to establish the mood before shooting.
05:35Chaplin also famously played the violin for young Jackie Coogan on the set of his 1921
05:40directorial debut The Kid, and apparently that wasn't a one-off. In the decades before film
05:45sets had massive stereo speaker systems which could pump sound throughout a set to get the
05:50cast in the zone, this was seen as a more personal touch.
05:54Terrence Malick Has A Contractual Stipulation That He Can't Be Photographed
05:59Terrence Malick is one of the most enigmatic filmmakers in the history of Hollywood.
06:04A famously reclusive director who not only avoids press interviews and awards shows,
06:09but spent an entire 20 years away from the industry between 1978's Days of Heaven and
06:141998's The Thin Red Line. There are also curiously few images of Malick available online,
06:20a result of him literally having it written into his directing contracts that on-set
06:25photos of him cannot be published anywhere. Only in recent years with the advent of smartphones
06:30have set spies managed to snap pictures of Malick at work, and it wasn't until 2017 that a recording
06:35of the director's voice even made its way online, save for a quick vocal cameo he made in his
06:40directorial debut Badlands. It's this fiercely protective approach to his own privacy which
06:46has helped Malick cultivate such a fascinating aura of mystery over the last 5 decades.
06:52Christopher Nolan Bans Phones, Water Bottles, and Smoking
06:56Quite the stink has been made about Christopher Nolan's on-set rules in recent times.
07:00After Anne Hathaway claimed he didn't allow chairs on his sets, the reasoning being quote
07:05If you have chairs, people will sit, and if they're sitting, they're not working.
07:09End quote. This understandably caused quite the storm online, before one of Nolan's
07:14spokespersons confirmed that his sets did indeed have chairs for the cast and crew,
07:18but that Nolan himself opted not to use one. The PR statement did however confirm two more things,
07:24which are indeed banned from his sets. Quote
07:27For the record, the only things banned from Nolan's sets are cell phones,
07:30not always successfully, and smoking, very successfully. End quote.
07:35According to his Dunkirk stars Mark Rylance and Barry Keoghan as well,
07:38Nolan also bans the use of water bottles. Keoghan said quote
07:48Number 2. Sergio Leone Had The Musical Score Recorded Before Shooting
07:52One of the greatest filmmaker-composer relationships in history is unquestionably
07:56that of Sergio Leone and his recently departed collaborator Ennio Morricone.
08:01The two paired together for all of the director's movies from A Fistful Of Dollars onward,
08:05and developed a unique working relationship which operated entirely counter to the way
08:10most movies are shot and scored. See, typically film scores are created only after shooting has
08:15been completed, when the composer can see a rough cut of the film and tailor their music to the
08:19images they're seeing. But this pair did things quite differently. With the director typically
08:24having Morricone complete the score before he'd even shot a foot of film, and sometimes even
08:30before he'd actually written the script. This allowed the filmmaker to play Morricone's score
08:34during shooting and set an appropriate mood for the cast. And this certainly paid off dividends
08:39on The Good, The Bad and The Ugly in particular, with the film's iconic Mexican standoff being
08:43perfectly timed and edited to the existing musical piece, The Trio.
08:47Number 1. Steven Soderbergh Doesn't Allow Open Toed Shoes On Set
08:52Several years ago now, some of the world's most acclaimed A-list filmmakers answered an Empire
08:57Magazine survey about their directorial habits. And upon being asked about their specific on-set
09:03rules, Steven Soderbergh piped up with a surprising, if curt answer. Without elaborating, he simply
09:09quipped, no open-toed shoes. While it's easy enough to appreciate the health and safety aspect
09:15of not allowing crew members handling heavy equipment to wear open-toed shoes, the bluntness
09:20of his answer suggests his order extends to every single person on set from catering through
09:25to the cast themselves. Again though, he provided no further explanation beyond that so...
09:30Who knows what he really meant. Or why.
09:32So that's our list. I want to know what you guys think down in the comments below. Do you know of
09:36any other strange filmmaker rules that they employ on set? And did you know any of these?
09:41Let me know and while you're down there if you could please give us a like, share, subscribe
09:45and head over to whatculture.com for more lists and news like this every single day.
09:48Even if you don't though, I've been Josh, thanks so much for watching and I'll see you soon.

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