40 Moving Images: Making Movies, Understanding Media
Nanette Burstein
Close-Up
Q
In what ways did you first become involved in making movies?
A
I went to NYU fi lm school and started making short fi ction fi lms and
during that time I started my junior year interning in the edit room for
a documentary series. I got hired as an assistant editor, and then they
ran out of funding and I off ered to edit the last movie in the series for
very little money, which they let me do. So I was pretty young, I was
21 when I had my start at a professional documentary, and it was an
interesting experience because the directors weren’t involved in the
editing room, they were just hired to go out and shoot the fi lm and
then it was left to the editor to fi gure out the story line, so there was a
lot of freedom which made me really excited about documentary.
Q
What were your next steps?
A
Th rough having made my own short fi ction fi lms I had to do a lot
of jobs myself. It’s very hands on. And then following that up with
editing non-fi ction fi lms, when I went to make my fi rst feature-length
documentary, I had both of those experiences in fi ction and non-fi ction
and I decided to meld the two and shoot a non-fi ction fi lm, to fi lm real
people but have in mind a story that has a narrative and can be shown
in a three-act structure and not be a meandering story. Something that
would appeal to me thematically would be compelling to me as well,
and I could develop a style that is appropriate for that subject. At the
time of this project, that warranted being very gritty because I didn’t
have any money, so it had to be gritty. So all of these experiences led
up to shooting my fi rst fi lm.
Q
How have you used motion picture form to develop storytelling?
A
For me, the style is always dictated by the subject matter. If I have
a subject matter that I’m interested in telling, I try to fi nd the most
Behind the Scenes with Director
Director Nanette
Burstein on the set of
American Teen with
cinematographer
Wolfgang Held. Her
other directing credits
include The Kid Stays in
the Picture and Going
the Distance, and she has
produced such projects
as the television series
Film School. (Courtesy of
Nanette Burstein)
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