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By Joan Gibson
I love the idea of organizations like the Film
Society that are committed to cultural literacy, says filmmaker
David Winton. Groups like the Film Society are key because
they perform the function of critical filtering, he added,
identifying films you wouldnt ordinarily see.
So it was not surprising that when he moved his office
and editing suites to the San Francisco Film Centre, he stopped
in. Like a good neighbor, says membership manager Nicola
Rinne, David just came over one day, introduced himself and
said he wanted to get involved. He signed up for a dual membership
at the Benefactor level.
Davids production company, Winton/duPont Films,
specializes in television documentaries and industrials that focus
on business, the marketplace and work. The industrials constitute
the bulk of their productions and many of their clients are Fortune
100 companies such as Dow Jones, Sony and Morgan Stanley Dean Witter.
These kinds of projects are focused on sales, marketing and recruiting
products. David enjoys the work that the industrials provide; however
it is the work they do on TV documentaries that he is most excited
about.
His latest film, The Crash, which was shown
October 28 on the History Channel, documents the stock market crash
of 1929. The Crash was edited right here at the Film Centre.
Another recent project, Code Rush, recently
shown on PBS, is a fascinating look at a team of code writers at
Netscape who raced with time in 1998 to reconstruct the companys
Internet browser and turned the industry upside-down by making its
source code freely available. Next, hes hoping to do a film
on the 1980s financial boom, examining the impact and fallout generated
from that time.
Films about the marketplace and business are
a great milieu for storytelling, says David. Work has
a huge psychological impact on our lives. For many people its
not just a way to make a living, it has become their main form of
human fulfillment. This creates all kinds of paradoxes and
human dramas in the workplace as jobs and industries change at a
rapid rate. Stories about the workplace also lend themselves to
the cinema verité style of filmmaking. One of the cool aspects
of Code Rush, he says, was the refreshing spontaneity of
being able to watch the people in the film respond to events as
they were happening.
David became friends with Frank duPont in high school
in the 1970s during what he calls the heyday of American filmmaking,
and they shared an enthusiastic interest in film. They met up again
after college and began their business in New York in 1988. Neither
of them studied filmmaking in school; indeed David was a history
major at Harvard. He doesnt feel that film school is necessary
in order to tell a good story as a filmmaker. Cinema is the
ultimate form of manipulation. Its all about the perspective
and viewpoint of the filmmakers taste and intelligence.
He cites Stanley Kubrick as a great director who has
had an impact on his work. Lars von Trier is enthusiastically mentioned
as well. In addition to Kubrick and von Trier, other directors who
have influenced him include David Lean, Howard Hawks, John Ford
and Ingmar Bergman. In college you had to love Bergman.
I asked him what he looks for as a moviegoer, and
what are some of his favorites. As expected, he casts the eye of
a director on the question. Favorite films include 2001 A Space
Odyssey, Lawrence of Arabia, Dreamlife of Angels,
Smoke Signals, von Triers Dogma films like Idioterne
and Meet the Parents. He considers The Celebration
to be a defining film, one that flipped a switch for people,
providing an immediacy that is lacking in the Hollywood experience.
David enjoys going to the movies with his family because
its fun to hear what everyone has to say about their experience.
I look for a fresh voice, an overarching intelligence, I like
to see the architecture of the mind at work, to see that the conventions
of the story
(beginning, middle, end) are obeyed. He enjoys dissecting
the casting, the writing, the performances, the cinematography and
the sociopolitical aspects of the script. In short, he is looking
for the best way to tell a story, which is essentially what all
good filmmaking is about.
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