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All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 Mastering the Art of The Dolly Zoom

    • May 11, 2013

    Introduction to the Dolly Zoom, including some of the concepts and principles that govern the visual effect as well as some practical tips on how to achieve the effect yourself. Film examples used in this course are "Vertigo", "Jaws" and "Goodfellas"

  • S01E02 The Basics of Lighting for Film Noir

    • May 11, 2013

    Learn the basics of three point lighting and some of the tools for shooting Film Noir so you can start analyses the look of films shot in this unique style.

  • S01E03 The History and Science of Color Temperature

    • May 11, 2013

    Survey the effect of color temperature and its psychological effects from the incessant heat of Spike Lee's "Do the Right Thing" to the icy chill of the Coen Brothers' "Fargo". Then we look at the science of color temperature from it's beginnings with Max Planck to how color temperature is measured with new alternative sources of lighting before looking at some practical and artistic uses of white balance.

  • S01E04 Origins of Film Noir

    • May 11, 2013

    Jump into the world of Film Noir and look at how the technology and economic factors gave birth to a genre that still deeply influences the way filmmakers work today. Take a look at 4 Film Noirs spanning the beginning and end of the classic film noir era: "The Stranger on the Third Floor", "Double Indemnity", "The Big Combo" and "Touch of Evil".

  • S01E05 The Journey to Modern Non-Linear Editing (Part 1)

    • May 20, 2013

    Trace the history of modern day film editing - starting with electronic engineers developing solutions for capturing and editing television through to the first computerized editing systems.

  • S01E06 The Journey to Non-Linear Editing (Part 2)

    • May 20, 2013

    We pick up the story from the electronic engineers of television in part 1, to computer scientists, mathematicians and programmers as we explore the advancements made to editing from the Digital Revolution.

  • S01E07 The Origins and Formatting of Modern Screenplays

    • June 3, 2013

    Screenwriting isn't easy. Great story telling requires craft and insight - but it all starts with getting the proper formatting. Trace the roots of how the screenplay evolved from the earliest moving pictures, through the golden age of Hollywood and into the post-studio era.

  • S01E08 The Changing Shape of Cinema: The History of Aspect Ratio

    • June 23, 2013

    John Hess traces the evolution of the screen shape from the silent film days through the widescreen explosion of the 50s, to the aspect ratio of modern digital cameras.

  • S01E09 Composition Techniques for Widescreen Aspect Ratios

    • June 23, 2013

    Aspect Ratio is one of many choices you make when deciding how to shoot your film. John Hess explains some basic tips on how to visualize your desired ratio and some helpful composition techniques.

  • S01E10 5 Elements of Great Chromakey

    • July 16, 2013

    Explore the 5 crucial elements of capturing a great chromakey for your production.

  • S01E11 Hollywoods History of Faking It | The Evolution of Greenscreen Compositing

    • July 16, 2013

    Go inside the history of the travelling mattes (now called chromakey) and learn the history of visual trickery used by filmmakers from the earliest filmmakers through to the modern day.

  • S01E12 How To Create Bizarre Slit Scan Video using After Effects

    • August 4, 2013

    See how After Effects can be used to displace time to create bizarre and other-worldly slit scan effects.

  • S01E13 The History and Science of the Slit Scan Effect used in Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey

    • August 4, 2013

    Explore the mysterious and forgotten technique of Slit Scan for special effects and how Douglas Trumbull applied the photographic technique to Stanley Kubrick's masterpiece, "2001: A Space Odyssey". Then we'll do our best to recreate the effect using LEGOs

  • S01E14 The History and Science of Color Film: From Isaac Newton to the Coen Brothers

    • August 29, 2013

    Color is a subtle tool that can transport us from our ordinary lives to extraordinary worlds of cinema. Peel back the layers of history and look at how color was first understood and implemented in the world of film.

  • S01E15 Introduction to Color in Digital Filmmaking

    • September 4, 2013

    Color is a natural everyday experience - but how do you use color to advance your film? We'll start by looking at how filmmakers in the late 90s began exploring creative uses of color. Then we'll take a quick overview of how your digital camera captures color and some basic color theory. We'll finish by designing, shooting and grading a Lolita inspired shot for maximum color impact.

  • S01E16 The Evolution of Home Theater - Big Tech of the Small Screen

    • September 22, 2013

    See how the changes in technology have changed our own social attitudes towards how to watch movies.

  • S01E17 The Psychology of Scary Movies

    • October 23, 2013

    Let's go deep in the human mind and dissect our fascination with fright - exploring 8 theories on way we are attracted to the dark.

  • S01E18 The Science & History of Popcorn - The Snack that Saved the Movies

    • November 17, 2013

    For some, Popcorn and the Movies just go together. But it hasn't always been that way. We look at the science and mechanics that make popcorn pop and trace the history of this ancient snack that ultimately rescued the film industry.

  • S01E19 The History of Hollywood Censorship and the Ratings System

    • November 27, 2013

    Take a look at the history of censorship of Hollywood from pressures from progressive groups in films infancy, through the scandal rocked silent film era, the threat of boycotts in the Great Depression and turn from censorship to classification and ratings in the 1960s.

  • S01E20 The History of Cutting - The Birth of Cinema and Continuity Editing

    • January 20, 2014

    Cinema began as a novelty - projecting dancing shadows on a screen of simple every day scenes. But through the contributions of talented artists, a new cinematic language of editing emerged. Trace the development of editing from The Lumiere Brothers through Georges Méliès, Edwin S. Porter, and D.W Griffith.

  • S01E21 The History of Cutting - The Soviet Theory of Montage

    • February 12, 2014

    Building on the works of D.W. Griffith and the development of "continuity editing" in early film history, Soviet silent filmmakers would pioneer new innovative ideas about editing that moved film from an extension of theater into a mature and powerful artistic medium.

  • S01E22 The History of the Movie Trailer

    • March 24, 2014

    Some people consider them the best part of the movie going experience - the Movie Trailer. Take a look at the evolution of the "coming attractions" from simple silent film splices, through the template style of the Golden Age of Hollywood, through Auteurs and finally into the Blockbuster era.

  • S01E23 The History of Horror

    • April 25, 2014

    Dissect the history of horror, from it's roots deep in Gothic literature, through B-movie status and director's proving grounds to ultimate respectability as an important filmmaking genre.

  • S01E24 The History of Sound at the Movies

    • August 10, 2014

    The inclusion of sound at the movies was one of the most dramatic changes in all of film history. Dive into the early experiments of Edison trying to incorporate sound from film's inception, through the experiments in the early 1920s, the Jazz Singer and the industry sound overhaul, and finally the multi-channel surround and modern movie sound technologies.

  • S01E25 The Science and Engineering of Sound

    • August 20, 2014

    Take a closer look at the science of sound and the basics of how microphones convert sound energy into electrical signals. We will also run through the different kinds of mics used in video and film production.

  • S01E26 The Basics of Recording Audio for Digital Video

    • September 15, 2014

    We now turn our attention to the audio signal chain as John P. Hess defines the different components needed when recording on set for digital video.

  • S01E27 The Fundamentals of Sound in Post Production

    • October 6, 2014

    It's time to open up the digital audio workstation and look at the basics of common tools used in post production audio from Equalizers, Compressors, Noise Reduction, and Delay effects.

  • S01E28 Introduction to Automated Dialogue Replacement (ADR)

    • October 28, 2014

    Sometimes it's just not possible to get clean dialogue on set - that's when ADR comes into play. In this lesson we'll look at the history of ADR or looping and tackle the process of doing ADR or a short film.

  • S01E29 Introduction to Foley and Sound Effects for Film

    • November 17, 2014

    Very little of what you hear in the movies is real - in this lesson we take a look at the art of Foley, how to classify it, the history of the man who started it all and take a crack at doing our own Foley work.

  • S01E30 The Curious Copyright Case of "It's A Wonderful Life"

    • December 18, 2014

    It's A Wonderful Life has become a holiday tradition bolstered by near constant plays on television as the film fell into the public domain in 1975. But in the 90s, a studio would regain control over the film and put copyright to the test.

  • S01E31 The History of Frame Rate for Film

    • February 2, 2015

    Explore the history of the frame rate - the engine that gives motion to the motion picture from the earliest versions in silent pictures to the frame rates of broadcast television.

  • S01E32 The Origins of Auteur Theory

    • March 10, 2015

    Auteur - it's a favorite term of cinephiles around the world. But what exactly is Auteur Theory? In this Filmmaker IQ course we peel back pages of time and explore the origins of Auteur Theory from the economically tumultuous adolescence of French Cinema to the culture war waged in the columns of competing American movie critics.

  • S01E33 The Origins of Acting and "The Method"

    • April 29, 2015

    Trace the origins of acting technique by following the roots of theater going back all the way to the Ancient Greeks, through the Italian Renaissance and finally to the psychological approaches of the 20th Century under the term "Method"

  • S01E34 How Do We Measure an Audience?

    • June 15, 2015

    The success of a film or video is often judged on the size of the audience - but how do we measure that audience? - It's not always as simple as counting tickets. In this lesson we look at the techniques and methods studios and distributors use to calculate who has seen their products and try to make sense of all those Box Office Numbers and Ratings.

Season 2

  • S02E01 A Bit of History on Data

    • October 15, 2015

    Digital media has become the new celluloid - but how much do you know about this medium? Watch this primer on digital data storage and get caught up on the basics of the backbone of every modern filmmaker's workflow.

  • S02E02 The Cinematic History of Fake Blood

    • October 30, 2015

    There are a lot of ways to make the screen bleed - in this course we dissect the history of fake blood from its origins in the Theater to modern recipes for making characters bleed on screen.

  • S02E03 The Science of Camera Sensors

    • December 2, 2015

    A lot goes on under the hood when you press "REC" - check out the fascinating science behind film and electronic camera sensors.

  • S02E04 The History and Science of Lenses

    • December 14, 2015

    No camera could be complete without a lens - the glass technology that brings the world into focus. Dive into the history of the lens from it's early beginning as a fire starting tool to the plethora of modern designs.

  • S02E05 The Properties of Camera Lenses

    • January 4, 2016

    With a grounding in science and history, we now dive into the properties of camera lenses and explain the features of the modern camera lens for photography and cinematography from, Focal Length, Aperture, Primes vs. Zooms as well as some specialty features.

  • S02E06 Focusing on Depth of Field and Lens Equivalents

    • January 18, 2016

    How much space in front of the lens will be in focus? That question defines Depth of Field - but this simple concept has lead to a staggering amount of confusion in today's multi-format camera environment. Through some fundamental scientific demonstrations, we will clarify concepts like circle of confusion and lens equivalency.

  • S02E07 How a Director Stages and Blocks a Scene

    • March 4, 2016

    How a director stages a scene dramatically affects the story - in this experiment at YouTube Space LA, we take a boilerplate police detective script and shoot it five ways with five different types of blocking to demonstrate how direction and acting can really change the feel of a scene.

  • S02E08 The Science of Rendering Photorealistic CGI

    • March 20, 2016

    How do we get a glorified adding machine to generate a photorealistic image? Find out as we explore the processes developed over 40 years of intensive computer science research which now bring amazing Visual Effects to the silver screen which include Rasterization, Ray Casting, Ray Tracing and the Rendering Equation.

  • S02E09 Posing and Rendering CGI Characters

    • May 2, 2016

    How do we create and pose CGI characters? In this companion course to our "Science of Rendering Photorealistic CGI" we walk through the steps we use to create, pose and render our mascot using 3D Studio Max, V-Ray as well as Adobe Photoshop and Adobe After Effects.