
Me and my sister-in-law, Erin, fell hard for the films of Hal Hartley. We watched any of his films that we could get our hands on. Most of my free time was spent hopping back and forth between different Blockbuster Video stores and searching through their "previously viewed" bins. In Memphis, this proved to be a gold mine, being that indy films and foreign fare wasn't really in demand, so I always cleaned up on the more esoteric titles. I can't tell you the joy I felt when I found Hal Hartley's TRUST for $3.99. Bliss. Martin Donovan is awesome, and the late Adrienne Shelly is just magical.
The canvas of cinema is almost too large to grasp in a lifetime, but that doesn't mean you shouldn't jump in, enjoy it all, and learn. I'm a professional filmmaker and I'm still learning about films and filmmakers. The older you get, the more you cherish surprise and discovery. Last year I came across a fantastic doc called Z Channel: A Magnificent Obsession. Most of the films that were chronicled and discussed were films I had not seen. So I tracked down almost all of them (some are out of print) and watched them all. It was an incredible experience. Watch this wonderful montage of all the films used in the documentary.

Just watch this scene and tell me you don't want to see this incredible film. James Earl Jones is a badass. Chris Cooper gives his best, in my opinion.
The second book on my required reading list would be Spike Lee's She's Gotta Have It. This movie takes me back. Independent film in the 80s was just so raw and exciting. She's Gotta Have It was funny and sexy. I fell hard for Nola Darling (I also named Taryn Manning's character in Hustle & Flow after her). I loved her bed with the wooden frame behind it covered in candles and candle wax. Mmmm! "Please, baby, please, baby... baby, baby, please." Spike Lee kept a journal while he was trying to get the movie made. It's fascinating. There's this one rant I remember where Spike is talking about how he wants a real dark-skinned woman to be the lead in his movie. "Why can't we ever see a pretty dark-skinned woman? Well, people will in my films. Fuck it." Amen, Spike.
Book number three would be Robert Rodriguez's Rebel Without A Crew: Or How A 23-Year-Old Filmmaker With $7,000 Became A Hollywood Player. This is essential reading for any and all young filmmakers. Rodriguez essentially sold his body for film. He was penniless and passionate to make a feature film so he checked into a hospital where they performed medical tests on him for cash. He talks about how noisy the 16mm camera they were using was so they couldn't record sound. Rodriguez would then take a tape recorder into his car and record the actors saying their lines. This, of course, resulted in the dialog track going out of sync when he would edit it together. But this problem became the trigger for what is now the Rodriguez style of quick cutting. Whenever an actor's dialog would go out of sync, he would cut to a reaction shot. A simple scene of two people talking would look like an action scene.
Robert is a hero to many of us. His DIY discipline has remained consistent over his entire career. Almost all of his movies have a 10 Minute Film School extra on the DVD. He's generous to share his tricks and one should listen and learn. For my first film, when I was just as poor as he was during El Mariachi, I lit my movie per his instruction, using 250 watt photoflood light bulbs in Home Depot bought clamp lights. I followed his tricks and now I have a movie career, too. I've never met Robert Rodriguez. But I own him a drink. I owe him more than that.

He takes you through all his films, from 12 Angry Men to Dog Day Afternoon, from The Wiz to Network. I highly recommend it. This book would not just have one movie as its companion piece for my class. You would have to watch all of them. Yes, all of Sidney Lumet's movies. You'd thank me later. But for now: