Five Stars! How to Become a Film Critic, the World's Greatest Job

Five Stars! How to Become a Film Critic, the World's Greatest Job
ISBN-10
0972098119
ISBN-13
9780972098113
Category
Film criticism
Pages
256
Language
English
Published
2005
Publisher
Sustainable Stories
Author
Christopher Null

Description

*** SECOND EDITION FEATURING NEW MATERIAL, NEW MOVIES, AND NEW REVIEWS! PUBLISHED MARCH 2013 *** So you want to be a film critic and review movies for a living? Veteran film critic Christopher Null teaches you, step by step, how to break into the business with the lessons he's learned from more than a decade in the industry. Five Stars! will teach you all you need to know! - Understand movie history and the mechanics of filmmaking - without the film snob jargon! - Learn how to write a review, step by step - Get into every movie for free and never pay to go to the movies again! - Get free DVDs - before anyone else! - Break into professional writing in newspapers, magazines, and online - Learn how to approach editors - from the experts themselves - Build an audience for your work - Interview celebrities and hang out with the stars! Five Stars! is the only book on the market that shows you exactly how to become a professional movie reviewer, step by step! It's an absolute must-read for any aspiring film critic! 264 pages - packed with essential information!

Similar books

  • The Searchers: Essays and Reflections on John Ford's Classic Western
    By Peter Lehman, Arthur M. Eckstein

    Axtell , “ The White Indians . ” The American literary tradition of the " captivity narrative ” from which The Searchers derives : see Kolodny , “ Among the Indians . ” On the historical background of actual captivity in the Texas ...

  • Gerçek bakış: Lacan sonrası sinema kuramı
    By Todd Mcgowan

    Gerçek bakış: Lacan sonrası sinema kuramı

  • The C.A. Lejeune Film Reader
    By Caroline Alice Lejeune

    ... and we recognized the meadows beside the river where an extremely nervous Flora Robson, in the stiff robes and ruff ... to carry Marguerite to Dover I idly wondered what they'd done that morning with the cats, all hundred of them, ...

  • The Movies of the Eighties
    By Ron Base, David Haslam

    Gibson considered himself Australian , but actually he was born in Peekskill , New York , where his father was a railroad brakeman . His grandmother was Australian though , a former opera singer , Gibson said , so when Gibson's father ...

  • Film Analysis Handbook: Essential Guide to Understanding, Analysing and Writing on Film
    By Thomas Caldwell

    0 0 American director David Lynch went one step further. His debut film Eraserhead depicts Lynch's nightmarish fears about fatherhood and his disgust at the industrial city he was living in when making the film. However, Lynch does not ...

  • Film Theory for Beginners
    By Richard Osborne, Angie Brew

    This highly original and informative guide to the origins and development of film theory will be an indispensable tool for all students.

  • The Bigger Little Book of Hollywood Clichés
    By Roger Ebert

    Since The Little Book of Hollywood Cliches was first published the author has been flooded with new contributions and, along with some of his own insights, has combined the best of old and new in this expanded compendium of movie cliches, ...

  • European Film Theory and Cinema: A Critical Introduction
    By Ian Aitken

    These include Que la Fête commence , Le Juge et l'assassin , Lacombe Lucien , Les Camisards ( René Allio , 1972 ) , Moi Pierre Rivière ( I ... 1975 ) and Le Retour de Martin Guerre ( The Return of Martin Guerre , Daniel Vigne , 1983 ) .

  • Undergraduate Research in Film: A Guide for Students
    By Jenny Olin Shanahan, Gregory Young, Lucia Ricciardelli

    Professors and students can use it as a text and/or a reference book. Essentially, what makes this volume unique from is that it brings together examples of film projects and film studies courses within the framework of research skills.

  • Agee on Film: Criticism and Comment on the Movies
    By James Agee

    Agee was particularly perceptive about the work of his friend John Huston and recognized the artistic merit of certain B films such as The Curse of the Cat People and other movies produced by Val Lewton.