I have a few scenes in my film where it's just two people sitting down at a table across from each other talking. Everybody does. How do you keep these scenes interesting? What tips can you give so that they don't look amateurish. I was watching this scene here from another member:
http://www.jamescarveronline.com/video/the_hit/scene3.html
...(who stated that this is his first time, so I'm sure he'd like some feedback too) and I was reminded just how bad these scenes can go. I mean you can talk about the lighting, which isn't great, but I don't think that's the main reason this scene doesn't work. They're not right up against a wall - a mistake a lot of first timers make. You do cut into coverage - a lot of first-timers don't. The sound isn't great. I think that hurts it. But what else is keeping this from feeling like a real movie scene? Is it just the acting?
Thanks,
C.G.
http://www.jamescarveronline.com/video/the_hit/scene3.html
...(who stated that this is his first time, so I'm sure he'd like some feedback too) and I was reminded just how bad these scenes can go. I mean you can talk about the lighting, which isn't great, but I don't think that's the main reason this scene doesn't work. They're not right up against a wall - a mistake a lot of first timers make. You do cut into coverage - a lot of first-timers don't. The sound isn't great. I think that hurts it. But what else is keeping this from feeling like a real movie scene? Is it just the acting?
Thanks,
C.G.