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Faisal

Versatile and inventive, Faisal Azam approaches filmmaking with the eye of an artist. A graduate of UC Berkeley with a degree in Rhetoric, Faisal began his professional life in Los Angeles working as an advertising communications analyst where he evaluated television commercials and marketing campaigns for some of the world’s top companies. As his appreciation for the power of image-based advertising grew, it awakened a desire to tell stories and convey messages through the ultimate visual medium—film.

On a leap of faith, Faisal came to New York City with little but an instinctive love of cinema and strong aesthetic sensibilities. Beginning his filmmaking career as an editor, Faisal developed a keen sense of narrative structure and a deep understanding of storytelling as a precise and exacting art. Having gained experience with a variety of film forms—from commercials and promos to documentaries and narrative films—he has worked with clients as diverse as Nike, Consumer Reports, Academy Award winning director Zana Briski, and Rolling Stone. In 2006, he co-wrote and directed his first short film, Unknown Shores—which screened at a number of domestic and international film festivals. In addition to this blog, he is currently at work on his next film project.

The Fountainhead

Since high school people have recommended that I read Ayn Rand. In eleventh grade, and later in college, I remember friends reading The Fountainhead— actually, I remember friends carrying around a copy of the book because now that I think about it I can’t actually recall anyone sitting and reading that hefty tome. Mind you, I’m not averse to reading long books; one of my favorites is Haruki Murakami’s amazing novel The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle. But The Fountainhead never seemed inviting; the cheap paperback version reminded me more of a brick than a book, and Rand’s dry, repetitively dull writing didn’t even make me want to turn the first page. Writing, for me, is as much about the way a writer uses language as it is about what he or she says. A good writer has a strong sense of rhythm, pacing, word choice; a great writer shows wit and lyricism, writes in a way that’s emotionally honest, and couples intelligence with imagination. With Rand, language seems secondary, a mere tool used didactically to get across a point. Since I couldn’t make it through her book, I figured why not a movie. After all, two hours trumps 752 boring pages anytime…

Nixon

Nixon is a long, lumbering ox of a film that, though tedious and muddled at times, is ambitious in its exploration of the life and undoing of the infamous president. Far from being the character assassination one might expect, Oliver Stone’s film is a surprisingly fair portrayal of Nixon (played brilliantly by Anthony Hopkins) and a complex examination of his rise and, ultimately, tragic political demise…

“Perhaps the future of cinema is in the hands of…”

“Perhaps the future of cinema is in the hands of a few youngsters who’ll make films with the little money in their pockets without shackling themselves to an industrial mindset.”

–Robert Bresson

“No dialogue!” I said, aloud. “No dialogue at all!”

Sometimes the absence of dialogue speaks volumes more than the spoken word…

“I love editing…”

“I love editing. I think I like it more than any other phase of filmmaking. If I wanted to be frivolous, I might say that everything that precedes editing is merely a way of producing film to edit.”

–Stanley Kubrick

“With a good script a good director can produce…”

“With a good script a good director can produce a masterpiece. With the same script a mediocre director can make a passable film. But with a bad script even a good director can’t possibly make a good film. For truly cinematic expression, the camera and the microphone must be able to cross both fire and water. The script must be something that has the power to do this.”

–Akira Kurosawa

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