Film Making Giants

Alfonso Cuarón — The fluid camera

11 min · 17. helmi 2026
jakson Alfonso Cuarón — The fluid camera kansikuva

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You’re listening to Filmmaking Giants. Today’s episode is about a director who changed what camera movement means. Plenty of filmmakers move the camera. Some move it to show off. Some move it because the budget allows it. Some move it because movement is exciting and cinema, after all, is motion. But Alfonso Cuarón’s camera doesn’t move simply to impress. It moves to place you inside a human situation—physically, emotionally, morally. It moves like attention moves. It moves like fear moves. It moves like memory moves. And by doing that, Cuarón became one of the defining filmmakers of modern cinema: a director whose technical mastery is never separate from his empathy.

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jakson Park Chan-wook — Operatic violence & surreal beauty kansikuva

Park Chan-wook — Operatic violence & surreal beauty

You’re listening to Filmmaking Giants. Today’s episode is about a director who makes violence look like opera—stylized, rhythmic, sometimes darkly funny, sometimes horrifically intimate—and then uses that beauty to trap you. Park Chan-wook is famous for extreme images: a hallway fight, a hammer, a tongue, an octopus, a revenge that turns into a labyrinth. But if you reduce him to shock, you miss the real craft. Park’s films are not violent because he likes violence. They are violent because he is fascinated by what violence reveals—about desire, shame, power, identity, and the hidden stories people tell themselves so they can keep living. Park is also one of cinema’s great formalists. His framing is precise. His color is purposeful. His camera movement is deliberate. His editing has the snap of a blade. He understands that style is not a surface; style is a weapon. He uses it to seduce the viewer into complicity, and then he makes you confront what you enjoyed.

12. helmi 202611 min