September 22, 2009
“People tend to think of creativity as a mysterious solo act, and they typically reduce products to a single idea: This is a movie about toys, or dinosaurs, or love, they’ll say. However, in filmmaking and many other kinds of complex product development, creativity involves a large number of people from different disciplines working effectively together to solve a great many problems. The initial idea for the movie—what people in the movie business call ‘the high concept’—is merely one step in a long, arduous process that takes four to five years.
A movie contains literally tens of thousands of ideas. They’re in the form of every sentence; in the performance of each line; in the design of characters, sets, and backgrounds; in the locations of the camera; in the colors, the lighting, the pacing. The director and the other creative leaders of a production do not come up with all the ideas on their own; rather, every single member of the 200- to 250-person production group makes suggestions. Creativity must be present at every level of every artistic and technical part of the organization. The leaders sort through a mass of ideas to find the ones that fit into a coherent whole—that support the story—which is a very difficult task. It’s like an archaeological dig where you don’t know what you’re looking for or whether you will even find anything. The process is downright scary.
Then again, if we aren’t always at least a little scared, we’re not doing our job.”
Edwin Catmull, President of Pixar Animation Studios
Support this solo initiative
What began as a collection of links has evolved into a comprehensive archive committed to creative culture—offering so far 395 interviews with under-the-radar Artists, Designers & Makers, in addition to 202 write-ups across events, books, movies, more. Free to explore. Free from ads. If you gain a level of motivation, knowledge, even delight, from Design Feast, please support on Patreon. Thanks for your consideration!
Wishing you continual success,
Nate Burgos, Content Creator & Publisher
Since its original version, Design Feast was redesigned once and then for the second time.
LinkedIn | X | Instagram | Facebook