Every so often, an article comes along that reminds us why we fell in love with cinema in the first place. This week, No Film School published a piece that struck right at the heart of what it means to become a filmmaker, not through institutions, but through obsession, curiosity, and relentless watching.
What truly stood out was this powerful truth:
“The one thing they have in common is that none of them had formal training. Yes, these crème de la crème of auteurs—who not only made classics but also defined what qualifies as a classic—never went to film school. And yet, they became film schools.”
Let that sink in.
Hitchcock. Kurosawa. Kubrick. Spielberg. Cameron. Tarantino. Nolan.
Not one of them learned filmmaking in a classroom.
They learned it by watching, by doing, by failing, by trying again, and by letting cinema itself be their mentor.
Why This Matters for Today’s Filmmakers
In an industry where the pressure to “have the right credentials” can feel overwhelming, this reminder is liberating:
- You don’t need permission to start.
- You don’t need a degree to create something timeless.
- You don’t need a gatekeeper to validate your vision.
What you do need is curiosity, discipline, and a willingness to study the masters—not academically, but viscerally.
The author curates 10 films that function as a full filmmaking curriculum, each one teaching a different craft element: montage, blocking, deep focus, neorealism, color theory, production design, sound, suspense, and more.
Opening the Conversation:
For the Producing Lounge, this sparks a bigger question:
If the greatest filmmakers became film schools without attending one…
- What does that mean for how we nurture talent today?
- Are we overvaluing formal training?
- Are we undervaluing lived experience, curiosity, and self-teaching?
- How do we, as producers, identify and support the next “self-made” auteur?
- And what films taught you more than any class ever could?
Full Article
For anyone who wants to dive deeper, here’s the link that inspired this reflection: https://nofilmschool.com/movies-that-teach-filmmaking-better-than-film-s...
this is why I am writing TV shows instead. Easy access for the viewer, mostly.
My perspective. If Hollywood disappears, more room for people like me who do no-budget filming.
I don't live in USA. Here in Sweden, the film industry is subsidized by the taxpayers. Just as in many ot...
Expand commentMy perspective. If Hollywood disappears, more room for people like me who do no-budget filming.
I don't live in USA. Here in Sweden, the film industry is subsidized by the taxpayers. Just as in many other countries. Every year, The Swedish Film Institute tell what prizes Swedish films have won abroad. Hardly bothering about the uneconomic production.
A few weeks ago, I asked the Swedish Film Institute how they would react if production companies use AI. They don't bother, as long as the result is artistic.
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Sharing so many of my colleagues and friends sentiments Bill Brock - I haven't been in quite a while but it's not the end. It's simply morphing into a different animal. And I couldn't stop creating ev...
Expand commentSharing so many of my colleagues and friends sentiments Bill Brock - I haven't been in quite a while but it's not the end. It's simply morphing into a different animal. And I couldn't stop creating even if I wanted to. And yes, there was a season where I did.
Michael Thorn Swing over to YouTube and type the title into the search box. It’s there.