This is why they’re called motion pictures!
On motion picture and television sets today the director spends 90% of his time directing the camera. Professional actors come to set prepared to direct themselves. In spite of this recent change, 90% of all books on directing do not teach specifically how to direct the camera.
Directing the Camera fills that void by teaching the elements of craft that contemporary directors use to give their films the visually dynamic look preferred by audiences today.
Shoot Like Tarantino: The Visual Secrets of Dangerous Storytelling
Editing for Directors: A Guide for Creative Collaboration
39 Steps to Better Screenwriting: A Practical Guide to Improving Your Screenplay (Kindle Edition)
The Director's Six Senses: An Innovative Approach to Developing Your Filmmaking Skills
Directing the Camera: How Professional Directors Use a Moving Camera to Energize Their Films
The Coffee Break Screenwriter Breaks the Rules: A Guide for the Rebel Writer
The Film Director’s Bag of Tricks: Get What You Want from Writers and Actors
Film Directing: Cinematic Motion (2nd Edition)
From Word to Image: Storyboarding and the Filmmaking Process
Suspense with a Camera: A Filmmaker's Guide to Hitchcock’s Techniques 
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