Filmmaking
Filmmaking here with articles, tech, story and other stuff to learn, inspire and maybe piss you off as in "Why didn't I know that before!" Believe me, happens to me all day long. Always more to learn and strategize for greater success and Joy in this amazing filmmaking world. I enjoy action films but really good ones in what I like to call "Arthouse Action" which are films like "Die Hard", "Enemy of the State" and others with quick witted words coupled with quicker action. But make no mistake I prize and enjoy the Art of Cinema in many genres and eras.
One of the most important skills you can acquire is the ability to think in both Strategic and Tactical Perspectives. But let’s define them accurately first.
Strategy - Strat·e·gy Etymology: Greek stratēgia generalship, from stratēgos Date: 1810 (1) : the science and art of employing the political, economic, psychological, and military forces of a nation or group of nations to afford the maximum support to adopted policies in peace or war (2) : the science and art of military command exercised to meet the enemy in combat under advantageous 2 a : a careful plan or method : a clever stratagem b : the art of devising or employing plans or stratagems toward a goal
Tactic - 1tac·tic Greek taktikē, from feminine of taktikos Date: 1640
1 : a device for accomplishing an end 2 : a method of employing forces in combat
According to the noted Prussian military theorist, Karl von Clausewitz, who wrote “On War”, a definitive theoretical text on waging war, "Strategy belongs primarily to the realm of art. Tactics belongs primarily to the realm of science.” Clausewitz said that "War is a mere continuation of politics by other means." If so, then can one consider that ‘politics is a mere continuation of war by other means.” And if it is war, then what is one’s approach against, not an opponent in civil exchange, but rather an enemy?