'Whiplash' | Anatomy of a Scene w/ Director Damien Chazelle | The New York Times
The writer and director Damien Chazelle narrates a sequence from his film “Whiplash,” featuring Miles Teller and J. K. Simmons. Produced by: Mekado Murphy Read the story here: http://nyti.ms/1C1MJau Subscribe to the Times Video newsletter for free and get a handpicked selection of the best videos from The New York Times every week: http://bit.ly/timesvideonewsletter Subscribe on YouTube: http://bit.ly/U8Ys7n Watch more videos at: http://nytimes.com/video --------------------------------------------------------------- Want more from The New York Times? Twitter: https://twitter.com/nytvideo Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nytimes Google+: https://plus.google.com/+nytimes/ Whether it's reporting on conflicts abroad and political divisions at home, or covering the latest style trends and scientific developments, New York Times video journalists provide a revealing and unforgettable view of the world. It's all the news that's fit to watch. On YouTube. 'Whiplash' | Anatomy of a Scene w/ Director Damien Chazelle | The New York Times http://www.youtube.com/user/TheNewYorkTimes
See also...
Explore...
The Editing of Whiplash & more | BAFTA Film Craft Sessions
Whiplash - Scene Breakdown, Analysis & Comparison
WHIPLASH | Victim to a Master Manipulator
GCSE Film Studies Paper 2 : District 9 revision
Whiplash - Ending Explained (SPOILERS)
The Wave: Cinema's most terrifying lesson
New...
LAMDA Performance and public speaking exams 2026-2027
Impact Evaluation of LAMDA Exams in Schools
Stranger Things, The First Shadow. The Phoenix Theatre, Friday 11th September.
Discover...
GCSE Examinations Whiplash Film Studies ZEN YouTube The Lost Boys Documentary Open Theory GCE American Cinema Assessment GCSE Drama Parent Screenplay Mocks Carol District 9 The Stories We Tell Den Of Geek British Film Industry
Uh-oh - we were unable to load our website on your browser so we're showing you a plain HTML version.
We use many features found in modern browsers and regrettably yours seems incompatible.
However this legacy version contains (very, very nearly) all the same content. Each page is rendered on our server and doesn't rely on any browser features except the odd font. It doesn't even need Javascript or fancy CSS. It's like being in 1995!
Your browser is reporting itself to us as Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com). Please consider updating your browser to make the most of our website.
If you would like to try our proper website again - you can do so here...