|
Go 
|
New 
|
Find 
|
Notify 
|
|
Reply 
|
|
Admin 
|
New PM! 
|
Freshman
|
quote: Originally posted by Kyle Johnson: i ah vnt seen it, and no ones ever said anything but "this movie is great" and i usually avoid those. so does it cure cancer?
Well that's a pretty crappy attitude to have, especially for someone interested in filmmaking. You must miss out on a lot of good films. edit: And I also think Casablanca is a really good film. Love Humphrey Bogart, and a great story.
|
| |
| Posts: 81 | Location: New Jersey | Registered: December 02, 2006 |    |
|
Freshman
|
quote: Originally posted by Kyle Johnson: I just dont like black and white movies
That is a horrible horrible shame. Soooo many good films are black and white.
|
| |
| Posts: 81 | Location: New Jersey | Registered: December 02, 2006 |    |
|
Moderator

|
Ive become so engaged in surreal and/or obscure films that its hard for me to be impressed by classical storytelling styles and cinematography. After watching enough intense, in-your-face, edge-of-your-seat, thought-provoking, mind-mutilating films, these traditional movies seem so insufficient somehow. Its the same with classic novels. Weve become so accustomed with fast-paced thrillers that 900 page character dramas seem nothing short of boring. Try reading Jane Eyre or Les Miserables right after reading Fight Club. Its near impossible
"Important dialog is only in Hollywood films" - Kyle Phillip Johnson
|
| |
| Posts: 1275 | Location: Indiana | Registered: May 23, 2004 |    |
|
Moderator

 |
Meh. Citizen Kane disappointed me. For being the best film ever in so many people's opinions, it wasn't that amazing. I will eventually have to see Casablanca, but I'm not expecting as much as I was with CK. These old legends are good. There's no doubt about it. Well made, with real craft, skill and heart... but they're typically only good for what they were, what they are, films made in a different era, at a different stage of the artform. Film is young, very young, and it changes constantly. I love many movies made in the last 30 years, or even the last five, more than those oldies. Not cause they're old - just cause they're not as good. Art changes. Many present-day artists are better (I know that is subjective, but from our cultural perspective they are better) than the medieval folks who had just discovered perspective. It's natural. Okay. I've securely sealed up my flame-retardant suit now. | PerryKroll.com | TRC | "If not actually disgruntled, he was far from being gruntled." Wodehouse
|
| |
| Posts: 5197 | Location: Tisch at New York University | Registered: June 03, 2003 |    |
|
Alumnus
|
quote: Originally posted by titaniumdoughnut: Meh. Citizen Kane disappointed me. For being the best film ever in so many people's opinions, it wasn't that amazing. I will eventually have to see Casablanca, but I'm not expecting as much as I was with CK.
These old legends are good. There's no doubt about it. Well made, with real craft, skill and heart... but they're typically only good for what they were, what they are, films made in a different era, at a different stage of the artform. Film is young, very young, and it changes constantly.
I love many movies made in the last 30 years, or even the last five, more than those oldies. Not cause they're old - just cause they're not as good. Art changes. Many present-day artists are better (I know that is subjective, but from our cultural perspective they are better) than the medieval folks who had just discovered perspective. It's natural.
Okay. I've securely sealed up my flame-retardant suit now.
I think it's important to understand that movies like CK are so impressive because they're what defined the technique for future filmmakers. When we watch them in this reverse order, i.e. see movies in the theater today and then see the original "le maître" of the genre we view the older work in our minds as being derivative and nothing new because we've seen it before in more modern work. Citizen Kane was considered a masterpiece because of its (at the time) revolutionary use of things like mise-en-scene, luma keying and the like. Hoosiers, for example, is considering more boring and unoriginal now than it was when it first came out because it was one of the first "unlikely sports team goes all the way"-type stories, the underdog winning it all. It's been done so, so many times since then that when we look at it now it seems like the directors were following a template. But in reality it was movies like Mighty Ducks, Miracle and those vomit-inducing Air Bud flicks that actually followed the template.
|
| |
| Posts: 1150 | Location: Marienbad | Registered: June 24, 2005 |    |
|
Moderator

 |
I agree with you 100%. | PerryKroll.com | TRC | "If not actually disgruntled, he was far from being gruntled." Wodehouse
|
| |
| Posts: 5197 | Location: Tisch at New York University | Registered: June 03, 2003 |    |
|
Administrator

|
quote: Originally posted by titaniumdoughnut: I love many movies made in the last 30 years, or even the last five, more than those oldies. Not cause they're old - just cause they're not as good. Art changes. Many present-day artists are better (I know that is subjective, but from our cultural perspective they are better) than the medieval folks who had just discovered perspective. It's natural.
Modern day filmmakers are better because movies like Citizen Kane were made. If those "medieval" folks hadn't discovered perspective when they did, we would still be in the dark ages.
|
| |
| Posts: 2273 | Location: Boston | Registered: September 18, 2003 |    |
|
Moderator

 |
That's very true, and I wonder how long it's going to take film to even out, and stop being nothing more than practice for the next generation of cinema. I feel like the 80s and 90s the trend definitely moved toward movies which age better, but they're still aging. | PerryKroll.com | TRC | "If not actually disgruntled, he was far from being gruntled." Wodehouse
|
| |
| Posts: 5197 | Location: Tisch at New York University | Registered: June 03, 2003 |    |
|
 | Please Wait. Your request is being processed... |
© Studentfilms.com, Inc. 2008
|
|