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#164542 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#164543 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#164544 |
Power Member
Sep 2012
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Good and bad quality are obviously relative, but I think modern films--at least Hollywood ones--tend to care more about delivering a very generalized experience and appeasing the broadest possible audience.
I think there are plenty of interesting, exciting and daring independent and foreign films today--I could probably think of 10 or so great ones I've seen in the past 2 years, but big studio Hollywood movies tend to be worked over by focus groups and executives so that they never get truly bad, but can also be scrubbed of quirks that can make a movie truly great. So you get a lot of very good and average films that entertain but may not necessarily exist in the consciousness after the movie ends. |
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#164545 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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I love the original version of The Beguiled, and I cannot imagine it ever being bested, but I might go see the remake just because I'm curious to see how they will handle the turtle scene. With all of the animal rights people and such in this day and age, I cannot imagine it being done the same way. |
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#164546 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Having said that, I think the writing just isn't as strong as it used to be. With few exceptions, most movies are tilted on the side of visuals over dialog. How many memorable lines can you remember from movies made in the last 20 years? I could make an old-farty statement like filmmakers once grew up reading books and listening to the radio, and now they grow up watching videos and playing video games. I could, but I won't. |
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#164547 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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"I'm Marry Poppins, y'all!" "Blah blah blah...all that chit-chat's gonna get you hurt." "The thing about street fights...the street always wins!" "What a day! WHAT A LOVELY DAY!!!" "That's not how the Force works!" "Today we're cancelling the apocalypse!" "I got worms as big as my arm!" -------------------- ...you're right, writing has gone downhill. ![]() ![]() Seriously though, as I look at the past few years' worth of movies I realize I don't remember the lines or dialogue all that well for most movies. That really isn't the thing that stands out anymore. Although, these days I find myself marveling at movies that succeed at something with less or no dialogue, and I can think of various examples of that. Show don't tell is still pretty strong writing in the sense that everything you need remains unstated and implicit to the scene and story, but it works on film only when the visuals and performances work. A movie like Moebius works with zero dialogue precisely because of that--wouldn't say it's badly-written, just different. EDIT: Got around to thinking about The Dark Knight. It has some of the most memorable dialogue if the last 20 years, and I quote it all the time. But it can be problematic (as critics often cite) because it states the obvious too much (telling instead of showing). Lines like "I'm like a dog that chases cars" sounds cool, but it really never needed to be stated, ever. The story and film did the job of showing those aspects. Same for lines like "we're indecent men in an indecent time," or "this is what happens when an unstoppable force meets an unmovable object." Nice ideas buried beneath these lines, but it's quite on-the-nose and it's a little hard to believe the characters would say these lines in a creditable situation. Sadly, most of Nolan's movies fall into this trap--Inception is always getting pinged as a "two hour slideshow" because of its exposition, and even Memento strikes me as doing a lot of telling to the audience. It goes to show that memorable dialogue is not always an indicator of a quality script. Then again, maybe a quality script is not always the requisite for a quality movie (after all, Nolan succeeds because of style and talent). So many nuances... Last edited by Al_The_Strange; 06-09-2017 at 07:54 PM. |
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#164548 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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With regard to recent films, I am at least happy that we're finally in an era where computer-generated visuals don't suck if they're done right.
Years ago, even the best high-caliber CGI visuals (The Lord of the Rings trilogy, etc.) would take my mind out of the movie. These days, I see occasional effects-heavy high budget films and I do not even think about the fact that I'm watching CGI. Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 looks pretty amazing. (The plot is a blatant clone of Forbidden Planet, but the computer visuals are incredibly seamless with the practical effects.) The world still has a long way to go in this regard, of course. While Wonder Woman was an otherwise good movie, the confrontation during the last half hour looked like a late 1990s video game film adaptation. |
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Thanks given by: | Al_The_Strange (06-09-2017), llj (06-09-2017) |
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#164549 | |
Senior Member
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Your statement about too many films aiming to be awesome and flopping upon second viewing echoes my own views. CGI could be a powerful tool if used judiciously and carefully, but it rarely is. More often than not, CGI is applied as a cost and time saving measure. I long for the days when stuntmen rolled real cars, when the Mos Eisley Cantina was populated by animatronic aliens, and when guys like Tom Savini were a household name. You guys are a breath of fresh air compared to general movie-going audiences. |
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Thanks given by: | ShellOilJunior (06-10-2017), The Great Owl (06-09-2017) |
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#164550 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#164551 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Thanks given by: | ShellOilJunior (06-09-2017) |
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#164552 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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"I have no desire to talk to anyone who might be calling me." Nobody realizes that I'm quoting it, though. ...and this drives home the point that I'm a real-life version of Steve Buscemi's Seymour. (I'm really looking forward to giving my Criterion Blu-ray of Ghost World a spin this weekend. I've been watching a ton of horror movies lately, so I think that I'm going to have a purposeful non-horror weekend. Ghost World, Vision Quest, etc.) |
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Thanks given by: | AaronJ (06-10-2017) |
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#164553 |
Blu-ray Count
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I think there are quite a bit of good/great films made these days but they just aren't the same as the Golden age of Hollywood along with the 70s-90s IMHO. The 90s were truly the most underrated decade for films. So many great films came out of that decade.
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#164554 | |
Power Member
Sep 2012
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In general, I don't watch superhero movies unless I'm forced to, or I watch them just to keep up with pop culture. I still like comic books and I was a big Marvel/DC fan when I was a kid, but as a movie genre, superheroes hold zero appeal for me. I also find superhero movie fan culture increasingly off putting. |
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#164555 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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I think that the current popularity of superhero movies stems from the fact that, for the first time, the powers-that-be in the studios are people who grew up loving comic books, and that, for the first time in cinema history, we're actually seeing comic book movies, meaning that the movies look exactly like the comic books and that they follow continuity storylines over long spans of time in the same way that actual comic book stories have a continuity from one issue to another. People are looking forward to the next "issue" of The Avengers or X-Men. |
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#164556 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Thanks given by: | The Great Owl (06-10-2017) |
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#164557 | |
Power Member
Sep 2012
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Well, it's actually been almost 20 years now of superheroes ruling Hollywood, so it's not really a new thing anymore, at least to me it doesn't feel like it. (Also--wow, time flies fast. I'd really better get a cracking on those life goals...) ![]() Last edited by llj; 06-09-2017 at 08:58 PM. |
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#164558 | |
Senior Member
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Yes ShellOilJunior, you're onto something here. The Room is the portrait of a tortured soul. I'm not referring to the central character of the film itself, Johnny, but to the gifted artist behind the lens, filmmaker Tommy Wiseau. For years, he labored in obscurity to pen what The New Yorker calls "...one of the most insightful screenplays of our time." Now, as Wiseau's legend grows, so do various interpretations of the meaning behind his masterpiece, The Room. "Clearly, Wiseau's screenplay peels back the layers of his own insecurity. It deconstructs the man to the microscopic. That's why he chose to produce, star in, and direct the picture. It was too deeply personal." -Peter Travers, Rolling Stone Magazine. "The film's a metaphor for modern times. Football’s become America’s new pastime, divorce rates are skyrocketing, and other social stigmas are paralyzing society. Wiseau's brave. He doesn't shy away from the stench." -Aintitcoolnews I think... I think, Wiseau must’ve been betrayed. By someone in his past. And having worked with some of the actors that played the crew of the Enterprise, I can empathize with him.” -William Shatner “I am Groot.” -Groot ![]() |
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#164559 | |
Moderator
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Thanks given by: | billy pilgrim (06-10-2017), mja345 (06-09-2017), The Great Owl (06-10-2017), trentdiesel (06-09-2017) |
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