To_The_Past
To_The_Past t1_iujr7bu wrote
Reply to Would you disagree if I said that the, "the Lord of the Rings" films may just be some of the greatest films ever made? Are they ever going to become widely recognized as such? by Iloveindianajones
They were widely recognised as such as soon as they were released and the reception hasn't changed.
To_The_Past t1_iuj5piu wrote
Reply to comment by Nrksbullet in How in the world was Halloween 2018 not called H40? They blew it. by [deleted]
Who believes this?
To_The_Past t1_iuj520w wrote
Reply to Fright Night (1985) by bluejester12
Loved it. It's funny and full of heart.
The remake had strong performances but was really ugly. I lean towards liking it, the script is solid and the characters work. Not a patch on the original though.
To_The_Past t1_iuixe0z wrote
Reply to comment by No-Tune-868 in How to watch and analyse arthouse cinema? by lonzosch
I don't think you understand what either me or yourself are saying. Editing is used as an analogy that illustrates why your argument doesn't make sense. You're not right, you have decided that you have to be right but are unable to articulate your position coherently and have it withstand any scrutiny, and this is frustrating you. Have a nice day.
To_The_Past t1_iuhp7gl wrote
Reply to comment by No-Tune-868 in How to watch and analyse arthouse cinema? by lonzosch
>I didnt disagree with how themes are explored affect quality. I disagreed that themes affect quality.
I disagree that this is a meaningful distinction, let alone one that I proved. You said you're not sure themes are important - bad movies have the same basic themes as good movies, after all! My contention is that they are, and that bad movies have them too is a bad argument.
Bad movies often have the same basic editing or plotting as good movies too, but this doesn't mean editing or plotting are unimportant, that's a bad argument. Editing, plotting - and themes - and getting them right in the execution of a movie - are crucially important. Even if they're not the tangible things that jump out to you as why you liked the movie, they are crucially important factors that resulted in that end.
To_The_Past t1_iuhob85 wrote
Reply to comment by No-Tune-868 in How to watch and analyse arthouse cinema? by lonzosch
Same only applies here in the absolute broadest strokes (like plot, lots of good and bad films with the same basic plots). How they develop and explore that theme is tremendously important to the film you get, in virtually every aspect of the film, and there are also other variables as well as theme.
Replace the basic themes in Blade Runner and you simply don't get Blade Runner. You get something completely different.
A lot of shit films have the same type of editing as good movies too, that's just a fact too. Doesn't mean editing isn't critically important to the movies you like working as they do.
To_The_Past t1_iuhneac wrote
Reply to comment by No-Tune-868 in How to watch and analyse arthouse cinema? by lonzosch
That's tangible vs less tangible details. I never though about the editing in Bloody Sunday or Being There but those films wouldn't work without masterful editing.
The filmmakers commitment to themes determines so much of the mise en scene, editing, plot focus and motion, characterisation, acting choices, and more. You take the theme out of your favourite movies and you simply won't have the same movie at all.
What a film makes you feel and the parts that jump out to you as what you liked, and what made it work that way, are two very different angles.
To_The_Past t1_iuhazkg wrote
Reply to Why is Happiness (1998) considered a comedy by of_kilter
Because it has constant jokes
To_The_Past t1_iucnn25 wrote
Reply to comment by autoposting_system in What are the not we obvious things that make older movies feel older? by aja_ramirez
Leo's just babyfaced. This is not an actual change in cinema or generations. It's not like we haven't had James Cagney or Mickey Rooney.
To_The_Past t1_iu9509e wrote
Reply to Bad movies with interesting ideas. by wisconsinking
Super Mario Bros. That had a lot of interesting choices. A lifelike dinosaur for Yoshi? A grimy cyberpunk world? Dennis Hopper?
To_The_Past t1_iu3jl50 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Best weapon(s) tactics, room clearing tactics movie by ze11ez
But your post makes no sense as sarcasm lol
To_The_Past t1_iu3g3cs wrote
Reply to looking for film recommendations for campy hyper stylized horror flicks by jaydenweatherley
The Guest. So much style, with its tongue devilishly in cheek, and the namesake of the title is one of the great characters in the genre.
To_The_Past t1_iu3futt wrote
Reply to comment by the_all_time_loser in Best weapon(s) tactics, room clearing tactics movie by ze11ez
The trick of Equilibrium's gunplay was to sell something every bit as if not more unrealistic than John Woo's shootouts, as something that feels sciency and clinically realistic. It's great style and it works but it is entirely unrealistic.
To_The_Past t1_iu0c4d7 wrote
Reply to comment by mediarch in Another post claiming someone has had enough of modern sound engineering. This time...me. by Elbradamontes
Unless you're watching stuff more than 15 years old, where almost everything sounds clear and comprehensible on regular home sound systens.
Nowadays if you sit in the wrong seat in the wrong theatre, well then it's your fault you couldn't hear half the dialogue in the latest Nolan movie.
To_The_Past t1_itbc9ex wrote
Reply to comment by CyroSwitchBlade in Why 2021 Stephen King’s The Stand altered the cast to be relatable by RSwoon
You need really deft and assured storytelling for jumping around like that to really work.
To_The_Past t1_ixurpmp wrote
Reply to comment by damniwishiwasurlover in All Quiet On The Western Front (2022) by Impressive-Sea3221
I didn't mind it veering from the book - yes it does so in a way that "Hollywoodizes" the story in unfortunate ways (despite how successfully grim and uncompromising it is on the surface).
But preposterous, Hollywoodised films that are bastardisations of subtler work can still be fantastic on their own terms. Ultimately I just thought it didn't hold together well in its own right, overall.
It was fantastically shot, the soundtrack was great, the acting was excellent, and there really are some scenes for the ages. When the tanks first appear, and you don't need one line of dialogue to communicate how absolutely alien a threat they are, that can hold up to any horror sequence in any film. So there's no shortage of talent on this project.
But the movie frequently dragged and seemed interminable... and not in the trenches under artillery fire, which would have been appropriate. It felt like it didn't quite know how to structure or focus itself and the scenes with high command were very thin.
Both 1931 and 79 are much better films.