NotTheGuyYouKill
Member
Nolan's the best.
I don't remember that...Inception was full of shaky cams. they filmed it on handhelds.
Thanks for posting this Jett. Also, this part caught my attention.
Q: Have you ever thought about communicating your feelings to the industry and other directors?
A: I’ve kept my mouth shut about this for a long time and it’s fine that everyone has a choice, but for me the choice is in real danger of disappearing. So right before Christmas I brought some filmmakers together and showed them the prologue for The Dark Knight Rises that we shot on IMAX film, then cut from the original negative and printed. I wanted to give them a chance to see the potential, because I think IMAX is the best film format that was ever invented.
Does anyone know who the filmmakers were?
We save a lot of money shooting on film and projecting film and not doing digital intermediates. In fact, I've never done a digital intermediate.
However sophisticated your computer-generated imagery is, if its been created from no physical elements and you havent shot anything, its going to feel like animation.... The problem for me is if you dont first shoot something with the camera on which to base the shot, the visual effect is going to stick out if the film youre making has a realistic style or patina. I prefer films that feel more like real life, so any CGI has to be very carefully handled to fit into that.
Stylistically, something that runs through my films is the shot that walks into a room behind a character, because to me, that takes me inside the way that the character enters. I think those point-of-view issues are very important.
Q: Another thing thats unique about your style, especially for such big films, is that you choose to work without a second unit. Why is that?
A: Let me put it this way: If I dont need to be directing the shots that go in the movie, why do I need to be there at all? The screen is the same size for every shot. The little shot of, say, a watch on someones wrist, will occupy the same screen size as the shot of a thousand people running down the street. Everything is equally weighted and needs to be considered with equal care, I really do believe that. I dont understand the criteria for parceling things off. Many action films embrace a second unit taking on all of the action. For me, thats odd because then why did you want to do an action film? Having said that, there are fantastic filmmakers who use second and third units successfully. So it all comes back to the question of defining what a director does. Each of us works in different ways. Its really helped me keep more of my personality in these big films. Theres a danger with big-action fare that the presence of the filmmaker is watered down, it can become very neutral, so Ive tried to keep my point of view in every aspect of these films.
Chris Nolan said:However sophisticated your computer-generated imagery is, if its been created from no physical elements and you havent shot anything, its going to feel like animation. There are usually two different goals in a visual effects movie. One is to fool the audience into seeing something seamless, and thats how I try to use it
Related to that, on the Dark Knight extras he mentioned that although he used CGI elements in the helicopter crash, he made a point of ending the sequence with a practical shot of the helicopter wreckage sliding down the street toward the camera shooting off sparks. He said that if you end the sequence with a real shot, then on a gut level the audience takes away from it that the entire sequence was real. I thought that was pretty cool.
Maybe he means stylistically/aesthetically?Shooting film looks better than Digital? lolWut?
It's certainly debatable in the 35mm vs RED choice, but IMAX format (65mm) is absolutely better than current digital recording technology. Its sole drawbacks are cost (about 3 times more expensive than regular film) and flexibility of shooting due to the size of the thing.Shooting film looks better than Digital? lolWut?
Eeeeehhh, I haven't scrutinised it fully, but the current RED cameras have that film-look down pretty well.Maybe he means stylistically/aesthetically?
I was shooting a very important scene with Guy Pearce in which his character is extremely upset, and its the lead-in to where Carrie-Anne Moss character takes Pearces shirt off and sees all the tattoos on his chest. That day, the financier of the film just happened to be visiting the set and was literally standing right behind me. We did a take that I thought was very good, and I knew we were out of time. So I asked Guy if he felt hed gotten it, and he said, No, we should do it again. I remember having a What do I do? moment. Do I let him do it and risk running over? Or do I insist that we move on, which Guy would have done, because hes flexible and professional? But I let him do another take, and thats the one used in the film
Nolan's real biggest secret revealed--
In the OP, its scary just how similar he looks to Kurt, on Glee.
Shooting film looks better than Digital? lolWut?
Whoa.. Is shooting digital really the norm now? I must have snoozed on movie tech during the last decade. Last I heard, Episode II and Spy Kids were experimentally shot digitally, and kinda stuck out like a sore thumb because of it.
Shooting film looks better than Digital? lolWut?
Yeah, so sterile...I'll take film's lurvely texture over digital's sterile look any day.
Fincher does what Nolan don'tcan't?
Yeah, so sterile...
[IMG/]http://i.imgur.com/9jXih.jpg?1[/IMG]
[IMG/]http://i.imgur.com/EHzGn.jpg?1[/IMG]
[IMG/]http://i.imgur.com/oJwPq.jpg?1[/IMG]
Fincher does what Nolan don'tcan't?
Digital grain can be terribly used though.
That nub who made that shite tron movie abused that stuff in a criminal fashion
Digital grain can be terribly used though.
That nub who made that shite tron movie abused that stuff in a criminal fashion
Digital grain can be terribly used though.
That nub who made that shite tron movie abused that stuff in a criminal fashion
I'll take film's lurvely texture over digital's sterile look any day.
IMAX > 3D. Yes I know there is also IMAX 3D.
I really will be surprised if a lot of 3D movies are being made in 10 years. I don't know anyone who likes them and everyone complains about the ticket prices for them.
Speaking of flat looking 3D movies. Webb's Spider-Man looks especially so in every non-CGI action effects scene that I saw.
man i'm so burned out on spider-man, could hardly give a fuck about that movie.
Shots fired at Avatar and other 3D movies, Me likes.Q: Speaking of technical changes, was there any pressure to do The Dark Knight Rises in 3-D?
A: Warner Bros. would have been very happy, but I said to the guys there that I wanted it to be stylistically consistent with the first two films and we were really going to push the IMAX thing to create a very high-quality image. I find stereoscopic imaging too small scale and intimate in its effect. 3-D is a misnomer. Films are 3-D. The whole point of photography is that its three-dimensional. The thing with stereoscopic imaging is it gives each audience member an individual perspective. Its well suited to video games and other immersive technologies, but if you're looking for an audience experience, stereoscopic is hard to embrace. I prefer the big canvas, looking up at an enormous screen and at an image that feels larger than life. When you treat that stereoscopically, and we've tried a lot of tests, you shrink the size so the image becomes a much smaller window in front of you. So the effect of it, and the relationship of the image to the audience, has to be very carefully considered. And I feel that in the initial wave to embrace it, that wasnt considered in the slightest.
Shots fired at Avatar and other 3D movies, Me likes.
I love this guy.
IMAX > 3D. Yes I know there is also IMAX 3D.
I really will be surprised if a lot of 3D movies are being made in 10 years. I don't know anyone who likes them and everyone complains about the ticket prices for them.
Every time I read an interview of the man, I like him even more.
That was refreshing to hear. It's why films like his will resonate in the future.
His view on Film being cheaper is interesting when I've heard much to the contrary. Is it only really cheaper with small-budget films? It's refreshing to see a director of large-scale films saying what he's saying about CGI and 3D, though.
*sigh* If only that good intuitive sense for filmmaking had kept making more movies like Memento. His points on all of those pretty much mirror my opinions almost exactly.
His approach to film making seems to be a very intimate one. Nolan just shot up there into my favorite directors list.
His stances on 3d and all that bullshit is why I'll see any Nolan movie despite having zero interest in the subject matter oftentimes (like batman).
Best action movie director of 2000s
Interesting stuff about the digital vs. film
He also has the right attitude about CGI
It's like the man says all the right things.
Wow, I've become a bit bored with his style/schtick, but what great answers. I always respect someone who is principled.
The problem with 3D is that it on the whole, makes the film look worse. Until every cinema has a giant 3DS screen I don't think it's worth it.
I like this guy.
the boss of all bosses
Nolan is the director we deserve. Great man.
Nolan's the best.
I tear'd up a bit when he defended film. Film should never die.
That's what I call a director.
Came here expecting pages of hatin'Love it. Great viewpoints.