The Dark Knight Rises |OT| The Legend Ends (Warning: Unmarked Spoilers Within)

Status
Not open for further replies.
Policemen running. What else?

Look at how it's framed in the shot piece. Recentered on the face while the background is reconsidered as foreground information. It's called format layering. The alien shot you posted does the same. The format of the background forms into the foreground because of the recentering.
 
I'm really not understanding what I'm supposed to be mesmerized by in that shot. That there are several things in a single shot? I even read the article, and I still don't understand why someone would find it particularly awe inspiring.
Awe-inspiring? No. Interesting? Yes. It keeps your interest level up, because you've got multiple things to look at. It's really THAT simple. Nolan is a "one thing at a time" director, and this is boring.

That's pretty much what I've been saying for the last 5 posts or so.
 
There's a couple shots from TDKR I'd love to post right now, but a lot of them are from TV spots and featurettes, so I'll just refrain from this whole debate.

I think there's an element of truth to Jackass's criticism, but I think it's neglecting to note Nolan/Pfister's exponential growth in framing shots over the course of their filmographies. The transition from his first Hollywood production (BB), which I agree is rather boring in its shots after the first third, to his latest is noticeable.

Additionally, I think it's being a little too critical of Nolan's brand, which tends toward more of an architectural sort of technical composition, versus something more visceral and artistic.
 
Sure, but we're comparing it to The Amazing Spider-Man here.
The school fight scene in TASM is shot in a more interesting, more kinetic way than any action sequence Nolan has done. I'm not saying TASM is a masterpiece. It's just a more visually entertaining movie, if a dumber one.

But I don't watch superhero movies because they're smart.

Look at how it's framed in the shot piece. Recentered on the face while the background is reconsidered as foreground information. It's called format layering. The alien shot you posted does the same. The format of the background forms into the foreground because of the recentering.
I'm sorry, but I don't understand anything you're talking about. I'm saying the shot is still a "one thing at a time" type of shot. A flat, expository shot that carries only one visual information. Scared policemen running.
 
ibuSUetBfkX7zl.gif
 
Visually, ASM is fantastic for Webb's first outing. There is nothing groundbreaking though. The shots are very clean and one of the better examples of a comic book action transitioning to cinema. Easily the best out of the entire Marvel film lineup.

Nolan goes by the beat of his own drum. It's very hard to compare him to modern directors at the moment doing similar films.
 
Visually, ASM is fantastic for Webb's first outing. There is nothing groundbreaking though. The shots are very clean and one of the better examples of a comic book action transitioning to cinema. Easily the best out of the entire Marvel film lineup.

Nolan goes by the beat of his own drum. It's very hard to compare him to modern directors at the moment doing similar films.

Unfortunately Andrew Garfield is an abomination. I hate him.
 
Policemen running. What else?

Look at the Alien shots. In both of these shots, multiple things are shown at the same time. In the ones with the body on the left, you have two conversations simultaneously going on, one in the foreground right between two people about to examine the body, and one between another group who's in deep background. You've got the dead body in the shot because it helps to build tension (it has an alien in it, remember?). You've got the stressed out people in the background who don't know what the fuck is gonna happen, and you've got the two "scientists" in the front.

The other shot has the alien in the foreground, the genuine terror in the faces of the two people in the background, again the dead body on the right side of the screen, a constant reminder, you've got a similar "doorway" composition (repeated everywhere in Alien, from set design to shot composition), you've got the guy on the left to watch for because he's going to try and manipulate the alien...

That's a lot more information than just "COPS RUNNING SCARED".

You do know and realize that 90 % of the people dont give a shit about any of this. They just see the frame, the image, and that's it. Alien has some great cinematography, but those shots are nothing special.
 
Unfortunately Andrew Garfield is an abomination. I hate him.

I HATE YOU!

He fits the Spider-Man outfit nicely, liked the tall and lanky look. It's a toss up between him and Tobey as Peter Parker. I don't think either really do him justice, but the chemistry and emotional value of the series weighs heavily in Tobey's favor.
 
I HATE YOU!

He fits the Spider-Man outfit nicely, liked the tall and lanky look. It's a toss up between him and Tobey as Peter Parker. I don't think either really do him justice, but the chemistry and emotional value of the series weighs heavily in Tobey's favor.
He don't look or sound like a teenager in high school
 
Nolan goes by the beat of his own drum. It's very hard to compare him to modern directors at the moment doing similar films.
Go ahead and compare him to older directors if you want.

Frankenheimer, Alan J. Pakula, Friedkin... all of them share a sensibility with Nolan, for instance, and yet their movies were way better, and were visually incredible.
 
Also, for what it's worth, all this "one thing at a time" criticism of his cinematography falls to take into account that there is usually a lot of plot strands going on concurrently in the editing portion of Nolan's movies. Keeping things clean and simple visually makes it easier to digest as the story cuts back and forth between locations (and even time periods).
 
I HATE YOU!

He fits the Spider-Man outfit nicely, liked the tall and lanky look. It's a toss up between him and Tobey as Peter Parker. I don't think either really do him justice, but the chemistry and emotional value of the series weighs heavily in Tobey's favor.

There were about 8 or 9 times where I wanted to scream "SPIT IT OUT ALREADY!" at the screen. Most notably the scene on Gwen's roof. And before you say it, he WASN'T being "shy." He was being a tool. Someone being shy wouldn't act like that.

Agreed on the action though.
 
Oh and are some seriously comparing action scenes from TASM with Batman?! Seriously?! I love TASM, but it's a fricking superhero with superpowers, moving extremely fast, like a spider, it will obviously be much more energetic than a Batman movie, pointless remark.
 
You do know and realize that 90 % of the people dont give a shit about any of this. They just see the frame, the image, and that's it. Alien has some great cinematography, but those shots are nothing special.
Uh, maybe 90% of the people don't give a shit about any of this. But the 10% are actually the ones who know what they're talking about. 90% of people go to the movies for pretty stupid reasons. I'm not trying to address them right now.
Oh and are some seriously comparing action scenes from TASM with Batman?! Seriously?! I love TASM, but it's a fricking superhero with superpowers, moving extremely fast, like a spider, it will obviously be much more energetic than a Batman movie, pointless remark.
Have you read any comic book? Batman is athletic, and he does a shitload of awesome physical stuff in the comics. There's a way to shoot those scenes where you'll actually SEE it.
You never specified. You only said it was more visually entertaining.
You quoted me, dude. Just read that quote again.
 
Go ahead and compare him to older directors if you want.

Frankenheimer, Alan J. Pakula, Friedkin... all of them share a sensibility with Nolan, for instance, and yet their movies were way better, and were visually incredible.

I don't want to do that, don't think it's really fair to either of the directors and just leads to more empty arguments.

I'm pretty pleased with Nolan's filmography to date, that's all that really matters to me.

There were about 8 or 9 times where I wanted to scream "SPIT IT OUT ALREADY!" at the screen. Most notably the scene on Gwen's roof. And before you say it, he WASN'T being "shy." He was being a tool. Someone being shy wouldn't act like that.

Agreed on the action though.

Same. People mistake chemistry for awkwardness sometimes. Michael Cera would have looked good in some of those scenes.
 
Also, for what it's worth, all this "one thing at a time" criticism of his cinematography falls to take into account that there is usually a lot of plot strands going on concurrently in the editing portion of Nolan's movies. Keeping things clean and simple visually makes it easier to digest as the story cuts back and forth between locations (and even time periods).
Well then let him write a book. Then he'll have more time to explain all his shitty rules to us, I guess.
 
vGdYW.jpg


Works for me.
Watch the sequence again. The moment those two start talking together, Nolan switches to close-ups. And you'll never have more than two characters talking at the same time in this sequence. Basically, she goes away, and then he goes to talk with Arthur. That's EXACTLY what I am talking about.

Good set designs, boring scenes.
 
I'm not talking just about the G.A, but keep on being condescendent, it suits you well.

Wanna talk about gorgeous cinematography?!

The Dark Knight, Hugo, Prometheus, War Horse, The Social Network, Girl With Dragon Tattoo, Drive, The Grey, Warrior, on the top of my head and among recent examples.

I believe that Begins has fantastic cinematography as well, but the color palette is less spectacular than in TDK.
 
Well then let him write a book. Then he'll have more time to explain all his shitty rules to us, I guess.

I figured out what your problem is. You think every director has to be a visual auteur. Got it.

There's room for different types of directors. Just because Nolan has a particular skillset that leans toward storytelling doesn't make him a bad director. His cinematographic style is well-suited for that purpose.
 
Uh, maybe 90% of the people don't give a shit about any of this. But the 10% are actually the ones who know what they're talking about. 90% of people go to the movies for pretty stupid reasons. I'm not trying to address them right now.

Have you read any comic book? Batman is athletic, and he does a shitload of awesome physical stuff in the comics. There's a way to shoot those scenes where you'll actually SEE it.

You quoted me, dude. Just read that quote again.

Yes, I read comic books douche bag, now stop being a jackass.
 
I'm not questioning the movie, since I haven't seen it, but you guys are calling out on people who said Bane's mask/costume looks dumb. And it does.

Would it look bad in the movie - maybe not if it has a proper context. But you can only gauge that once you've seen the movie. I don't see why so many of you are so desperate at serving a pre-emptive crow...


I like his mask and costume, haven't said shit about anyone who thinks otherwise, though. I've only laughed at the Ledger comments from back in the day, and the person who thought Amazing Spider-man was going to be better than this based on seeing Bane's mask.
 
Watch the sequence again. The moment those two start talking together, Nolan switches to close-ups. And you'll never have more than two characters talking at the same time in this sequence. Basically, she goes away, and then he goes to talk with Arthur. That's EXACTLY what I am talking about.

Good set designs, boring scenes.

I agree there are way too many scenes where it's just closeups, and some scenes have too many cuts, especially some of the fight scenes. But what Nolan gets right in Begins far outweigh my criticisms.
 
I figured out what you're problem is. You think every director has to be a visual auteur. Got it.

There's room for different types of directors. Just because Nolan has a particular skillset that leans toward storytelling doesn't make him a bad director. His cinematographic style is well-suited for that purpose.
But he's NOT a good storyteller! That's my whole point! He's got a good story to tell, I guess, but they're told in a boring way. Stilted dialogue, stupid rulesets nobody cares about, empty characters that carry concepts on their shoulders... anyways, that's how I feel about him. I think he's just not a good storyteller, and that he's way more interested with screenwriting concepts than with visual ones. Which make him a bad storyteller because he's working in the film industry. Maybe he'd be a good screenwriter if he could fix that dialogue shit and have it directed by somebody else...

Isn't that what he's gonna do with the Batman franchise now? Maybe that's gonna be interesting.
 
Watched the featurette on the fighting, stunt stuff in Batman Begins, and Nolan talks about the fast cuts, and it's there to show this bestial, animal like fighting style of Batman, how fast he is, and to show less of him.
 
Watched the featurette on the fighting, stunt stuff in Batman Begins, and Nolan talks about the fast cuts, and it's there to show this bestial, animal like fighting style of Batman, how fast he is, and to show less of him.
So why did he do it before he became Batman, then, in the prison scene and in the Ra's Al Ghul training scenes?

Sounds like a stupid excuse to me. And, well, it doesn't work anyways. The only shot that works in this logic is the one where one of Falcone's dumb dudes gets dragged in the container.
 
Watched the featurette on the fighting, stunt stuff in Batman Begins, and Nolan talks about the fast cuts, and it's there to show this bestial, animal like fighting style of Batman, how fast he is, and to show less of him.

I liked the fights with Batman, in fact I miss those kind of scenes in Dark Knight. However scenes like when Bruce was fighting the prison guards...all the close-ups and cuts weren't really necessary.
 
the point of the fight scenes was typically to show it from the villains perspective and how Batman stalks them one by one gradually making them piss their pants. I love that shift in dynamic from your bogstandard superhero fight. You don't see shit because hes a friggin Ninja
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom