Nobody knows what he's talking about but that tweet will still sell 3 million copies and be a critically acclaimed hit.
Nolan really lost his touch on story and character development lately.
it was really difficult to tell apart most of the soldiers :/
Nolan really lost his touch on story and character development lately.
Also it may sound like a strange nitpick (and I bet many will not agree with me for this) but it was really difficult to tell apart most of the soldiers :/
Does a film like this really need "story" or "character development" to begin with? I'm leaning towards the notion that there are certain kinds of films (or games) that simply don' need those elements.
Does a film like this really need "story" or "character development" to begin with? I'm leaning towards the notion that there are certain kinds of films (or games) that simply don't need those elements.
DOOM is perhaps the best FPS released in the last decade and it is aggressively anti-story and anti-character development. From the world of film, we can say the same about Mad Max as well.
Nah. I think he makes a pretty deliberate intention to not focus on thoughts of any of the characters outside of a few moments in the sail ship in that particular timeline
The main soldier for instance played by Christian Bale Jr. is a blank slate made to blend in with every other soldier out there. His struggle is theirs etc.
I wonder if the people pushing back against the "character development" complaints have actually seen the film? Because it's quite clear that Nolan focused quite a bit on deliberately having 3 separate narrative arcs which each cover a set of characters with every intention of developing them as much as possible in the space the film allows. It's not a "there is no story or character focus" film at all. It's just that like every Nolan film, there are weaknesses which show. I think some people get taken out of it more than others in Dunkirk because if something doesn't work for you, a significant part of the film fails to work. This is a Nolan film without any scifi hook or watercooler twist, so you're either in the experience or you're not, and wonky character work can definitely take some people out of that experience no matter how well executed the technical aspects are.
Nah. I think he makes a pretty deliberate intention to not focus on thoughts of any of the characters outside of a few moments in the sail ship in that particular timeline
The main soldier for instance played by Christian Bale Jr. is a blank slate made to blend in with every other soldier out there. His struggle is theirs etc.
And mad max gets shortchanged when people discuss development imo. That movie is always moving and has a lean script but all the main characters in there get some solid development over the runtime tbh. It's just done so seamlessly
I've seen it. I just don't think that was his intent.
We're dropped into moments of these character's lives to see this moment through their perspective. I didn't find anything "wonky" about it. We didn't have any Anne Hathaway "love" moments. Mark Rylance never makes a big speech about why they're headed to Dunkirk. People just need to be helped (okay, maybeis part of the reason) and he is going out there to help them. It's one of Nolan's most restrained and subtle films, IMO.his other dead son
I've seen it. I just don't think that was his intent.
The closest you get to an actual character arc is the son (Peter?) and his understandingof what soldiers go through. Mark Rylance doesn't have much of an arc or go through much of a change. Farrier/Hardy definitely doesn't. I don't think that Tommy really goes through any change--he's just trying to survive.
We're dropped into moments of these character's lives to see this moment through their perspective. I didn't find anything "wonky" about it. We didn't have any Anne Hathaway "love" moments. Mark Rylance never makes a big speech about why they're headed to Dunkirk. People just need to be helped (okay, maybeis part of the reason) and he is going out there to help them. It's one of Nolan's most restrained and subtle films, IMO.his other dead son
DOOM is perhaps the best FPS released in the last decade and it is aggressively anti-story and anti-character development. From the world of film, we can say the same about Mad Max as well.
I mostly agree with that except that even as Nolan's most restrained and subtle film, it has the elements of Nolan character writing that he cannot let go of. I mean, we shouldn't just shrug it off. The elements are all there and it was very visible to me. What is not communicated in words for some characters are communicated in actions, and while that's a huge improvement over his hammy dialogue (we get enough of that on the sail boat), it is no less on the nose.
I liked the movie a lot, and I think it mostly works really well. I'm just saying, we shouldn't have this lazy defense where we claim the movie isn't about character development at all and hence it cannot be critiqued for that. It's bullshit because I can point out every lazy character beat that he chooses to use to highlight a scene throughout the film. Did most of those bother me? No, because I'm accustomed to Nolan's style. Would it bother someone who doesn't like that sort of stuff at all? Absolutely.
But the absence of those moments also makes the film unrealistic
George is seriously injured and dies and neither of them raise there voice or confront the solider?
Like that made perfect sense in the moment for what that plot was aboutDuty and not wanting a shell shocked survivor to kill himself over guilt took precedent
Like that made perfect sense in the moment for what that plot was aboutDuty and not wanting a shell shocked survivor to kill himself over guilt took precedent
Nahthe father showed like zero worry for George and the son would have acted out more not just stayed quiet. I get that the intention was not trying to make the soldier feel guilty when he is already traumatized but the whole scene lacks a normal human reaction to the situation
Are you freakin' serious?
Can't really complain about that. I thought Apes was fantastic. Compleeeeeetely different types of movies, of course.
I need to see it again. Amazing cinematography and the story telling was very unique. Even though the characters rarely spoke; their actions spoke for them.
Was there actually a mole?
Nahthe father showed like zero worry for George and the son would have acted out more not just stayed quiet. I get that the intention was not trying to make the soldier feel guilty when he is already traumatized but the whole scene lacks a normal human reaction to the situation. Actually a lot of the movie suffers from this.
The mole is the structure they use as a pier for the naval destroyers, since they cannot land on the beach (unlike the civilian boats).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mole_(architecture)
I do think that Nolan intended that to be a pun on "mole" (i.e. the French soldier), however.
im luke warm on the movie TBH, but i actually dont get the complaints about (minor spoilers)the nazis. yes you dont see them, yes you never hear nazi you just hear enemy, and originally i didnt like that.
on thinking about it though i do. they are treated like a force of nature. they are coming, they cant be stopped, the brits are trapped and a storm is coming.
im luke warm on the movie TBH, but i actually dont get the complaints about (minor spoilers)the nazis. yes you dont see them, yes you never hear nazi you just hear enemy, and originally i didnt like that.
on thinking about it though i do. they are treated like a force of nature. they are coming, they cant be stopped, the brits are trapped and a storm is coming.
I think that captures that on-the-ground point of view pretty well though.I do think you do lose a very significant aspect of the horror of war when you treat the Nazis as some inhuman force of nature. But, as Nolan would probably argue, there are already plenty of war films that reckon with the humanity of the enemy and the terrible things war inflicts upon its combatants.
This is a Nolan thread alright. How long till we get the diagrams explaining how the different narratives of Dunkirk interconnect? Come on, Mondo has T-shirts to make.I think some people just don't get the movie