WrenchNinja
Member
Hope the new directors have a better eye for action
Who cares, honestly? Just make good episodes and we're all good.
Don't care who's behind it cause I trust Marvel to pick people who can execute on their vision and make badass characters and stories of these comics i've loved for decades.
Bunch of female directors doesn't change that at all. Would be really cool to find a female director that i could point to like the Russo Bros in the action department. Just like really adept at portraying kinetic and clear HARD superhero action?
Anyone have a name for someone like that that i could go youtube?
You realize this is the same argument that gamergaters used. Who cares about all this PC nonsense? I just want good games. Or remember when games were just about having fun? I heard it before.
This stuff does matter, it goes beyond just your entertainment.
anecdotes! I have them too. A guy I saw Shin Godzilla with talked about how JJ had the better empathetic character. Daredevil certainly has the higher budget and fight coeography, which is a lot easier to hype up than "good show about PTSD and relationship abuse"
It sounds like you really don't like the actress, or the characters she plays? she was a tragic character in breaking bad and that you're glad her arc ended kinda disturbs me
Don't understand the JJ negativity in here. I thought it was amazing throughout
It does go beyond one's entertainment but it isn't doing many people favors when the final product could be subpar. I don't want to bring up all the misogyny and bullshit with Gamergate because God knows people will force any issue into a simplistic black-white scenario with that shit but I don't think it's ridiculous to want quality, especially in the context of handling subjects like rape, sexuality, assault, and PTSD that Jessica Jones handled in season 1.
Loads of shows are along the format of True Detective now. Mr Robot, The Knick, Utopia, Black Mirror, House Of Cards, and a dozen more where the direction is evident or award-worthy and the team is usually the same. My point isn't that it'll be used as a sell point but that people do care about directors of tv show episodes.
It should. Every movie should hire the best for their vision, even if the vision is having an all female or black cast. It's all cool when done right, and cynical when done to make a point, like Yahoo firing male staff for no reason to make room for female staff.
Yea im in the same boat about this kind of stuff, if somehow I get a job in usa I dont want that the reason I got hired is because im mexican but because im good for the job.
You mean...like Jessica Jones Season 1?
But seriously, these "they should hire the most qualified person for the job!" arguments are tired as fuck and appear every time a minority gets the opportunity to do anything. I like how it's automatically assumed they're not qualified to do the job because they're all women. When it's all men? Nobody says anything and it's perfectly normal.
What? The Knick is probably the only show there which fits the comparison with True Detective. Can you even really name a single director from House of Cards Seasons 2-4 who is an actual attraction as a known director? I can't say I can name a single director of Mr Robot offhand or remember a single time where a director was mentioned in relation to people recommending me that show. Same with Utopia (the UK series I assume?).
Direction is not unimportant on TV, but the fact is that it is often not the focus of attention or a big selling point and that remains true today. You might have a big Hollywood director launching a new show by producing it and directing the pilot, but by and large most viewers have no idea who directs the majority of TV nor do they care. When people talk about Lost, how often do you hear people talk about Jack Bender? Almost never? He directed all the major episodes of the series!
When it was handled in season 1, it was done well. The other half of the season with the subplots and whatnot was a typical ABC Television trash fire.
I think these arguments and comments are only brought up when it's announced that "only women are going to make/direct/star/etc in this movie!" Look back at the GAF thread for when Patty Jenkins was announced as director for Wonder Woman. That thread is almost devoid of that shit. The thread for Ryan Coogler directing Black Panther is pretty much the same. It's a discussion of the director's past work and how it would fit the movie.
People are responding with the "I just hope they find the most qualified person to do the job" not to be antagonistic. I remember similar comments in the True Detective threads when Fukunaga wasn't returning for Season 2.
Anything less than a response of applause to the announcement of Jessica Jones' second season having only female directors isn't a detraction.
But there's no final product to critique, so why should anybody be concerned about TV directors. i literally have never heard people concerned about TV directors. TV showrunners and writers, sure. But TV directors? I don't know, son. Sounds like a detraction.
I dunno. Seems a little sketchy to me. Luke Cage gonna have all black directors? Iron Fist all white males?
I'd add Breaking Bad to this list. Rian Johnson episodes were kind of a big deal. There was quite a buzz in the final season when he was coming back to the series to direct "Ozymandias."
It really bothers me that they feel the need to make push female directors on female projects. Why not instead put more female directors across all of your shows, and keep each one diverse? Why does the Black Panther movie need to have a black director. Why couldnt Dr Strange or something else? Just seems like marketing bs to me unless I'm missing a reason
This is what you're going to get with an announcement on anything with a decent profile (a Netflix Marvel show is kind of a big deal) and a forum thread specifically created to discuss said announcement.
We're only discussing directors because directors is the topic brought specifically to us.
When it was handled in season 1, it was done well. The other half of the season with the subplots and whatnot was a typical ABC Television trash fire.
I think these arguments and comments are only brought up when it's announced that "only women are going to make/direct/star/etc in this movie!" Look back at the GAF thread for when Patty Jenkins was announced as director for Wonder Woman. That thread is almost devoid of that shit. The thread for Ryan Coogler directing Black Panther is pretty much the same. It's a discussion of the director's past work and how it would fit the movie.
People are responding with the "I just hope they find the most qualified person to do the job" not to be antagonistic. I remember similar comments in the True Detective threads when Fukunaga wasn't returning for Season 2.
Except what is the point of saying that? As if you assume the people in charge of hiring these directors aren't concerned about how qualified the people they're hiring are to do the job.
Do you regularly spend your time questioning hiring decisions? Like every time you hear someone got hired you think to yourself "Well, I just hope he was the most qualified person to do the job"?
Does it keep you up at night not knowing for sure if the people hired for whatever was the most qualified person to do the job?
I just got an idea for a website: a ranking of TV directors sorted by "most qualified" so people have something concrete to point to whenever TV episode directors are announced.
Yea im in the same boat about this kind of stuff, if somehow I get a job in usa I dont want that the reason I got hired is because im mexican but because im good for the job.
I don't think that's a good comparison to Knick and True Detective at all. Rian Johnson on Breaking Bad is more akin to Miguel Sapochnik on Game of Thrones. An episode director who wasn't noticed until he did a good episode on that series, and fans who knew about it looked forward to future episodes by the same director. But no one would think of Breaking Bad as a Rian Johnson show in the same way they think of Knick and True Detective S1 as Steven Soderbergh and Cary Fukunaga shows. That's just not how it works on TV.
I feel like people who keep bringing this up are imagining that TV directors are selected through some kind of aptitude tests or something. To begin with, TV are often playgrounds for directorial debuts.
Except what is the point of saying that? As if you assume the people in charge of hiring these directors aren't concerned about how qualified the people they're hiring are to do the job. As if they hired these people because they were women and just hope for the best.
Do you regularly spend your time questioning hiring decisions? Like every time you hear someone got hired you think to yourself "Well, I just hope he was the most qualified person to do the job"?
Does it keep you up at night not knowing for sure if the people hired for whatever was the most qualified person to do the job?
I just got an idea for a website: a ranking of TV directors sorted by "most qualified" so people have something concrete to point to whenever TV episode directors are announced.
Johnson's not as synonymous with his series as Soderbergh or Fukanaga, but he's a much bigger deal the Sapochnik. He made Looper in the middle of Breaking Bad and Brick several years before. "Ozymandias" is considered to be one the best episodes of modern television.
You're assuming that the execs who hire these directors are infallible and completely committed to the final artistic quality of the product.
Shit, man. Every time there's a casting decision of an actor or an actress we're doing the same thing - questioning the hiring decision and whether or not the actor can pull it off. I don't see why it's so bizarre to you for people to do the same for a director.
I was going to cover this, but Duckroll got it. Essentially, you can quite clearly see a number of white male directors getting their first shot at directing multi-million dollar films, but minority and women directors don't get the same shot.
Seth Grahame-Smith was slated to direct the Flash, despite having never directed a film. Ever. We was later replaced by Rick Famuyiwa (black), who at least had five films under his belt. This is the kind of unequal playing ground that this hiring is attempting to correct.
If what you're saying is true, then why hasn't anybody name dropped a specific director that they're concerned with due to their previous work or lack of experience?
In this thread? Probably because none have been announced. Hence the comment "I just hope they hire who's best." When there's an actual announcement regarding who's directing an episode, I imagine there will be a "I hope she can pull it off" the same way people said it about Peyton Reed when it was announced he was taking over Ant-Man from Edgar Wright.
C'mon now, you're being way too naive.
If that's the excuse you want to use for not acknowledging the reality of the situation, go for it man. Fight that fight against the cruel message board villain you've dreamed up in your head.
I love the underlying assumption that they can't be hiring the best because there's no men involved as if all those all male directed shows just hired the best but here they must be settling for lesser talent...
I love the underlying assumption that they can't be hiring the best because there's no men involved as if all those all male directed shows just hired the best but here they must be settling for lesser talent...
I don't know. He's hardly the exception. A number of young white male directors have been getting big breaks going from smaller stuff to franchise blockbusters. Josh Trank and Gareth Edwards are just like Trevorrow for example. We also see VFX guys like Tim Miller and Robert Stromberg getting to helm films. A huge Disney blockbuster in Stromberg's case. So many opportunities for talented white men in Hollywood.
How would you judge and rank this? Be detailed.So these are the top eight directors available to hire in terms of talent?
How would you judge and rank this? Be detailed.
This is great, especially since it seemed the directors were hired primarily based on merit, which is really the way it should be. I hope this show ends up great and that more doors are opened in the future.
Also was not aware until this thread that Elisa Maza's voice actress from Gargoyles (Salli Richardson) was also a director.
LOL That's how you know Salli Richardson?
Yes. I'm aware she has quite a lot more acting work on her resume, but none of it I've actually seen. I knew she was an actor but not a director as well.