Total Members Voted: 15
Quote from: SecondClass on September 17, 2016, 11:17:48 AMyou can, but one reason makes the film needlessly pretentious and one doesn'tthis whole "you just say it as a synoynm for dislike" business is asinine - I would just say I disliked the movieI just don't see how it's even a problem if a director is pretentious while simultaneously having something to be pretentious about. If a movie kicks ass on every level, the director has a right to be proud of his work.You act like it's a bad thing or a criticism, when it's not. I can't think of a single conventionally good movie that prefers style over substance, and I don't even think preferring style over substance necessarily makes you pretentious.Pretentious is when someone makes a style-over-substance movie, yet claims otherwise. He claims that it has more substance than it does. But if a director makes a flashy action movie that's very stylish and self-indulgent, it's not pretentious if the director acknowledges that.
you can, but one reason makes the film needlessly pretentious and one doesn'tthis whole "you just say it as a synoynm for dislike" business is asinine - I would just say I disliked the movie
I guess that makes sense, but its still a valid criticism in a movie. One that goes out of it's way to be artsy for the sake of being artsy, without actually saying or doing anything substantial.
Quote from: SecondClass on September 17, 2016, 11:54:11 AMI guess that makes sense, but its still a valid criticism in a movie. One that goes out of it's way to be artsy for the sake of being artsy, without actually saying or doing anything substantial.I just think it shows an unwillingness to understand what the director was going for with a particular shot. It's easy to look at an "artsy" scene and think "Wow, this is so stupid and pretentious and doesn't add anything to the movie," but how hard are you trying to find meaning?Unless you're of the opinion that you shouldn't have to think to hard about movies, and I'd fundamentally disagree with that. You would probably despise Lars von Trier.
Quote from: TurquíaHiriente on September 17, 2016, 11:45:20 AMTDK was good, but not a great Batman film.what makes a good batman film
TDK was good, but not a great Batman film.
Quote from: Verbatim on September 17, 2016, 11:51:05 AMQuote from: TurquíaHiriente on September 17, 2016, 11:45:20 AMTDK was good, but not a great Batman film.what makes a good batman filmBeing more true to the character. Nolan's Batman was a martial arts novice, a largely incompetent businessman, had no detective skills to be found, and was constantly outwitted by villains. They're solid movies though; don't get me wrong. Batfleck is a better Batman, for example.
The Dark Knight because of the memes, but otherwise Interstellar.
Quote from: BaconShelf on September 17, 2016, 02:28:44 PMQuote from: challengerX on September 17, 2016, 02:12:17 PMThe Dark Knight because of the memes, but otherwise Interstellar.This is pretty much my answer. I kind of wish he hadn't tried to go into dimensional physics at the end though because it doesn't really work. It took a couple reads of the "Science of" book for me to really get a proper grasp on that stuff and it really does just hinge on lying back and accepting it rather than trying to poke holes in the logic.Shame, too, because I loved the film up until that point. The FX were on point both CG and practical, the soundtrack was phenomenal, the performances weren't half-bad, the accurate renditions of space travel, relativity and astrophysics were really good for me, but trying to make him survive the black hole really destroyed the amazing foundation everything had built. Having him die would have put a lot more impact on the ending of the film and leave people more satisified than the hoops jumped through to make him survive.Idunno, I don't like bullshit magitechhandwavium science in films that have already gone out of their way to be scientifically accurate. I'll accept the stuff on Earth and the wormhole (Though why saturn?) but the ghost thing was really pushing it.I mean, it is science fiction. And to be fair to the movie we don't really know what happens inside a black hole.
Quote from: challengerX on September 17, 2016, 02:12:17 PMThe Dark Knight because of the memes, but otherwise Interstellar.This is pretty much my answer. I kind of wish he hadn't tried to go into dimensional physics at the end though because it doesn't really work. It took a couple reads of the "Science of" book for me to really get a proper grasp on that stuff and it really does just hinge on lying back and accepting it rather than trying to poke holes in the logic.Shame, too, because I loved the film up until that point. The FX were on point both CG and practical, the soundtrack was phenomenal, the performances weren't half-bad, the accurate renditions of space travel, relativity and astrophysics were really good for me, but trying to make him survive the black hole really destroyed the amazing foundation everything had built. Having him die would have put a lot more impact on the ending of the film and leave people more satisified than the hoops jumped through to make him survive.Idunno, I don't like bullshit magitechhandwavium science in films that have already gone out of their way to be scientifically accurate. I'll accept the stuff on Earth and the wormhole (Though why saturn?) but the ghost thing was really pushing it.
Memento from a stylistic sense; it's basically the perfect film for a media class to study.I'm a massive fan of Inception and Dark Knight though. Far better films as far as mainstream media is concerned.
Probably Memento, though I haven't seen it.
Quote from: Verbatim on September 17, 2016, 10:16:14 AMProbably Memento, though I haven't seen it.Appearance of intelligence > Intelligence