posted
I'm getting to the point where I feel that all I see offered from new movies is bad cinematograpy, direction, acting, writing, and CGI.
I just got done watch Cop 1988, you can't do better picture, lighting, or cinematography wise.
Plus I would put James Woods up agianst any actor from nowadays. All actors from nowadays are pretty much boy men, male models with zero personality.
Posts: 121 | Registered: Sep 2010 | Site Updates: 0
| IP: Logged |
posted
I've pretty much given up on Hollywood. But since my cinematic scope and taste is broader than that, I can still enjoy new flicks from asia and europe (although they are both steadily going downhill too).
Posts: 1278 | From: Denmark,Europe | Registered: Dec 2007 | Site Updates: 3
| IP: Logged |
posted
Each to their own I guess but I'm loving cinema as much today as I did in the 80's.
Directors Like Nolan, Eastwood, Fincher, the Coens etc continue to make quality movies that are (almost) always worth the price of a cinema ticket.
Also, I don't care what anyone says, I still look forward to the summer blockbusters and don't automatically slate remakes / reboots / sequels just because its 'cool' to do so. My home DVD collection is almost upto 1500 and will continue to expand with both 'classic' and 'modern' movies.
I think to state that you have just given up 'new' movies shows a very narrow minded, 'broad-brush' point of view in the same way that if I said i disliked a certain hamburger I would just give up on ALL meat.
Just my opinion like...
Noms 2011
Posts: 2517 | From: Living in oblivion. Third floor up. Nice views from the window.... | Registered: May 2004 | Site Updates: 4
| IP: Logged |
quote:Originally posted by Jack Gannon: I'm getting to the point where I feel that all I see offered from new movies is bad cinematograpy, direction, acting, writing, and CGI.
I just got done watch Cop 1988, you can't do better picture, lighting, or cinematography wise.
Plus I would put James Woods up agianst any actor from nowadays. All actors from nowadays are pretty much boy men, male models with zero personality.
Jack, I have to agree with ya. As a kid in the 80's i would go to the cinemas almost weekly and eavery week there would be another classic to discover.
I now might only go to the movies once a year, and I love going to the movies. I won't hardly go now because there is hardly anything decent coming out. Yes there have been a some good movies that have come out in the last decade but comparatively few compared to the 70's and 80's.
Very few film makers seem to be interested in making something unique, or it is unique but ridiculous. I am sick of a movie coming out like Transformers or some garbage like that. Give us something clever and original. Hang on a sec, let's just cash in on a remake. Hearing about Arthur being remade with that talentless hack Russel Brand made me want to vomit violently.
Posts: 2586 | From: Defrauding the company from abroad | Registered: Jan 2010 | Site Updates: 24
| IP: Logged |
posted
i agree with Noms. well said. i also look forward to summer blockbusters, i love all kinds of movies.
regarding remakes - while i don't see the need half the time, especially when it comes to beloved 80s movies (that's just my knee-jerk reaction, mainly).. if the preview looks alright, i will check them out and form my own opinion.
Posts: 4807 | Registered: Oct 2002 | Site Updates: 39
| IP: Logged |
posted
i havent seen a good trailer outside of the pirates movies, in along time.
Posts: 1605 | From: Lake Chicamocomico | Registered: Feb 2011 | Site Updates: 0
| IP: Logged |
posted
I can go either way on this one. While I haven't given up completely on movies nowadays. I don't go to the cinema nearly as much as I used to. And I also have very little use for NetFlix. A new movie here and there still may spark my interest, but it's a rarity nowadays.
Posts: 1802 | From: Planet Druidia | Registered: Jan 2009 | Site Updates: 3
| IP: Logged |
posted
i liked tron legacy, they could have casted better for son of flynn, but still good.
Posts: 1605 | From: Lake Chicamocomico | Registered: Feb 2011 | Site Updates: 0
| IP: Logged |
posted
devo, that new nightmare with jackie earl haley is just wrong on so many levels.
robert englund is freddy. you just cant replace him like all those other slashers.
on a side note, was it just me, or was character devolpment in that movie non existant?
Posts: 1605 | From: Lake Chicamocomico | Registered: Feb 2011 | Site Updates: 0
| IP: Logged |
kevdugp73
He's eating after dark again....
Member # 5978
posted
I still love going to the movies....a nice escape...add some popcorn, a root beer slushie and my wife snuggling into my arm to keep warm (OK...that was a bit sappy)....a very nice night out. I think it's important to remember that as adults, in my opinion, movies just don't capture your heart like they did when you were a kid, and you were typically far less willing to be critical of a movie....you just didn't look for that stuff....or at least I didn't. But there are still lots of modern movies I've seen and love and will watch more than once....In America, Of Mice And Men, Moll Flanders, Sleepers, he Green Mile, The Shawshank Redemption....the Star Trek prequel and most of the super hero movies have also captured my attention....Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings....love em all.....
Posts: 2148 | From: Nova Scotia, Canada | Registered: Aug 2007 | Site Updates: 0
| IP: Logged |
pettyfan
Livin' next door to the Klopeks
Member # 2260
posted
I agree with Noms and Ronnie. I'd get bored if I didn't watch new movies...I mean, I love movies from the 80s and 90s, but I can't watch the same ones over and over and over. I look forward to the summer blockbusters too.
Posts: 2902 | From: Home Sweet Home | Registered: Jan 2004 | Site Updates: 0
| IP: Logged |
pettyfan
Livin' next door to the Klopeks
Member # 2260
posted
And as for remakes, I like to form my own opinion first. Personally I liked the new Nightmare on Elm St movie, but others, like the Fog, sucked.
Posts: 2902 | From: Home Sweet Home | Registered: Jan 2004 | Site Updates: 0
| IP: Logged |
posted
So you're a writer, director, actor and makeup artist. Yet you hate modern movies?
I personally like to sit and relax on my couch and watch modern dvd's with the hubby. Once in a blue moon we will go out to the theater. He wants to see the new Pirates movie when it comes to our theaters.
Posts: 2287 | From: Pittsburgh | Registered: Nov 2008 | Site Updates: 0
| IP: Logged |
posted
Simply because someone is a writer, director etc, does not mean that it's strange to hate modern movies. He doesn't actually say that he hates modern movies but I think he is trying to say that movies from today are comparatively worse in many respects (acting, writing...).
I think Jack loves the old movies so much and does not see those qualities in today's films. Perhaps Jack as a writer, director etc would aim at bringing back some of those lost qualities or bringing a certain quality to films that are in his opinion lacking from modern movies.
[ 11. May 2011, 09:23: Message edited by: Bernie_Lomax ]
Posts: 2586 | From: Defrauding the company from abroad | Registered: Jan 2010 | Site Updates: 24
| IP: Logged |
most of the great directors out in hollywood are fans of stuff from previous generations
like de palma with alfred hitch
i personally think the style in which movies are made cant get any better than the mid 80's period, all across the board
honest opinion, i was and still remain more impressed with the special effects from star trek the motion picture than the majority of effects i have seen in modern movies.
Posts: 1605 | From: Lake Chicamocomico | Registered: Feb 2011 | Site Updates: 0
| IP: Logged |
posted
Lomax is absolutely right; I can’t say it any better than he did. That is my goal.
I never said I hate new films, just that so many of them stink these days that I'm beginning to lose hope in modern film makers.
Posts: 121 | Registered: Sep 2010 | Site Updates: 0
| IP: Logged |
most of the great directors out in hollywood are fans of stuff from previous generations
like de palma with alfred hitch
i personally think the style in which movies are made cant get any better than the mid 80's period, all across the board
honest opinion, i was and still remain more impressed with the special effects from star trek the motion picture than the majority of effects i have seen in modern movies.
De Palma and Htichcock is a classic example. I am assuming you are referring to Body Double / Rear Window. Great example.
Special effects / make up: I refer to this often, but An American Werewolf in London shows some severe talent that is honestly, very hard to comprehend. The scene were David metamorphosises is a masterpiece of cinema and is still unparalleled by today's efforts.
Posts: 2586 | From: Defrauding the company from abroad | Registered: Jan 2010 | Site Updates: 24
| IP: Logged |
posted
i thought that werewolf was great work too. cgi adds to movies but also robs us of great art
Posts: 1605 | From: Lake Chicamocomico | Registered: Feb 2011 | Site Updates: 0
| IP: Logged |
posted
My biggest problem with CGI is that it seems like a cheat code in a video game. Does it get you from one level to the next? Sure but at the cost of movie magic. One can no longer watch a film and say how the heck did they do that, now you just know it was computers.
The other aspect of CGI is that it still looks animated to me, it may be good animation at times, but nothing more than animation. I just miss that feeling of seeing an actual effect, and the payoff of seeing it work.
Posts: 121 | Registered: Sep 2010 | Site Updates: 0
| IP: Logged |
posted
Indy 4 with the ants is probably a good example.
Posts: 2586 | From: Defrauding the company from abroad | Registered: Jan 2010 | Site Updates: 24
| IP: Logged |
posted
I am not a fan of CGI either. Too many movies use too much of it. A little bit is okay, but most go overboard. I can appreciate makeup though. Have you seen Being Human (the U.S. version)- I think they do a decent job on the werewolf makeup.
Posts: 2287 | From: Pittsburgh | Registered: Nov 2008 | Site Updates: 0
| IP: Logged |
posted
I hate the US version of Being Human, love the BBC version.
Posts: 2008 | From: Dixieland | Registered: Oct 2008 | Site Updates: 0
| IP: Logged |
posted
Indy 4 also the vehicles all looked fake, and so did the cliff, the two cars were running side by side along. You know Mat Paintings is such a more realistic, or if not am more neat looking effect in my book.
The scorpions.
And the vehicle that was chopping through the trees, was proably the most CGI looking.
That movie was one big CGI fest, I award it not points and may god have mercy on it's soul.
Posts: 121 | Registered: Sep 2010 | Site Updates: 0
| IP: Logged |