Re: The old "next week" thread.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hGxxLpDHdnI
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hGxxLpDHdnI
Sorry to slide off on a tangent here but i was thinking when it comes to Peter Weir, The Way Back, is going to be his first project since Master and Commander 7 years ago. Now I don't know if any of you have been in that kind of situation were you have not worked on any project in a long time, but do you feel filmmaking is the kinda of think were you have to keep doing it in order to keep making good material or is it like riding a bike and that thought process just never really goes away?
I think it depends on the person, quality could get better or worse with a long hiatus. But I do think it is akin to bike riding and it's something you never lose. I think I feel that way because I also believe the best filmmakers are born filmmakers and not trained filmmakers, you have it or you don't.
Last edited by TrowaGP02a (2010-06-13 21:18:01)
The idea of innate talent has been added to my list of "Things I Stopped Believing In As I Got Older," aided in part by reading books like "Talent is Overrated" and "Outliers." I don't think people are born with particular talents. I do, however, think that there are certain traits which, in combination, can create the illusion of "talent." I'm guilty still of using the word "talent" because it's useful shorthand, but I don't mean some kind of congenital ability to frame a shot. That's silly.
The idea of innate talent in creative endeavors implies that some people will simply create things that don't suck without much effort at all. I don't think this is true at all. What I think separates the "talented" artists from the rest is the fact that when they have done something that sucks, they recognize that they've done something that sucks. And the really "talented" ones are the ones who have the metacognitive capacity to recognize why it sucks, and can focus their efforts next time on not doing the thing that made the work suck.
Admittedly this does require, I think, an above-average degree of intelligence, which can't be taught. More importantly, it requires a high degree of honest self-assessment, which is something that can be taught somewhat but depends significantly on the person's temperament.
But the specific skills of filmmaking -- how to frame a shot, how to structure a story, etc. -- are things that not only can but must be taught, as no one is born with this highly-specified, artificial skill.
Once you've learned the skills, I don't think you forget them. When we say people have "lost their touch," I think what's really happened is their capacity for honest self-assessment has been hindered.
It's not necessarily that they have forgotten how to frame a shot or tell a story, it's that they no longer have the capacity (or, perhaps, never did) to see the disconnect between what they're trying to achieve and what they've actually managed to achieve.
I guess I'm splitting hairs, but the pithy version of this is that I don't believe some people are born more talented, but I do believe they're born more competent.
So the real question, regarding the specific example, is: does Peter Weir still know good from bad, and does he still possess enough self-honesty to tell the difference? If so, then I don't think he's forgotten any of the specific skills that filmmaking entails.
Does Peter Weir still know good from bad, and does he still possess enough self-honesty to tell the difference?
Well, I've been questioning both of those since M&C was released, so I think the real question is, has seven years of vacation done him any good?
Ooh, CTHD. A wu xia movie with every imaginable cliche of the genre. Bamboo forest fight? Check! Tea house fight? Check! Gorgeous girl improbably disguised as a man? Check! Scroll of Awesome Technique? Check!
Still, I suppose if you haven't seen a wu xia film before this wouldn't have all been derivative and cringe-inducing.
CTHD was one of my favorite films for a long time... but it has dropped a bit in the last few years. I still think the chick fight is one of the best I've ever seen, and the overall atmosphere of the film (mostly thanks to the score) is phenomenal.
It seems a lot slower now than when I first loved it.
Ooh, CTHD. A wu xia movie with every imaginable cliche of the genre.
I always figured that was the point.
Well, it does depend on what market the film was aimed at. Here in the west, where most haven't paid much attention to wire-fu films, having all those cliches was a plus and a breath of fresh air. In Asia, though, it may have been the equivalent of a Hollywood by the numbers buddy cop film with a $300 million budget.
Details on the Independence Day broadcast.
It'll be available that night as a normal download.
I don't mind telling you guys that I'm really nervous about next week's show. Cause my love for "The Fountain" is just … ugh. That movie is up on a pedestal for me. It can do no wrong. I can have a lengthy and serious discussion about all its flaws, but then I'll pop in the DVD and absolutely lose my fucking shit during the very first scene and I'm hooked and I have to watch the whole thing.
My love for that movie is completely irrational. I'm out of my mind.
Oh geez...you might not want to listen to us tear it apart then...
Oh yeah! Gonna be good! The scene near the end where he gets eaten by the tree, with the music etc, is very spinetingly for me.
... I'm out of my mind.
I agree! Yeehaw!
...you might not want to listen to us tear it apart then...
And... then depression set in.
Oh sweetie he's teasing you, nobody has two television sets.
I've been here before but haven't posted much. I've been listening ever since geekza. enjoy you guy alot!
so what time is the fountain commentary? os it live like the independence day one?
Nope, The Fountain will be released either evening this coming Sunday or early in the day on Monday. (Probably Sunday.)
Welcome to the forums!
Thanks Fig. Listening to it now. When do you guys think you'll be doing the live thing again? Would be cool to be a part of that in a chat room!
ID4 was the second time we've done one, previously we did The Core about two months ago. Maybe again in a couple of months.
For a second, I was like 'they made an Alien 4?' and then I was like 'oh, so they did'.
An earlier script, which cut out all the craptastic Ripley-Newborn stuff, showed what might have been, featuring exciting chases through an hydroponic garden and a climax on Earth.
Still, the question is why? Just why?
Doesn't get the respect it deserves, Alien 4. The failed Ripley clones; playing that 'kill me' clone was a ballsy thing for Sigourney Weaver to do; Ron Perlman doing the monkey knife throwing thing (remember he was in Quest For Fire, he could probably stay in ape-man character all day if he wanted to); um...
Ok there's a lot of crap too.
17yrs since the last Alien movie... it just ain't right, man.
I've said it before and I'll say it again: "Alien Resurrection" was a perfectly serviceable first draft of "Firefly."
Didn't this commentary come out already?
Didn't this commentary come out already?
No Greg, you just insist on datamining and finding commentaries early.
Showoff.
Gregory Harbin wrote:Didn't this commentary come out already?
No Greg, you just insist on datamining and finding commentaries early.
Showoff.
No, I think what happened was I was sick one day and I whined to Fig for something to listen to.
I'm way too lazy to try to figure out where on the server the files are.
I honestly just thought Alien 4 had already been released.
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