Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

Rob wrote:

Question: the person(s) who create Cinema Sins are not the same person(s) who create Honest Trailers, correct? Obviously they're different YT channels, but these are two wholly different content creators, right?

You are correct. The Honest Trailers creators are of a group called Screen Junkies. I believe Cinema Sins is self-titled.

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Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

Doctor Submarine wrote:

Just like bad art is still art, bad criticism is still criticism. It really doesn't matter if they intend it to be something else. It is what it is.

I think the problem might be that you're being too didactic about this and thereby missing the point of what folks like fireproof78 are getting at. I'll put it to you like this:

The Office. The Office is about a despicable guy who is in charge of a company of people and comedy ensues from just how bad he is at his job. If there were a handful of viewers (and let's be realistic here, in the grand scheme of things, it is a drop in the bucket compared to the majority of people who understand that it's just a sitcom and not a guideline for real life) who ran their businesses and treated their employees according to what they saw on the show, what then? Keeping in mind we're talking about a small margin of people, not a growing epidemic, do we shun the writers of The Office? Do we encourage people not to watch the show or do we shake our heads at the dumb asses who can't think for themselves and ignore them?

I feel that similarly, shows like Cinema Sins are "criticizing" movies (again, even ones they like) "badly" (meaning hyperbolic nitpicking) on purpose, for comedic effect.

If Honest Trailers makes a joke about Gravity being "90 minutes of bumping into things" and then accompany that visual with pinball sound effects and someone agrees the movie is in fact that then oh well. You win some, you lose some. No matter how good Gravity is (and I do love it, myself) not everyone is going to feel the same way, just as no matter how bad Transformers 2 is, some people will un-ironically love it and that's okay. Honest Trailers didn't pull an Inception and plant the idea in that person's head that they didn't like the movie, it's possible that it just allowed them to articulate why.

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Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

johnpavlich wrote:
Doctor Submarine wrote:

Just like bad art is still art, bad criticism is still criticism. It really doesn't matter if they intend it to be something else. It is what it is.

I think the problem might be that you're being too didactic about this and thereby missing the point of what folks like fireproof78 are getting at. I'll put it to you like this:

The Office. The Office is about a despicable guy who is in charge of a company of people and comedy ensues from just how bad he is at his job. If there were a handful of viewers (and let's be realistic here, in the grand scheme of things, it is a drop in the bucket compared to the majority of people who understand that it's just a sitcom and not a guideline for real life) who ran their businesses and treated their employees according to what they saw on the show, what then? Keeping in mind we're talking about a small margin of people, not a growing epidemic, do we shun the writers of The Office? Do we encourage people not to watch the show or do we shake our heads at the dumb asses who can't think for themselves and ignore them?

I feel that similarly, shows like Cinema Sins are "criticizing" movies (again, even ones they like) "badly" (meaning hyperbolic nitpicking) on purpose, for comedic effect.

If Honest Trailers makes a joke about Gravity being "90 minutes of bumping into things" and then accompany that visual with pinball sound effects and someone agrees the movie is in fact that then oh well. You win some, you lose some. No matter how good Gravity is (and I do love it, myself) not everyone is going to feel the same way, just as no matter how bad Transformers 2 is, some people will un-ironically love it and that's okay. Honest Trailers didn't pull an Inception and plant the idea in that person's head that they didn't like the movie, it's possible that it just allowed them to articulate why.


Thanks, johnpavlich, that is helpful. I feel like I'm not articulating this well. Here's hoping the podcast goes better.

More to my point, is not that it is bad criticism, is that it is being done for comedy. Therefore, it should not be taken seriously.

I'm really not trying to be a dick about this, so I will leave it at that.

God loves you!

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Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

Doctor Submarine wrote:

Just like bad art is still art, bad criticism is still criticism. It really doesn't matter if they intend it to be something else. It is what it is.

When you say, "It is what it is," I think you're saying that it is what it is interpreted to be, and not what it intends to be. The problem is that nothing is going to be interpreted in the same way by everyone. If some people miss it, as Pav was saying, then they don't really understand what it is.

Some art is so screwed up that no one can decipher the intent, and at that point I would say that it's not what the artist intended for it to be; but I would say that CS and HT are what they are intend to be. Some people will miss it, but if they attempted to spoon-feed their intentions to everyone, it would detract from the entertainment.

EDIT: Not to give CS and HT too much credit, they're definitely not perfect. They do miss the target sometimes.

Last edited by Sam F (2014-06-29 19:08:42)

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Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

If Cinema Sins are doing those videos for comedic effect then they've got a whole different problem in that they're not fucking funny.

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Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

Sam F wrote:
Doctor Submarine wrote:

Just like bad art is still art, bad criticism is still criticism. It really doesn't matter if they intend it to be something else. It is what it is.

When you say, "It is what it is," I think you're saying that it is what it is interpreted to be, and not what it intends to be. The problem is that nothing is going to be interpreted in the same way by everyone. If some people miss it, as Pav was saying, then they don't really understand what it is.

Some art is so screwed up that no one can decipher the intent, and at that point I would say that it's not what the artist intended for it to be; but I would say that CS and HT are what they are intend to be. Some people will miss it, but if they attempted to spoon-feed their intentions to everyone, it would detract from the entertainment.

EDIT: Not to give CS and HT too much credit, they're definitely not perfect. They do miss the target sometimes.

Exactly. They might not be perfect in their efforts, but I think that they state their purpose and try to do it.

C-Spin wrote:

If Cinema Sins are doing those videos for comedic effect then they've got a whole different problem in that they're not fucking funny.

Further proof that comedy is subjective. Honestly, as part of this thread I keep going back to SFDebris comments on commenting on bad comedy. Comedy, as an art form, is subjective. I love British and dead pan comedy, but that isn't for everyone-my parents can't stand it and my wife doesn't get it. Similarly, I do not appreciate slap stick or groin shots. Things like Jack Ass are not funny to me.

Like I said, it is subjective.

God loves you!

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Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

But again, it makes absolutely no difference what they "intend" it to be. What matters is what's there.

If I serve you a steak dinner and you say, "Mmm, this is a delicious steak!" and I say, "Actually, I intended it to be salmon," that doesn't change the fact that I made a steak.

"The Doctor is Submarining through our brains." --Teague

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Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

If you serve wine that you intended to be water, though, it means you're the Messiah.

I write stories! With words!
http://www.asstr.org/~Invid_Fan/

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Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

Actually that just means you're a shitty cook.

Also to me that seems like a bizarre twisting of what's actually happening here.

I make a lovely salmon dinner and serve it to you, you complain that you didn't want steak, I say, "I didn't make steak, it's salmon.", but you storm off saying you're sick of all this steak bullshit, you just wanted a nice salmon dinner.

I didn't do anything wrong, I made a nice salmon dinner, you're the one who decided to see it as a steak dinner. Should I get fired because I gave you exactly what i said I was going to?

Last edited by BigDamnArtist (2014-06-29 20:57:55)

ZangrethorDigital.ca

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Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

I don't know what this thread is about anymore, so I'm looking forward to The Intermission even more than I already was.

Edit: Okay. So.
Film criticism tends to be film analysis. Though plotholecriticism takes this critiquing literally.
It is ostensibly offered as 'comedy', though if that is the case then its level of success is up for debate, as it often veers towards needlessly petty and trivial.
Some people take this as it seems to be intended, as comedy.
Others take this as legitimate criticism, so perpetuating a kneejerk culture of "here are trivial problems that I can use to dismiss the film with so that I don't need to engage in intellectual criticism". This is neither ideal, nor healthy, though people are free to do/interpret as they wish.

We all seem to like movies. But we don't like it when people trivialize what it takes to like a movie.

Is that where we are with this?

Last edited by Herc (2014-06-29 21:03:56)

Disclaimer: if you dislike the tone of a post I make, re-read it in a North/East London accent until it sounds sufficiently playful smile

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Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

Doctor Submarine wrote:

But again, it makes absolutely no difference what they "intend" it to be. What matters is what's there.

Yes, and I'm saying that what's there is what they intended, it's just misinterpreted by some people, just like most everything. But I know what they intended is there because it's plain to the people who get it. Like BDA was saying.

Last edited by Sam F (2014-06-29 21:07:27)

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Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

Kind of? We're also dealing with the subjectivity of what qualifies to some as trivial and important to others.

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113

Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

Okay.

I don't wanna get bogged down in semantics (I just found out that I am older right now than Laura Dern was in Jurassic Park, and I'm having an existential crisis and I don't feel like I have the time for semantics), but:

I think the thing that makes their criticism seem trivial to me, is that they almost-exclusively offer plotholecriticism in a vacuum. Sure, some films are irredeemable messes (Catwoman, UGH), but exclusively catalouging all the faults of a film which does SO many other things right (e.g. Die Hard) just comes across as petty.
But then we come back to the 'it's offered as comedy' thing. Maybe I just don't like certain American ways of presenting things? That loud, brash way (tone of voice is so much, ya know?) which kinda reinforces my perception that they haven't thought very hard beyond the surface of things.

Ergh. Starting to get cyclic. Oops.

Last edited by Herc (2014-06-29 21:20:31)

Disclaimer: if you dislike the tone of a post I make, re-read it in a North/East London accent until it sounds sufficiently playful smile

Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

Sure, but what about the idea that these guys LIKE Die Hard? Aren't they just being cheeky? "I kid. I kid because I love." smile

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Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

Herc wrote:

...but exclusively catalouging all the faults of a film which does SO many other things right (e.g. Die Hard) just comes across as petty.

But's that's their entire schtick "No movie is without sin."

A large part of Cinemas Sins does is go, alright this is a movie everyone loves, let's see how many of our "sins" we can find. And on that aspect I find it kind of interesting, because it's actually leveling the playing field a bit, "Every movie has these, but some of them are good and some of them are bad."

Which hey, the optimist in me says maybe a few people in the audience will wonder why some movies are considered bad and some are good even though they all have these "sins", and go look deeper.

/Not sure how much it actually adds to the discussion at hand, but that's just something that occured to me.

ZangrethorDigital.ca

116

Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

You know, taking that optimistically, that's a good point. I can live with that.

Disclaimer: if you dislike the tone of a post I make, re-read it in a North/East London accent until it sounds sufficiently playful smile

Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

BigDamnArtist wrote:
Herc wrote:

...but exclusively catalouging all the faults of a film which does SO many other things right (e.g. Die Hard) just comes across as petty.

But's that's their entire schtick "No movie is without sin."

A large part of Cinemas Sins does is go, alright this is a movie everyone loves, let's see how many of our "sins" we can find. And on that aspect I find it kind of interesting, because it's actually leveling the playing field a bit, "Every movie has these, but some of them are good and some of them are bad."

Which hey, the optimist in me says maybe a few people in the audience will wonder why some movies are considered bad and some are good even though they all have these "sins", and go look deeper.

/Not sure how much it actually adds to the discussion at hand, but that's just something that occured to me.

The pessimistic view is that people will see the video and say, "Hey, look at all these things that are wrong with this movie! It totally sucks!" And 100% of viewers aren't going to have either reaction.

"The Doctor is Submarining through our brains." --Teague

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Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

Doctor Submarine wrote:
BigDamnArtist wrote:
Herc wrote:

...but exclusively catalouging all the faults of a film which does SO many other things right (e.g. Die Hard) just comes across as petty.

But's that's their entire schtick "No movie is without sin."

A large part of Cinemas Sins does is go, alright this is a movie everyone loves, let's see how many of our "sins" we can find. And on that aspect I find it kind of interesting, because it's actually leveling the playing field a bit, "Every movie has these, but some of them are good and some of them are bad."

Which hey, the optimist in me says maybe a few people in the audience will wonder why some movies are considered bad and some are good even though they all have these "sins", and go look deeper.

/Not sure how much it actually adds to the discussion at hand, but that's just something that occured to me.

The pessimistic view is that people will see the video and say, "Hey, look at all these things that are wrong with this movie! It totally sucks!" And 100% of viewers aren't going to have either reaction.

And that makes the creators wrong for people's reactions? Again, after the Intermission, it certainly felt like this was a middle of the road issue, with some people for and some against. I still don't see the harm of things like CS, but I don't take them seriously either and I don't believe they are intended to be serious criticism, beyond the surface level variety. Which, just to point out, IMDB has a Goof's page, Movie Mistakes is a website devoted to nitpicky little points, problems or errors, and I have no doubt there are many more.

Also, something that I meant to articulate earlier, but kind of lost, was the fact that this feels, to me, like a play on the typical fan-forum critic. And what I mean is the type of critics who are not just going after the story, but will use hyperbolic language, name-calling, or other knee-jerk level criticism at a movie they don't like, and (by extension), supporters of the film they don't like.

Ok, I'm going to spoiler this because it is going to be very long, and give several examples based upon my own personal experience. This is not meant to target any specific fan or group but just comments about a film that I have encountered.

  Show
Still here? Ok, good. I mentioned many moons ago, that I hesitated to see Star Trek Into Darkness due to comments and reviews on some fan boards. Being of the internet variety, they were not pleasant. Sorry if this is rehashing old terrain, but this was my experience and it relates to many of the nitpicks that CS and others will find in many of their films:

"Abrams is a racist."

"Real people do not behave like that"

"The action flashes so much I don't know what's going on."

"Fuck this movie."

The list goes on. And so, after encountering this, and other comments of the like on various films, I pretty much take any such comments as knee-jerk butt hurt and don't take it seriously. Mostly because there is not really any reasoning with those arguments.

I will concede that this is film criticism, but that it isn't made to be taken seriously. Beyond that, I don't see this as detracting from RLM, WAYDM, SFDebris or others, because there are those who still want serious analysis. But some people don't want the steak dinner and don't care. They want a hamburger, are satisfied by it and move on.

I prefer steak dinner, but sometimes just a quick hamburger will do the trick. Same thing this. Would I prefer WAYDM analysis? Sure. Do I have the time to devote 2+ hours to each movie? Not always. So, I go with something that will make me laugh and move on, and save the analysis for later.

I just don't see anything wrong with that. But, hey, that's just me.

God loves you!

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Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

fireproof78 wrote:
Doctor Submarine wrote:
BigDamnArtist wrote:

But's that's their entire schtick "No movie is without sin."

A large part of Cinemas Sins does is go, alright this is a movie everyone loves, let's see how many of our "sins" we can find. And on that aspect I find it kind of interesting, because it's actually leveling the playing field a bit, "Every movie has these, but some of them are good and some of them are bad."


Which hey, the optimist in me says maybe a few people in the audience will wonder why some movies are considered bad and some are good even though they all have these "sins", and go look deeper.

/Not sure how much it actually adds to the discussion at hand, but that's just something that occured to me.

The pessimistic view is that people will see the video and say, "Hey, look at all these things that are wrong with this movie! It totally sucks!" And 100% of viewers aren't going to have either reaction.

And that makes the creators wrong for people's reactions? Again, after the Intermission, it certainly felt like this was a middle of the road issue, with some people for and some against. I still don't see the harm of things like CS, but I don't take them seriously either and I don't believe they are intended to be serious criticism, beyond the surface level variety. Which, just to point out, IMDB has a Goof's page, Movie Mistakes is a website devoted to nitpicky little points, problems or errors, and I have no doubt there are many more.

Also, something that I meant to articulate earlier, but kind of lost, was the fact that this feels, to me, like a play on the typical fan-forum critic. And what I mean is the type of critics who are not just going after the story, but will use hyperbolic language, name-calling, or other knee-jerk level criticism at a movie they don't like, and (by extension), supporters of the film they don't like.

Ok, I'm going to spoiler this because it is going to be very long, and give several examples based upon my own personal experience. This is not meant to target any specific fan or group but just comments about a film that I have encountered.

  Show
Still here? Ok, good. I mentioned many moons ago, that I hesitated to see Star Trek Into Darkness due to comments and reviews on some fan boards. Being of the internet variety, they were not pleasant. Sorry if this is rehashing old terrain, but this was my experience and it relates to many of the nitpicks that CS and others will find in many of their films:

"Abrams is a racist."

"Real people do not behave like that"

"The action flashes so much I don't know what's going on."

"Fuck this movie."

The list goes on. And so, after encountering this, and other comments of the like on various films, I pretty much take any such comments as knee-jerk butt hurt and don't take it seriously. Mostly because there is not really any reasoning with those arguments.

I will concede that this is film criticism, but that it isn't made to be taken seriously. Beyond that, I don't see this as detracting from RLM, WAYDM, SFDebris or others, because there are those who still want serious analysis. But some people don't want the steak dinner and don't care. They want a hamburger, are satisfied by it and move on.

I prefer steak dinner, but sometimes just a quick hamburger will do the trick. Same thing this. Would I prefer WAYDM analysis? Sure. Do I have the time to devote 2+ hours to each movie? Not always. So, I go with something that will make me laugh and move on, and save the analysis for later.

I just don't see anything wrong with that. But, hey, that's just me.

Ok so here's the thing

I'm on my phone because my internet is being unbelievably shitty but I wanted to get one last word in. I was way too lazy to type all this on my phone so I scribbled it down and took a pic. It's probably illegible and incomprehensible and maybe even mean but I'm about to fall asleep so I'm going to take a leap of faith and throw it out there

http://i.imgur.com/YyLgk8h.jpg

"The Doctor is Submarining through our brains." --Teague

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Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

http://i.imgur.com/bEK0cj9.jpg

Disclaimer: if you dislike the tone of a post I make, re-read it in a North/East London accent until it sounds sufficiently playful smile

Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

Well, I do apologize for not realizing sooner that this was such a personal topic for you. I suppose I would react the same way with people who suggest that Dr. Phil is a valid form of psychology.

I'm just so used to people telling me my job, even those who do not know the details of what I do, that I get used to shrugging off unprofessional opinions. Working in retail has certainly made me a little more accepting of poorly informed opinions because I deal with it on a daily basis.

Like I said earlier, if you think that this form of criticism is dangerous, then perhaps it is time to reach out to the creators and be like, "Hey, do you recognize what you are doing?" Education has to start somewhere, whether it is with creators or partakers. I get people in who are generally ignorant of shoes (my main job is managing a footwear department) but insist they know what's best. It's frustrating, but I cannot change their opinion. I merely can provide additional information and let them choose.

So, as a consumer, and not a creator, I can only say that I take as much information as I can get. And if there is a way to spread more information, I'll do it. But, my view on films is much different than most here. So, my view on criticism is much different too.

Sorry that this is such a sore subject.

God loves you!

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Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

Wanna hear something depressing. Transformers 4 has blown past Edge of Tomorrow in box office in just 1 week, despite the Tom Cruise movie being out for a month. It'll probably outdo Oblivion, Elysium, Edge of Tomorrow and Transcendence combined.

not long to go now...

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Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

If it makes anyone feel better, Transformers will keep Paramount in business and fund about a dozen other movies.

Imagination will often carry us to worlds that never were. But without it we go nowhere. - Carl Sagan

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Squiggly_P wrote:

I'm going to see T4 either tonight or tomorrow.

My first thought: Terminator.

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Re: Transformers 2 nostalgia

redxavier wrote:

If it makes anyone feel better, Transformers will keep Paramount in business and fund about a dozen other movies.

All of them TRANSFORMERS sequels.

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