Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

True. I am pretty much exclusively a book guy, so I can't really speak to the other mediums, but the books are definitely not definable as a "Comedy" full stop.

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Is there such a thing as a "comedy" book? "Humor", yes, and Hitchhiker's qualifies as that.

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Ok, here's one- True Lies is a bit shit. It is racist, misogynistic rubbish with some admittedly good action but thoroughly unlikeable characters and a middle hour that is so boring, it borders on ridiculous. The first act and the finale are perfectly fine but holy shit that whole 'my wife is cheating on me, let's put her through Hell' storyline is atrocious.

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Jimmy B wrote:

Ok, here's one- True Lies is a bit shit. It is racist, misogynistic rubbish with some admittedly good action but thoroughly unlikeable characters and a middle hour that is so boring, it borders on ridiculous. The first act and the finale are perfectly fine but holy shit that whole 'my wife is cheating on me, let's put her through Hell' storyline is atrocious.

I used to love "True Lies" mostly for the absurdity of it all. and it is absurd, with the whole cheating thing, imagining killing the car salesman, flying a Harrier (really, that should end the movie right there, with the entire team KIA).

Despite this, or maybe because of it, I do enjoy it. Maybe because it is very quotable, a little bit self0aware and takes full advantage of it. Is it a perfect movie? No, but I enjoy the absurdity.

It might be Tom Arnold too wink

The Princess Bride

I really get what sellew is trying to say, especially with the whole true love thing. For me, the reason why it works is because I am willing to buy the true love part, despite not seeing them fall in love, because the actors sell being in love. I react to them a little more.

One thing that I was thinking about, after this discussion, was the archetypes that the characters represent. One that I notice with Wesley is that he covers several, as does Buttercup, which contributes, possibly, to my more favorable opinion of the films.

One archetype that the two represent is the "everyman" or everywoman." Stories like that I have always spoken to me ad so I enjoy them a lot better. While Wesley develops more as a character over the film, there is several aspects of him that are left open to viewer interpretation.  He becomes a little more identifiable over the course of the film, but initially, he is a little more blank. Because of this, I can ascribe more attributes to him or place myself in his shoes a little more easily, and thus, I identify more with him and his plight.

Similarly, Buttercup fits the "damsel in distress" archetype very well, and really has little action or agency in her own rescue. Despite this, the narrative of "true love" is so timeless that it is something that the audience can identify with, identify with Buttercup's feelings and plight, and place themselves in the fantasy.

I believe it, because I can see myself there and identify with the feelings and plight. The archetypes work for me and I am willing to go along with it.

But, if the archetypes and rules don't work, as I can imagine it doing, then the movie really won't work. There is a lot of engaging in the Princess Bride that might not work for everyone.

A quick example is Padme and Anakin. I have no problem with the concept of how the two of them meet, or the feelings that they might have for each other. It is a very immature love, but I can understand it. It kind of reminds me of high school crushes, but I get it.

The problem, for me, is just that I don't believe they are in love. The actors don't sell it. I don't believe they are in love. I don't identify with Anakin, his plight or that he is love with Padme or that she is in love with him. Similarly to Princess Bride, we are told they are in love, but unlike Wesley and Buttercup, Anakin and Padme to not act like it.

That, for me, makes the difference.

God loves you!

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Hey, I've got a new one: Terrence Malick is awful.

"Hey, look at me! I'm filming people walking around in nature and mumbling banal philosophical platitudes! My films don't mean anything, but they sure seem like they do!"

I've been meaning to see Badlands, which I've heard is his crowning achievement, but based on The Tree of Life and The Thin Red Line, I just can't stand this guy. Everything he does just seems like the easiest form of intellectual engagement. "Here's a scene of Jessica Chastain chasing a butterfly, while she whispers about the importance of grace or something in voiceover! What does any of this mean? Who cares! It'll trick you into feeling really smart for watching." Ughhhh.

Last edited by Doctor Submarine (2013-11-03 04:30:12)

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

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

I think there's a masterpiece buried inside Tree of Life, if you were to completely strip out all the fucking narration and cut out 25 minutes. But ya, as much as I love a lot of what it's doing, it's just too self-indulgent for it's own good. You should give his earlier stuff a chance though, he started out with much more straightforward, mainstream storytelling.

Regarding True Lies - I fully acknowledge the problems, but the high points of that movie are so jaw-droppingly good they completely erase any 2nd act problems for me. It's got possibly Cameron's best pure action sequences, it's got Schwarzeneggar's best performance, it's got Tom Arnold in the best movie of his career. I can't call any movie bad when it delivers like 4 different all-time-great action set-pieces.

Interestingly, it's also clearly the blue-print for Michael Bay's movies in a lot of ways (the misogynistic comedy, the glorifying of american military hardware), which just goes to show how shit Michael Bay is as a filmmaker, when he isn't even able to get close to Cameron's weakest movie.

Last edited by bullet3 (2013-11-03 06:21:11)

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

bullet3 wrote:

I think there's a masterpiece buried inside Tree of Life, if you were to completely strip out all the fucking narration and cut out 25 minutes. But ya, as much as I love a lot of what it's doing, it's just too self-indulgent for it's own good. You should give his earlier stuff a chance though, he started out with much more straightforward, mainstream storytelling.

Regarding True Lies - I fully acknowledge the problems, but the high points of that movie are so jaw-droppingly good they completely erase any 2nd act problems for me. It's got possibly Cameron's best pure action sequences, it's got Schwarzeneggar's best performance, it's got Tom Arnold in the best movie of his career. I can't call any movie bad when it delivers like 4 different all-time-great action set-pieces.

Interestingly, it's also clearly the blue-print for Michael Bay's movies in a lot of ways (the misogynistic comedy, the glorifying of american military hardware), which just goes to show how shit Michael Bay is as a filmmaker, when he isn't even able to get close to Cameron's weakest movie.

I'll probably rewatch it now.

Also, love the Cameron-Bay comparison smile

God loves you!

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I'm not in love with Terry Malick either. He doesn't lack talent—he's got a good eye, and I actually dig Badlands—he's just not as thoughtful as advertised. What he's actually saying in his movies is often banal. The Tree of Life (while I think parts of it are pretty cool) bugs the shit out of me for that reason. It gets treated like it's this uniquely astute treatise on our place in the cosmos, but it all seems pretty trite to me. (Admittedly, part of it is that I simply don't like the movie's ethos of "Hey, if your relationships in life are less-than-ideal, don't trip. That suffering was part of a larger master plan, and it'll all get sorted in the afterlife, where everything's perfect."  What made that really sting for me is, when I initially saw TTOL, the first half of the movie—dinosaurs keeling over and such—got me excited that maybe Malick was heading toward almost the exact opposite sentiment. I.e., the universe doesn't care about us, so we should jolly well care about each other. Which is not exactly where Malick ends up.)

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

TREE OF LIFE was so close to working for me for a little while there. I watched it as part of the Best Picture showcase and I knew a lot of people had hated it, but about an hour and a half in I found myself thinking I was going to have to be the contrarian and carry its torch.

Then it kept going... and kept going... and marched steadily further and further up its own ass. It had me, it really did, and then it lost me.

Rob wrote:

What made that really sting for me is, when I initially saw TTOL, the first half of the movie—dinosaurs keeling over and such—got me excited that maybe Malick was heading toward almost the exact opposite sentiment. I.e., the universe doesn't care about us, so we should jolly well care about each other.

YES. This is exactly what made me think I might just love the movie, then it went the opposite way and so did my feelings on it.

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Dorkman wrote:

TREE OF LIFE was so close to working for me for a little while there. I watched it as part of the Best Picture showcase and I knew a lot of people had hated it, but about an hour and a half in I found myself thinking I was going to have to be the contrarian and carry its torch.

Then it kept going... and kept going... and marched steadily further and further up its own ass. It had me, it really did, and then it lost me.

Rob wrote:

What made that really sting for me is, when I initially saw TTOL, the first half of the movie—dinosaurs keeling over and such—got me excited that maybe Malick was heading toward almost the exact opposite sentiment. I.e., the universe doesn't care about us, so we should jolly well care about each other.

YES. This is exactly what made me think I might just love the movie, then it went the opposite way and so did my feelings on it.

Here in London there's a revival cinema that screens Tree of Life together with The Fountain for a 'let's get stoned' double feature. Yes, a one-hour cut for Tree of Life could be great, keeping the Creation sequence and some of the first half and severely gouging the Sean Penn stuff in the second half

Last edited by avatar (2013-11-03 16:55:14)

not long to go now...

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Rob wrote:

What made that really sting for me is, when I initially saw TTOL, the first half of the movie—dinosaurs keeling over and such—got me excited that maybe Malick was heading toward almost the exact opposite sentiment. I.e., the universe doesn't care about us, so we should jolly well care about each other.

That would be closer to the Herzog version of the story. Now there's a filmmaker who takes many of the same ideas as Malick and explores them in complex and interesting ways.

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

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Doctor Submarine wrote:

That would be closer to the Herzog version of the story. Now there's a filmmaker who takes many of the same ideas as Malick and explores them in complex and interesting ways.

Yeah, it's like he explores the same territory Malick does but without buffing out the messiness of real life. Malick's movies can feel like airy, guided meditations on how we'd like to imagine the world looks (always magic hour, ever a pleasant breeze); Herzog's best movies are more like demonstrations of how bittersweet and/or tragic life is. Herzog contends that nature is actually kind of a bitch.

I sound like I'm a Malick hater. I'm not. I'm down with Badlands and Days of Heaven. And there's stuff in The Tree of Life that I quite enjoy. What irks me is that he gets lauded as if he's the cinematic equivalent of Kierkegaard when he's closer to the equivalent of Deepak Chopra. TTOL film resonated with a lot of people for the exact reasons I bitch about. Lots of people share (or are on some level sympathetic to) the film's assertions about life/death/the cosmos. That's cool. They're poised to have a transcendent experience with it. I'm not the ideal audience for TTOL, is all.

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I have two strong opinions on Malick. 1) TTOL's birth of the universe sequence was more fulfilling than 99% of everything I've ever seen, 2) Badlands ftw.

Other than that, le yawn.

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

You can literally fan-edit Tree of Life into an all-time great film, all the material is there, the rough outlines story-structure wise work (the history of the universe, juxtaposed with the proverbial blip in the time-stream of a single kid's childhood), the performances are great. The ambition is staggering, it's just 20 minutes too long. I can't dislike a movie that tries for so much when most movies don't try at all.

Also, it not winning for Best Cinematography was a crime.

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That's true. You really could fan-edit TTOL into the movie some of us thought it was shaping up to be. All the raw materials are there. The scant dialogue makes it easier.

SPOILER Show
Remove that beach stuff at the end, re-order a scene or two, and there it is, basically. It goes from saying "Humans are really quite special [I didn't see any dinosaurs on that heavenly beach], and even in a chaotic universe we will re-unite after death in an idealized form" to saying "Humans are just another organism in the biosphere. All we have is this life and each other. There's nothing stopping a giant space rock from killing the Earth, and your kid brother could suddenly die. So seize the day (or something like that)."

I wasn't totally on board with TM's last movie, To the Wonder, but it's apparent message didn't bug me as much. It's much more of a "Life's crazy and perplexing. Yet, you know, somehow there is fleeting beauty/bliss/love [or whatever]" kind of theme. (The movie also proves that a Carhartt jacket can be sexy if Rachel MacAdams is wearing it.)

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Rob wrote:

SPOILER Show
Remove that beach stuff at the end, re-order a scene or two, and there it is, basically. It goes from saying "Humans are really quite special [I didn't see any dinosaurs on that heavenly beach], and even in a chaotic universe we will re-unite after death in an idealized form" to saying "Humans are just another organism in the biosphere. All we have is this life and each other. There's nothing stopping a giant space rock from killing the Earth, and your kid brother could suddenly die. So seize the day (or something like that)."

So, if you turn it into the exact opposite movie than what the creator intended, it becomes something you like smile

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

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Ya, when I say cut it down, I don't mean changing the whole idea and meaning. Malick is a very spiritual guy, and I don't mind the "we'll all be reunited one day" stuff. It doesn't push any specific theology at all, nor does some form of afterlife imply a god-figure pulling the strings. The best thing about the movie is the way it suggests that either a creator doesn't exist, or if he does, he doesn't give a fuck about you as he's kinda busy creating and shaping the universe and all of space-time.

I would keep the intent and meaning the same, just trim out 20-30 minutes throughout.

Sidenote - I hope his IMAX documentary assembled from all this footage happens at some point, cause it's probably the best-looking representation of the creation of the universe and life on earth that's ever been put together

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Invid wrote:
Rob wrote:

SPOILER Show
Remove that beach stuff at the end, re-order a scene or two, and there it is, basically. It goes from saying "Humans are really quite special [I didn't see any dinosaurs on that heavenly beach], and even in a chaotic universe we will re-unite after death in an idealized form" to saying "Humans are just another organism in the biosphere. All we have is this life and each other. There's nothing stopping a giant space rock from killing the Earth, and your kid brother could suddenly die. So seize the day (or something like that)."

So, if you turn it into the exact opposite movie than what the creator intended, it becomes something you like smile

Haha. You got me.

Honestly, it's not that I wish TM would have made "my" movie. I'm glad he made his movie. It's that the first half of his movie signaled that it might go in a particular direction, one I'd have dug more than the direction it eventually went in. So there was a let-down effect. That's not even a proper critique—it's just what my experience with the film was. To be sure, most people who liked TTOL would think my version sucked balls.

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bullet3 wrote:

Ya, when I say cut it down, I don't mean changing the whole idea and meaning. Malick is a very spiritual guy, and I don't mind the "we'll all be reunited one day" stuff. It doesn't push any specific theology at all, nor does some form of afterlife imply a god-figure pulling the strings. The best thing about the movie is the way it suggests that either a creator doesn't exist, or if he does, he doesn't give a fuck about you as he's kinda busy creating and shaping the universe and all of space-time.

That's interesting. Like you, I didn't think it was flogging a specific theology, per se. But there were  some Christian commentators (Andrew Sullivan is one) who took TTOL as an explicitly Christian tract. I didn't get that exactly, but they make a good case.

SPOILER Show
The family in the film is Christian. (White people, in Texas, in the 50s. Pitt plays church organ. Chastain spins baby around, points to the sky and says "That's where God lives"—doubtful she's referring to Thor. And people have argued that the parents are stand-ins for Christian figureheads, the stern Old Testament father, the merciful mother, something like that.) But then, like you say, you could go either way with it. The sandy afterlife could even be pure poetry, not an an actual afterlife. In the end, I kind of do read the film as implying that some kind of God, some intelligence force, maybe an imperfect one, cares about humankind enough to give us this cool-ass beach.

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Ya, the characters come from a strictly christian household (similar to the one Malick grew up in), but the movie in no way suggests they are correct (they are never answered back or anything like that). I see it as more like 2001, in the way it tries to be a universal story of humanity. Yes, it leans towards there being "some" kind of other beyond our lifetimes, but it's intentionally super vague about it, you could read it as pretty much any faith.

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

TechNoir wrote:

OK, how about this feeling I've had for a while: Hans Zimmer is the worst thing to happen to film music in recent years.

He has done alot of great and moving work in the past, and glimpses of good work recently. But also recently, his dense orchestrations, repeating, epic ostinatos and thick mixes as heard in movies like The Dark Knight, Inception, Man Of Steel, have seen his soundtracks move in the direction of substituting intelligence and subtlety, and replacing it with nothing short of a repetitive, increasingly derivative, aureal assault. There simply isn't room for anything intelligent or interesting to compete with the onslaught of string and brass chords. Everything is structured in easily digested 4/4 meter with no rhythmic flair whatsoever. It's radio pop, now also in soundtrack form.

Now if it was just Zimmer though I'd be OK with it. But a consequence of this general style/approach still being sought after by studios and alot of moviegoers is that almost every major blockbuster is required to include elements of it. As a music lover and hobby composer I'm sick of it.

As much good music Zimmer has made over the years, a big part of me wishes he wouldn't have taken the mainstream soundtrack world with as much storm as he did.

*cracks knuckles*

Ok. I hate to hijack this thread with the first reply to it, but this is one of those oft-repeating topics that I feel the need to clear up.

My credibility: If you don't already know, I'm a composer living in LA. I have lots of friends that work at Remote Control (Hans' production company), and I've talked to all of them at great lengths about the nature of Zimmer's work and business. Long story short, there are a lot of things said about him that are correct, and many that are dead wrong. I spend a lot of time analyzing and dissecting scores--his included.

I should also note that I will only be addressing what TechNoir has addressed, and not some of the other claims one commonly hears about him (such as "he doesn't actually write his music.")

Lastly, this is not about if you subjectively like his music. Arguing that is pointless. What TechNoir is basically trying to defend in his argument is that Hans Zimmer's music is devoid of artistic intent, and I believe that he couldn't be more wrong.

So.

TechNoir wrote:

...his [recent] soundtracks move in the direction of substituting intelligence and subtlety, and replacing it with nothing short of a repetitive, increasingly derivative, aureal assault.

This is one of those sentiments that you hear a lot. And for good reason. He is absolutely repetitive, and he definitely aurally assaults you (in some--not all--of his scores. And honestly, I think he'd be happy to hear that you think so!)

But his music is absolutely not lacking intelligence or subtlety. Quite the contrary.

What most people don't realize about HZ is that he is a minimalist. His goal is to reduce his themes and sonic palette to the simplest form possible. Why? He believes that this is more dramatically effective, and also helps create a sonic palette that is instantly recognizable. One could compare the music of Hans Zimmer to the aesthetic of the Matrix, in the sense that the Matrix excluded and limited its self to a small set of aesthetic ideals. When you see an overly green color palette, you instantly think Matrix. Same with trench coats and sunglasses.

Did a sonic palette remotely resembling Inception even exist before that movie?

[Side note: Most people will read that rhetorical question and go, "But it's just one long BRWAH!" Disregarding the fact that that's just wrong, and proves nothing except that they've never actually paid attention to the score, the BRWAH that is so commonly associated with it isn't even present in the score itself. Nor was it written by Hans Zimmer. It's a track called Mind Heist, written by Zach Hemsey and used exclusively in the Inception trailers. If you hate the BRWAH, blame Hemsey, not Zimmer.]

If you want to hear all this from his own words, go to the vi-control.net forum and look up posts by the username rctec. That's Hans. He posts there quite frequently.

TechNoir wrote:

There simply isn't room for anything intelligent or interesting to compete with the onslaught of string and brass chords. Everything is structured in easily digested 4/4 meter with no rhythmic flair whatsoever. It's radio pop, now also in soundtrack form.

All this shows is a fundamental lack of understanding in regard to the point of film music. By that I mean no offense, but it's hard to take anything else away.

The point isn't that we write interesting or complex or cool music. The points isn't even that we write music that's nice to listen to apart from the movie. If we do, that's an added bonus, but it's by no means essential.

The point is that we write music that supports the drama.

Again, Hans is a minimalist. And beyond that, he is a fantastic dramatist. Why do you think he's hired so much? Sure, his name is great and it draws a bit of prestige to the film, but even though I suppose one could consider him to be a household name…how many households really know Hans Zimmer? Not many.

He gets hired because he supports the drama better than just about anyone. How he specifically pursues that--what particular aesthetic he adopts for his music--is besides the point when he supports the drama as well as he does. I believe that I used this example in the mega 4-hour-long "The World of Film Scores" episode, but it's worth repeating again:

Hans is a great dramatist in the sense that he approaches his scores with a heavily chiseled concept. Case in point: Batman Begins. The 2-note melody is a tiny little nugget that is, a) instantly recognizable as Bruce Wayne/Batman's theme, b) represents the duality of his existence, c) "feels like a perpetually unanswered question," as Zimmer put it in an interview, and d) [this is the most important one] is able to be developed like crazy. Seriously. That 2-note melody is everywhere.

Notice that up until Bruce self-actualizes as Batman, the 2-note melody never resolves (for the musical folk here: in the key of D minor, the two notes would be D and F all over a static D minor chord). The first 20 seconds or so of this video show what I'm talking about:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_a3L242qYWo

But when he finally masters his fears, the bass resolves--the melody itself self actualizes:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gL_DDvgE0nU

(For the second note, F, the D minor chord resolves down to a Bb major).

But in The Dark Knight, the Joker turns his "little plan on its head." And with that…so too turns the melody onto its head (The Bb major chord turns to a 1st inversion Bb minor…fun fact, that same progression of Im to VIm is the same as the Imperial March). I'm having trouble finding a scene on YouTube--most of the scenes up are of Joker scenes that use the sliding cello note (another absolutely brilliant idea, btw)--but it's all over the movie.

This whole time you might be thinking that "It's just two notes!" Thing is, it didn't start that way. As I said, he comes to these concepts by whittling away at much more complex ones (apparently, it took him forever to whittle his Man of Steel theme to something he was satisfied with--coming from the John Williams approach made him start with an idea that was a bit overly complex). He isn't the first to do this. There is a very long line of minimalist composers--John Cage, Philip Glass, Steve Reich. They're all coming at music from a direction of "less is more." Often, the path of getting to "less" means starting at "more" and really working your way down. Many find that more meaningful and more beautiful than, say, a bombastic John Williams space battle. Steve Vai shredding vs BB King making one note sing sort of thing.

Which brings me to my next point:

TechNoir wrote:

Now if it was just Zimmer though I'd be OK with it. But a consequence of this general style/approach still being sought after by studios and alot of moviegoers is that almost every major blockbuster is required to include elements of it. As a music lover and hobby composer I'm sick of it.

I completely, completely agree. As much as I respect HZ's conceptualization and intent, it has definitely affected the industry in a pretty bad way. One reason is that most people hear the ostinato or the two-note melody and think, "Oh, that's simple! I'll just do that!" Instead of arriving at something minimal through the inherently artistic process of mindful simplification, they begin with something simple and arrive at something watered-down. And because it's simple--and yes, easy to grasp, which is not a bad thing in and of itself--it's copied and re-copied until all we hear are the aural equivalents of a dead horse.

Not that that hasn't happened before. The 90s had awful re-hashes of John Williams and Thomas Newman everywhere. I think it's safe to say that film scoring is no exception to the "90% of everything is crap" rule.

And not that this is the other composers' faults (that is, that they have to copy it--it shouldn't be a terrible, watered-down version of it. That's inexcusable). A director wants Hans Zimmer but can't afford Hans Zimmer. What am I gonna do--not eat? He wants Hans Zimmer and Joe Composer has to deliver so that he can survive. Such is the way of this business.

Now, I should note that Hans Zimmer isn't nearly my favorite composer. It sounds like you generally favor the more "involved" scores--the older John Williams sound. So do I. But I respect the shit out of Zimmer, because he single-handedly ushered in a new sound, and did it by thinking hard about it. You may not like the music, but you can't say that it's devoid of intelligence or subtlety.

Ok I'm done now.

Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

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All this and more on our new podcast Uncomposed.  tongue

Teague Chrystie

I have a tendency to fix your typos.

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

I am a fan of film scores, I listen to them on their own but, while I don't think Zimmer is shite, I tend not to listen to his stuff much. He has done good scores in the past but a lot of his recent work just isn't really for me. Although,a  lot of modern film scores are a bit shite, sadly, I still give them a chance. Some are good but for re-listens, I often to back to older scores.

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I don't hate Zimmer, but I really, really miss the days of his sweeping melodies, like the Lion King OST. I think minimalism is the right choice for films like The Dark Knight, but I can't just listen to a minimalist soundtrack for pleasure. Just a personal enjoyment thing.

Last edited by Abbie (2013-11-05 18:47:07)

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Re: Defend your most controversial film opinion.

Ya, I get what he's doing, but I think his trend-setting has been some of the worst things to ever happen to film music. As a fan of film scores, I would hate the shit out of him, if it wasn't for his amazing 90s stuff (or the occasional bright spot like his "Rango" score) there to show me he's capable of writing awesome stuff, but has just decided to do boring-ass "minimalist" rising strings. You know what, ya, if you whittle your music down to where there's practically nothing to it and it's just 2 notes, it's really easy to do thematic things with them because your theme is almost non-existent. That doesn't impress me, and I'll go one further and say that does not automatically make it fit better for his movies. Some movies, like Dark Knight, that stuff works great, but when I'm watching my sweeping action adventure, I want to FEEL something instead of generic low-strings. I'll always love Zimmer for his 90s stuff, but much like Michael Mann and his recent "shutter crime" phase, I wish he'd get over it already.

Part of this is me still bitter over his Man of Steel score, which I pretty much hate, but ya, when I look to the future of film-scoring, I look at guys like Alexandre Desplat and John Powell over Zimmer at this point.

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