Re: Best / Worst of 2013
I tried to sleep through the last hour of The Hobbit 2. I would've just left but I was there with my family...but I took the 3D glasses off and closed my eyes and just anger-listened to the ridiculousness. I saw it at The Embassy (which Peter Jackson basically owns) with the whole super fast frame rate thing, whatever it is, and no that did not make it more watchable.
I hated it. Worse than the first one. It was so BORING and pointless. And it made me so sad and angry because I loved Lord of the Rings so hard (still do). I would have to hear serious 5* reviews for the next movie to even consider going to see it.
And of course Peter Jackson has the NZ Government under his thumb, he's build a huge film industry in Wellington and brought in an insane amount of money (which I'm not complaining about at all). Also John Key is our current Prime Minister and if anyone is a pushover it's him. Ugh.
I also know from people who work at Weta that Desolation of Smaug was not finished until almost literally the last second before its release, because Peter wouldn't stop changing things. Not an easy man to work for, I believe it is true that power has gone to his head because while he's always been a perfectionist, it has apparently got incredibly hard to work for him and stay sane.
As some friends of mine who rode horses on Rings said after seeing the first Hobbit movie, "It's like all the heart has gone out of it...like he doesn't love it anymore."
Peter Jackson was never a big Tolkien fan. Even back in the 1990s, he wanted to do King Kong, but because of Godzilla & Mighty Joe Young, the studios wouldn't give him the money, so LOTR was a second choice. And he didn't want to do the Hobbit either, but del Toro pulled out.
It's Star Wars all over again. Artistic decisions were more distributed during the original trilogy. Then the director gets showered with praise ('genius!'), money, awards, power, etc - and it all goes to his head. He think he's God, but with a now 10+ year older brain that atrophies creatively. In the meantime, the movie industry (and audiences) have moved on, stylistically, tonally and technically, but the director has stayed in the same place, with more money, time, and power than is healthy.
Exactly the same deal with Ridley Scott and Prometheus i.e. "don't talk back to me". I'm a living legend.
Cameron - well, he always thought he was God, even from the beginning.
Moral of the story - the WORST thing you can do to a great director is shower him with praise, awards, money, and power. Keep him humble, keep artistic decisions distributed amongst creative talented people.
Last edited by avatar (2014-01-22 15:26:10)