Raymar3d, your post above doesn't jibe with the following:
...That said, constructive criticism can make a real difference in a re-edit if anyone feels inclined to give me your honest thoughts. I will listen.
Yet the tone of your replies to critiques, here, on YouTube and on Facebook is flat out defensive. Heck, you went so far as to pro-actively grab a quote about three act structure from another thread, drop it here and insist you're doing it right... before anyone even mentioned three act structure at all.
Look, I'm always happy to help people, as many here can testify to (I even had someone here hire me to critique a script) and as I humbly submit the years of effort I've put into the Primer threads prove. But helping people requires them to both genuinely want assistance and be open to hearing critiques without trying to argue them down.
That's not the case here.
I'll accept that if your intent is to help me improve. I'm not trying to argue anyone down. However the way you have said things to me seems extremely condescending. I'd like to think better of you than that because when we worked together on Exeter I never got that vibe. But from the moment this film came out, I have been criticized more for my 'lack of skill' than ever before. When you imply I have no experience and no training and no writing skills, I cannot help but take it as an insult whether you intend it that way or not. I don't know who entered the "Tressaurian Intersection" listings on IMDB, but it was done correctly, and you know I worked on that with you, so taking that incorrect IMDB and offering it up as my 'resume' by itself can only be taken as a dig or at least a lack of attention by omission. I mean dig after dig is getting old, implying things that are simply untrue. It just comes off as pretentious. I say that so you will know what I am reacting to, not to make you angry. Perception is reality to some. You perceive me as defensive an obstinate, and yet I am seeing it more as not wanting to be talked down to. It has almost nothing to do with my film at this point.
You ask me to take criticism, fine. But consider this....
I've been around the block many times and there is an extreme difference between considerate desire to help and belittling someone. A lot of people feel that tearing someone down makes themselves look superior, whether consciously or not. It doesn't. When I critique someone's work, I look first at what they did right and build them up. At that point, they'll consider what they could improve. You don't go in daggers stabbing and expect someone to give you an ear as if you are God's gift to filmmaking. Do you not see that? If you want to make someone defensive right off the bat, go in guns blazing.
I mean, everyone has room to improve. Once I was done with this film, I knew where it lacked. Production problems are my own issue as far as what was written vs. what I had to work with and I make no excuses there. But a lot of things did have to be reworked on the edit table as nothing ever really goes quite as planned. Regardless of that, you know exactly what it is like to have to construct things from scenes that were not filmed. It is an extreme challenge. Act IV of "Tressaurian Intersection" was missing footage because it had already been used to complete previous acts, delaying its release for years. You and Scott did a great job of bringing it to a conclusion and finally getting it done. The point is, everything you have to do in the edit bay is triage and if the end result is exactly like the script, it is pretty miraculous. That said, people only care about the final result and will judge based on that and that alone. It's the curse of filmmaking and art in general.
I've worked in the television industry. I've worked on 23 video games and simulations, I have worked on Battlestar Galactica and multiple Star Trek fan films. I've worked on movies and while they're low budget, they're still films. I have worked with many professionals, and the mark of a true professional is to first help, then critique. If you truly want to help, then you have to do it in a way that doesn't demean someone's efforts. You don't have to sugarcoat, but at the same time, dismissiveness is not helpful. Dismissiveness is just insulting and you close people up right off the bat by doing it. It is one of the greatest insults you can throw at an artist. And you as an artist yourself should realize this and not be surprised that someone reacts negatively toward that attitude.
Discussion is not defensiveness either, just because it is counter to your points. I quoted the thread you sent me a link to so you would know I read it. You made a point, I made a counter point. That isn't arguing in my book it is discussing it to get to the real middle of the road where we can find some sort of common ground. If that's possible.
The point is, you can't help me by insulting me. It is certainly fair if you have no idea I've done those things to question whether I am a novice or not. I'd like to think that it's at least good enough that I don't look like a novice, considering just how much work it was to do this. But it's not like you and I really know each other just because we worked on one scene of a movie once, over a year ago now, but the point is, you assume a lot about me you don't know.
So now you do, and if you really want to help, please don't be condescending toward me. If you feel it isn't worth the time, that's cool too. Live and let live. I have nothing against you. I don't offer any of this as an attack against you, only so you will understand where I am frankly, frustrated. I just don't want to be talked down to. Fair enough?
Peace,
Ken