• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Am I the only person that likes 'lens-flare'?

I know that some people found it annoying, but to be honest I barely noticed it. There were times that I did (and I did more the second time) but it was never distracting. In fact, I never even mentioned it in my review!
 
After reading that article where JJ explains the lens flare, I think I get what he means. Remembering the interior scenes that I can remember with lens flare, and imagining them with out lens flare, there does seem to be something 'missing' from the look without them, feels a bit too sterile...Not sure what I mean, but I don't mind them, guess I kinda like the style of them and the camera shakes and the like.
 
Except 2-3 times on the bridge where they completely overwhelmed the screen, I had no problem with them.
 
Exactly! I felt like I was on the ship, that I was actually there, that what I was seeing was real.


J.
How? Lens flares are not a natural thing, they are an artificial effect created by light shining on the lens of a camera. If you look around on a sunny day, or you enter a room with a lot of bright lights, your eyes will not see a lens flare.

For that reason I found the lens flares took me out of the movie because it constantly reminded me that I wasn't there, it constantly reminded me that there was a camera on set filming everything I was watching. I did not like that feeling, it was completely unnatural.
 
How? Lens flares are not a natural thing, they are an artificial effect created by light shining on the lens of a camera. If you look around on a sunny day, or you enter a room with a lot of bright lights, your eyes will not see a lens flare.

If you're somebody who wears glasses, that's not entirely true.
 
Exactly! I felt like I was on the ship, that I was actually there, that what I was seeing was real.


J.
How? Lens flares are not a natural thing, they are an artificial effect created by light shining on the lens of a camera. If you look around on a sunny day, or you enter a room with a lot of bright lights, your eyes will not see a lens flare.

For that reason I found the lens flares took me out of the movie because it constantly reminded me that I wasn't there, it constantly reminded me that there was a camera on set filming everything I was watching. I did not like that feeling, it was completely unnatural.

Or that camera was on the bridge filming everything...
 
Exactly! I felt like I was on the ship, that I was actually there, that what I was seeing was real.


J.
How? Lens flares are not a natural thing, they are an artificial effect created by light shining on the lens of a camera. If you look around on a sunny day, or you enter a room with a lot of bright lights, your eyes will not see a lens flare.

For that reason I found the lens flares took me out of the movie because it constantly reminded me that I wasn't there, it constantly reminded me that there was a camera on set filming everything I was watching. I did not like that feeling, it was completely unnatural.

Or that camera was on the bridge filming everything...

The famous "cloaked anti-gravity camera for inter-ship communications," no doubt.
 
Or that camera was on the bridge filming everything...
trek3.jpg


Exactly...
 
trek3.jpg


you can even see the guy holding a flashlight pointed at the camera. We could have had a giant lens flare obscuring kirk getting strangled by spock.
 
Like it or not (and I admit, I don't)... lens flares are a creative decision and very much part of Star Trek's new look. In much the same way, the 60's Trek often overdid soft focus, to glamourise the female guest cast. By the 70's, low rent movies used it alongside guitar riffs to much the same effect... ;)
 
Like it or not (and I admit, I don't)... lens flares are a creative decision and very much part of Star Trek's new look. In much the same way, the 60's Trek often overdid soft focus, to glamourise the female guest cast. By the 70's, low rent movies used it alongside guitar riffs to much the same effect... ;)

:lol: :lol: :lol:
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top