How did that Scalzi get that gig anyway? I looked at a couple more of his lists and it just looks like he tossed them off in 5min (or is that the whole idea of this blogging, to differentiate it from informed and/or researched opinion?)
Frakes is a mediocre director. Yes, he made one the better TNG films, but it still looks like a television episode. When Frakes would try an interesting camera move or angle, it was as if he held back from pushing the envelope.
[...]
Abrams had some wonderful shots in his film; however, I agree with Allyn's comments, that the lens flare occasionally got outta control. One thing that Abrams brought that non of the other directors brought to their films was kinetic camera work.
I got the impression he was saying it looked like a TV show rather than a movie.Frakes is a mediocre director. Yes, he made one the better TNG films, but it still looks like a television episode. When Frakes would try an interesting camera move or angle, it was as if he held back from pushing the envelope.
[...]
Abrams had some wonderful shots in his film; however, I agree with Allyn's comments, that the lens flare occasionally got outta control. One thing that Abrams brought that non of the other directors brought to their films was kinetic camera work.
Wow, you have such a great misunderstanding of what a DIRECTOR and a DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY are doing.
You call Frakes' direction mediocre because you think the images are not looking good enough? Sorry to be so harsh, but that's an opinion grounded in stupidity.
Frakes is a mediocre director. Yes, he made one the better TNG films, but it still looks like a television episode. When Frakes would try an interesting camera move or angle, it was as if he held back from pushing the envelope.
[...]
Abrams had some wonderful shots in his film; however, I agree with Allyn's comments, that the lens flare occasionally got outta control. One thing that Abrams brought that non of the other directors brought to their films was kinetic camera work.
Wow, you have such a great misunderstanding of what a DIRECTOR and a DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY are doing.
You call Frakes' direction mediocre because you think the images are not looking good enough? Sorry to be so harsh, but that's an opinion grounded in stupidity.
I got the impression he was saying it looked like a TV show rather than a movie.
Shatner had a good sense of composition and framing in his movie, and the aide of a really good cinematographer. He was trying for a more cinematic Trek that hadn't been seen since the first movie, but unfortunately budget and script problems hamper his efforts.
The director is in charge of the overall aesthetic of the film
Calling a director mediocre because it "looked like a TV show" is not any better.I got the impression he was saying it looked like a TV show rather than a movie.
I can only say that to me First Contact definately doesn't look like the TV show.His two Trek movies had a style that was very much like the television show that bore it; nothing spectacular or cinematic.
Close Encounters of the Third Kind doesn't look like Indiana Jones, Indiana Jones doesn't look like Jurassic Park, and Jurassic Park doesn't look like Minority Report. Yet all of these movies are directed by Steven Spielberg.
Which is all this boils down to, why you restored to your original "harsh" tone, and why you called my opinion "grounded in stupidity."I can only say that to me First Contact definately [sic] doesn't look like the TV show.
What makes you think that the new movie doesn't feel like a TV episode? Because of the flashy visuals? In my opinion that's nothing. Abrams cheated his way out of all the potentially great scenes just like every other Star Trek director did before him. The battle above Vulcan for example, it is NEVER shown. It's like Best of Both Worlds, where the Enterprise warps into the debris field. Lame. The battle between the Narada and the Enterprise is terribly short, and all they do is shaking the camera while ILM delivers its usual standard quality. The action scenes are not any better than in Nemesis, in my opinion. The make up effects for aliens where far superior in The Voyage Home (and you actually saw a lot more diversity in that particular movie, too, creating a much grander feel). Not being able to see anything because of the lens flares glaring at me everywhere and the camera shaking gave me a claustrophobic feeling, not an epic one. The brewery they used for the engine rooms was a terrible choice, reminded me of cheap TV shows and B-movies. The sets are small, the shots framed in a way that you have lots of close ups on faces and no wide shots that would have created a grander feeling. The movie's score reminded me too much of Lost and Alias, and it had an unfinished feeling, so nothing grand and cinematic in there either. A planet being blown up by an exploding sun was already greatly done in Generations. Actually I think that Generations has a much more epic feeling than this new movie.
Abrams had some wonderful shots in his film; however, I agree with Allyn's comments, that the lens flare occasionally got outta control. One thing that Abrams brought that non of the other directors brought to their films was kinetic camera work. The picture moves, not only through action but through the cinematography.
I can only say that to me First Contact definately [sic] doesn't look like the TV show.
Which is all this boils down to, why you restored to your original "harsh" tone, and why you called my opinion "grounded in stupidity."
Which is all this boils down to, why you restored to your original "harsh" tone, and why you called my opinion "grounded in stupidity."I can only say that to me First Contact definately [sic] doesn't look like the TV show.
No no, you clearly didn't understand the difference between a director and a DoP, and were making up your opinion upon that.
Abrams might have said "I want this movie to be bright, almost blinding you, because it's a bright future", and his DoP could have said "We could use lens flares to get that effect", to which Abrams responded: "Yeah, let's do that."
But with a different DoP, the new movie could have looked entirely different, despite having Abrams as the director. The shots would be framed differently, the lighting would be differently, it goes even back to set designs and color schemes, because the DoP has great influence on the look of the final product, that's his job. Which is why Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull doesn't look like the original 3 movies. They tried to emulate the style of the original DoP, but they weren't entirely successful.
Same goes for Frakes and Matthew F. Leonetti in First Contact and Insurrection. Of course First Contact would have looked differently with Abrams working together with Leonetti. But not that much, I suppose.
It would be like blaming the director for the soundtrack. Of course he has influence on the music, but he usually doesn't do it. Oh, I already said that before.
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