Abrams is hardly an auteur.
Disney doesn't give a fuck, they just want a billion dollar movie and figure Abrams is the one best qualified to make that happen.
Abrams is hardly an auteur.
Abrams is hardly an auteur.
Disney doesn't give a fuck, they just want a billion dollar movie and figure Abrams is the one best qualified to make that happen.
I don't entirely agree; I think the writer(s) are the most important people - but then, this is fungible, as directors can usually order rewrites, and new passes from different authors. Ridley Scott, for instance, bought a revisionist script about the Sheriff of Notthingham and ordered massive rewrites until it became Robin Hood Begins.No director is perfect (even Hitchcock made a few less than stellar films) but the single most crucial person working on a film is the director (or, a behind the scenes de facto director if the official one cannot do the job).
In the case of, say, episodes of Aaron Sorkin TV shows, the directorial presence is often negligible; their main duty being to orchestrate the walk-and-talks that balance out the massive dialogue dumps. This is the main difference between TV and movies - in TV, directors have little to no control over the script, and are often discouraged from getting too flashy, especially when a house style has already been established.
Ergo, the extent of Abrams' influence will likely depend on how much creative input the producers allow him. Star Wars movies also have a very classical style, with very little of the handheld-heavy/you're right there verve of MI:III and Trek XI. It'll be interesting to see which influence will win out - but then again, the ultra-propulsive feel of Abrams' movies are in large part due to the intensity of their scripts.
Avation said:No director is perfect (even Hitchcock made a few less than stellar films
I've seen every existing film Alfred Hitchcock directed (I wrote my university dissertation on Freudian themes in his work and got the only A in the class!), and very few of his 50+ films are serious misfires. Stuff like Murder, Secret Agent, The Paradine Case and Torn Curtain are weak but when you make that many films you're bound to go wrong sometimes. Hell, Torn Curtain contains one of the finest murder scenes of his career.
It really varies from movie to movie. I'd wager heavily that Abrams will have FAR less influence on Wars than he did with Trek. Disney are gonna be keeping a very close eye indeed.
Nobody even mentions Richard Marquand when discussing Return of the Jedi.
Indeed. I've seen scripts that have gone through at least seven writers.
Cough. Casablanca. Cough.But you don't see good scripts that have gone through seven writers.
I don't entirely agree; I think the writer(s) are the most important people - but then, this is fungible, as directors can usually order rewrites, and new passes from different authors. Ridley Scott, for instance, bought a revisionist script about the Sheriff of Notthingham and ordered massive rewrites until it became Robin Hood Begins.No director is perfect (even Hitchcock made a few less than stellar films) but the single most crucial person working on a film is the director (or, a behind the scenes de facto director if the official one cannot do the job).
In the case of, say, episodes of Aaron Sorkin TV shows, the directorial presence is often negligible; their main duty being to orchestrate the walk-and-talks that balance out the massive dialogue dumps. This is the main difference between TV and movies - in TV, directors have little to no control over the script, and are often discouraged from getting too flashy, especially when a house style has already been established.
I've always heard that with film it's directors and with TV it's writers that call the shots.
Since director's edit the films, every theatrical release is the real director's cut.
Indeed. I've seen scripts that have gone through at least seven writers.
But you don't see good scripts that have gone through seven writers. It is almost a mathematical law that the quality of a script is inversely proportional to the number of screenwriters. The belief that the director is the primary creator and the script is so much sausage is, near as I can tell, the main cause for Hollywood's powerful tendency towards mediocrity. Unless you are just horrified at an idea that can be implicitly critical of the Hollywood system, I don't know what the arguments are really about.
Scriptwriter is primary creator doesn't equate to director doesn't matter. Also, not all film is scripted, and the director is the primary creator in those cases. The people who emphasize the importance of the director migh wonder, though, why so little film is unscripted.
It is true that the modern system tends to invest the most power in the director (except when the bankable star is directing his or her performance, plus who knows what else.) Being the studio's man is not the same as being the main creator. The issue is further confused by director's so often being writers, cinematographers and editors, which are also important creative roles.
Since director's edit the films, every theatrical release is the real director's cut. Who's editing the double dip fake director's cut releases?
Uh, what? Like.... what? As a film student and filmmaker this is complete monkey jibberish to me. Directors rarely get final cut. In fact they almost NEVER do on the kinda big budget action films we're talking about here. Once you've finished your last day of shooting, that is it in terms of guaranteed power. You will present the producers your cut and if they don't like it they will get somebody else in to edit it, take away your footage from ever being touched by you and you're fucked forever.
Orson Welles' Magnificent Ambersons was completely butchered by this happening. He WAS given final cut for Citizen Kane and it was treated as a miracle as it was so rare.
On popcorn stuff like action blockbusters and generic romantic comedies, the idea that the director has as much power as stj's post is laughable. It gives this entire system of how he or she thinks Hollywood works that's... completely lacking in producers. The most in charge of most films.![]()
stj said:The people who emphasize the importance of the director migh wonder, though, why so little film is unscripted.
Glad to see I'm not the only one who knows how film works. I wonder who he or she thinks hires the directors and screenwriters?![]()
WHAT!? So little film is unscripted because uh.... everybody needs to know what they're doing before the day of filming? JJ Abrams can't arrive at the bridge set and be like "Uh, OK can everybody please sit still for 2 hours while I quickly come up with what everybody says, where everybody stands and what happens? Oh, and I'm not gonna write it down at all for any of you to learn. Sorry!".
The belief that the director is the primary creator and the script is so much sausage is, near as I can tell, the main cause for Hollywood's powerful tendency towards mediocrity.
Cough. Casablanca. Cough.But you don't see good scripts that have gone through seven writers.
Directors rarely get final cut. In fact they almost NEVER do on the kinda big budget action films we're talking about here.
Um. This post is completely lacking in the concept of "producers." Have you heard of them before?
There are certainly directors in Hollywood who have final cut (people like Tarantino, Paul Thomas Anderson, etc.) but that is very, very rare. On popcorn stuff like action blockbusters and generic romantic comedies, the idea that the director has as much power as stj's post is laughable. It gives this entire system of how he or she thinks Hollywood works that's... completely lacking in producers. The most important people who are in charge of most films.![]()
Glad to see I'm not the only one who knows how film works. I wonder who he or she thinks hires the directors and screenwriters?![]()
Also, the one credited screenwriter on the movie will likely have been handed a script that has had five different writers working on it already. They will trim the script for pacing, add a bunch of jokes and maybe a comic relief sidekick before being given full writing credit.
Hardly full creative control?
WHAT!? So little film is unscripted because uh.... everybody needs to know what they're doing before the day of filming? JJ Abrams can't arrive at the bridge set and be like "Uh, OK can everybody please sit still for 2 hours while I quickly come up with what everybody says, where everybody stands and what happens? Oh, and I'm not gonna write it down at all for any of you to learn. Sorry!".
I think it's cause most people just have a vague idea of producers doing something with the money and the director is responsible for everything on screen, not realizing that if you and your production company own the film and put up the money for it, YOU'RE the one who's going to have final say to make sure you get your money back and that the film doesn't do anything crazy like kill off the lead's girlfriend. Again, there are exceptions, but they're just that: exceptions. In stj's illusion of how Hollywood works, it's some tug-and-pull war between scriptwriters and directors while completely misunderstanding what the people in those roles do.
The belief that the director is the primary creator and the script is so much sausage is, near as I can tell, the main cause for Hollywood's powerful tendency towards mediocrity.
No. This couldn't be more opposite from what I believe. Hollywood is mediocre when the director isn't given enough power to put across their artistic vision. A film is great almost always because the director was given enough power to do what they wanted to do. It's mediocre because studio producers demand certain house styles and rules that can't be broken. There is no way in hell directors can be blamed for Hollywood's mediocrity.
It can happen with Abrams.. he has more clout than Whedon, has produced some profitable and generelly favorable reviewed movies and he's got a fitting style for such movies. The question is how much freedom has Abrams negotiated before signing the deal?
I hope it's a lot.. i don't want to ever see another Jar Jar or anything else in a Star Wars movie who's there to make the small kids laugh. There are better ways to do this as Pixar has proven. I'm confident that Abrams has worked out a good deal with Disney because he doesn't need Star Wars to bolster his rep but Disney needs a good reboot of the franchise and after Trek Abrams seems to be the man.
But then again Spielberg has all the clout and power in the world (probably more than any director there's ever been), and he still had to bow to Lucas and all his crazy ideas for Indy 4.
I could see not liking that episode. I can't see disliking it worse than say Melora from DS9 or Sub Rosa from TNG though.Unless you're implying that its a weird episode to dislike.
It's a fairly popular one, and is I think widely considered to be one of the better episodes of Voyager. There are certainly far more unpopular episodes of the series!!
I've said it before, if it was between him and being dead, it should have died.
There was someone here whose screen name escapes me at the moment, but he kept moving the goal posts back in regards to the 2009 movie, to the point where he was adamant that Star Trek was meant to appeal to a small audience and lose money. You two would probably hit it off well.
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