This is just another in the long list of petty excuses to bash this film.
Petty excuses to bash this film?


I loved the film, but it doesn't mean I loved everything about it. This is a message board. We nitpick. Big deal.
This is just another in the long list of petty excuses to bash this film.
A Hard Day's Night was a mock documentary. The flare was a consequence of uncoated lenses, unplanned shooting angles and uncontrolled lighting. It was not an "artistic decision" of a director with the sensibilities of an 8 year-old.So?The difference there is they were using 50 year-old optics (likely uncoated) and nobody was shining a flashlight towards the lens.Such lens flares occur in 1964's A Hard Day's Night. I've never heard a single complaint about that to date. This is just another in the long list of petty excuses to bash this film.
I don't see how anyone can call THIS:
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acceptable cinematically.
It's the cinematic equivalent of having your thumb over part of the lens and still thinking it's good enough for an AP lead photo.
Visually, it's a potentially very interesting movie. Cool props, costumes, sets, and spacecraft -- and some good looking actors and actresses. But I'd like to actually be able to *see* them. It's hard to pull detail out of that miasma of light.
True, but it was left in because it looked cool. No one had done it before because it was considered "wrong." Dick Lester felt it lent to the realism of the scenes. If he didn't think so, those scenes would have been reshot, as pointed out in the DVD commentary. Lester thought the lens flares looked cool.A Hard Day's Night was a mock documentary. The flare was a consequence of uncoated lenses, unplanned shooting angles and uncontrolled lighting.So?The difference there is they were using 50 year-old optics (likely uncoated) and nobody was shining a flashlight towards the lens.
I can't speak to the cinematic sensibilities of an 8-year old and neither can you. How about you leave the schoolyard namecalling out of this?It was not an "artistic decision" of a director with the sensibilities of an 8 year-old.
^That's because, in many cases, they were real flares. It was posted here some time ago that ILM developed new techniques for composting real flares over digital shots.
Same here.I didn't notice any shaky cam, either
Same here.I didn't notice any shaky cam, either
I'm thinking the same people whining about the lens flares are the same kind of people who complain about "the black bars" in widescreen movies, "and how they want "the whole picture" on their shitty TVs.![]()
On the contrary, I much prefer the black bars to the distorted image you get without them, black bars bother me not but image quality is important. Having a bright light covering parts of the image is not something which I consider "quality".I'm thinking the same people whining about the lens flares are the same kind of people who complain about "the black bars" in widescreen movies, "and how they want "the whole picture" on their shitty TVs.![]()
I never noticed the lens flares once. If it wasn't for these boards, I wouldn't even know there was such a thing.
Making screenshots of lensflares "worst moments" is not a good representation of the overall effect, since the flare may just overpower that *specific frame*. Film is a moving medium, folks. They call it motion pictures for a reason.
And I'd say that more than half of the shots that are above are perfectly fine.
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