Who is this imposter? What ever happened to Dennis?Saw Avatar again this evening; it was even more fascinating this time. .. Has this been mentioned in any materials related to the movie?
Who is this imposter? What ever happened to Dennis?Saw Avatar again this evening; it was even more fascinating this time. .. Has this been mentioned in any materials related to the movie?
The main 3D guy on the show, Vince Pace, was credited as second unit DP, I guess for the stuff shot in L.A. Pace is a real shooter, he has done tons of underwater stuff and he may even be an ASC member by now.
While there have been directors who act as their own DP (hack-types like Peter Hyams, plus maestros like Soderbergh), they are few and far between, and really have to be credited on film as such. Even directors who COULD have acted as their own DPs, like Kubrick and Ridley Scott, never did ... in fact, it is significant to note that Kubrick often employed world-class cinematographers, though his later films did use a promote-from-within style that was more in keeping with the Bond films.
As far as I know, the really heavy-duty AVATAR tech coverage in print sources has been limited to just AmCin and Cinefex, mainly because production and studio agreed to minimize tech coverage until the movie had been out awhile ... a strategy that meant other interested mags wound up dropping AVATAR because interviews and publication wouldn't have taken place till months after its release. So I guess to get serious info on the film, you've got to go to online interviews or just those two mags, at least until the dvd arrives. Kind of confuses the issue with respect to nominations and such, since a complete b-t-s picture might not emerge till AFTER the Oscars.
The main 3D guy on the show, Vince Pace, was credited as second unit DP, I guess for the stuff shot in L.A. Pace is a real shooter, he has done tons of underwater stuff and he may even be an ASC member by now.
While there have been directors who act as their own DP (hack-types like Peter Hyams, plus maestros like Soderbergh), they are few and far between, and really have to be credited on film as such. Even directors who COULD have acted as their own DPs, like Kubrick and Ridley Scott, never did ... in fact, it is significant to note that Kubrick often employed world-class cinematographers, though his later films did use a promote-from-within style that was more in keeping with the Bond films.
As far as I know, the really heavy-duty AVATAR tech coverage in print sources has been limited to just AmCin and Cinefex, mainly because production and studio agreed to minimize tech coverage until the movie had been out awhile ... a strategy that meant other interested mags wound up dropping AVATAR because interviews and publication wouldn't have taken place till months after its release. So I guess to get serious info on the film, you've got to go to online interviews or just those two mags, at least until the dvd arrives. Kind of confuses the issue with respect to nominations and such, since a complete b-t-s picture might not emerge till AFTER the Oscars.
For us, as interested third parties, it's hard to come by information about the BtS stuff, but I would think the industry itself is well aware of who did what on that picture (Hollywood being so thoroughly unionised).
trevanian, I assume you saw this, but the ASC magazine did an interview/story about Fiore's work on Avatar a few weeks ago: http://www.theasc.com/magazine_dynamic/January2010/Avatar/page1.php
I think the reason I love it is best articulated by Siskel at the end of the video of Titanic, he was talking about Titanic, but he very well could be talking Avatar today.
An 8+ minute documentary about the Sound mixing/editing of Avatar can be found here: http://soundworkscollection.com/avatar
An 8+ minute documentary about the Sound mixing/editing of Avatar can be found here: http://soundworkscollection.com/avatar
How different these short clips look in 2D...
I wish they hadn't gone through the Jurassic Park sound library.
It's a (little) bit distracting to me to hear the Thanator make sounds like the T-Rex or that Direhorses sound like Velociraptors.
I think the reason I love it is best articulated by Siskel at the end of the video of Titanic, he was talking about Titanic, but he very well could be talking Avatar today.
Yeah, Siskel's got it right - and what he says is exactly what Avatar's critics can't see.
I think the reason I love it is best articulated by Siskel at the end of the video of Titanic, he was talking about Titanic, but he very well could be talking Avatar today.
Yeah, Siskel's got it right - and what he says is exactly what Avatar's critics can't see.
What, he rolled over in his grave?![]()
But he's dead, so how did he see Avatar?
But he's dead, so how did he see Avatar?
It's all so well written. One reason the audiences have been so big, I think, is that at last an epic doesn't insult their intelligence or bludgeon them with violence and gore. It's a vast picture but it's on a human scale like Lawrence of Arabia. Everything is at the service of the characters, and so people go back more than once even when they really do know how it's going to turn out. Maybe they want to remind themselves of the craftsmanship of classic, epic film making when the word "epic" referred to the story and not just to the budget and special effects.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.