That's too bad, DS9 has some of the best writing along with TOS and TNG.
That's too bad, DS9 has some of the best writing along with TOS and TNG.
That's too bad, DS9 has some of the best writing along with TOS and TNG.
I think that DS9 was overly melodramatic and made me laugh more than any drama series should and that the Abrams films have some of the best writing and characterization of any of the Star Trek movies.
Different strokes.
Jeyl's gripe with Orci is over something which happened at another site, and he was asked not to drag it over here. When he did so anyway, BillJ ought properly to have demonstrated his lack of care by posting no response, and your demonstration of care would be more appropriately brought to the attention of either TrekMovie or Paramount. There's nothing which can be done here about the matter, and it's got zip to do with lens-flare apologies, anyway.
No one cares. Really.
Wrong. Really. Really wrong.
Would it make a difference if it didn't happen online but in real life? Like having a discussion with Orci on the street and then talking about it here?
That's not the topic. "Abrams apologizing for lens-flare" is the topic.Would it make a difference if it didn't happen online but in real life? Like having a discussion with Orci on the street and then talking about it here?
Traditionally, lens flare was considered an error and was scrupulously avoided by Hollywood cinematographers. Lens flare became, for lack of a better term, "hip" in the 1960s. Ironically, it was thought to enhance verisimilitude, to create a documentary-like realism -- although, of course, it's a technical artifact created by reflections between multiple elements of the camera lens.I think the current shaky cam trend started with Saving Private Ryan. The excessive use of lens flares, I'm not sure.
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