^Office chair.
Huh, and some people accused
me of being harsh in my comments back in June.
I think that some people are a but surprised that a production with so many pros involved didn't turn out better.
Those same people should probably learn to start listening to other professionals then, when said professionals offer their insight and opinion based on their experience, as
Maurice and others have. To be entirely fair,
Maurice's comments in June:
In three words: it's a mess.
It features a ridiculous number of paper-thin characters with clichéd motivations (when we get any). The editing is clumsy and there's never any sense of tension or build up. They appear to be trying for a heist movie/Seven Samurai thing here, but fail miserably at that.
As to CBS: it's aimed so squarely at fans and so fan-wanky and ham-fisted it hasn't got a prayer of getting their attention.
The trouble is, with so much "pro" talent and a budget larger than some small indie films which are actually in theaters, it's no longer apt to treat productions of this scale with kid gloves. If they're not good, there's really very little excuse. And this one is not good. Most of the fault lies with a script that, sadly, is blandly derivative when it's not pure rubbish. The show's inability to build or sustain tension throughout makes it difficult to call the editing anything more than serviceable.
As above, my "expectation" is that they tell a good story, which has little to nothing to do with the budget. At its core Renegades has a weak script, and that's the primary thing that's wrong with it.
In short, it'd be hypocritical to position a show as professional enough to serve as a network pilot and then expect it to be critiqued on the level of a fan production.
...were cogent, to the point, and not at all insulting in any way, let alone what any sane person would consider "harsh." The comments might have been
blunt, but so what? They might not be what the fan filmmakers wanted to read, but nothing gets made or released in a vaccuum, nor is anything every going to be perfectly received and viewed exactly the same way by everyone.
Too many fans get so bent out of shape when others criticize these things, choosing to view those opinions as attacks. Once again, we have a perfect example of a working professional recognizing the very flawed and substandard production and being shouted down by a mob of fans who don't want to listen, except as see.
It's not just
Maurice, either. Plenty of other people have made similar observations about this fan film and others, only to be bullied, shouted out of the thread, mobbed, ganged up on, and had their credentials questioned.
Bear in mind I am not suggesting it impossible or inappropriate to disagree with those opinions, but treating them as entirely without value (as I have seen happen here on numerous occasions) is just another sad trope of the fan film community and altogether a disappointing behavior to witness.
It's certainly no Axanar.
As all that exists of
Axanar so far is a cocktease sizzle reel and a poorly shot scene, I don't see how that's really a viable comparison to make.