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Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
Originally Posted by RocShemp
(Post 11995294)
^ Those comments from Whedon were meant to be tongue-in-cheek, right? Because taken as written he sounds like a whiny bitch.
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Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
Originally Posted by johnnysd
(Post 11994886)
I would think they meant at the time a B-type movie rather than a script. The script for Jaws is pretty stellar. And I miss that Spielberg too
Raiders also to an extent- because the film was basically an exercise for both Lucas and Spielberg in how to shot something efficiently and down and dirty (more like a poverty row serial than a blustery big studio A movie). When Spielberg had nearly unlimited resources and the full faith of the studio supporting him, he created 1941. |
Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
The first one that immediately comes to mind is The Phantom Menace, terribly directed by George Lucas. Considering a much better version of the same movie was realized when someone made judicious edits, called The Phantom Edit, it stands to reason a better director could have really made it a good movie.
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Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
Originally Posted by PhantomStranger
(Post 11995549)
The first one that immediately comes to mind is The Phantom Menace, terribly directed by George Lucas. Considering a much better version of the same movie was realized when someone made judicious edits, called The Phantom Edit, it stands to reason a better director could have really made it a good movie.
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Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
Originally Posted by Rypro 525
(Post 11995556)
part o the reasoning for the bad acting is Lucas doing line readings
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Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
Originally Posted by dugan
(Post 11995559)
And, probably, Lucas giving the actors nothing but a green screen to act against.
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Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
Originally Posted by PhantomStranger
(Post 11995564)
Lucas was very dumb for attempting to make The Prequel Trilogy in mostly digital sets. The technology was certainly not ready for it in 1999.
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Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
Originally Posted by Jay G.
(Post 11994856)
It's hard to say that there's anything that's solely the fault of the director, since there's literally nothing on screen that's the sole domain of the director. The director doesn't actually do anything as a scene is being shot, normally, aside from calling action and cut. What he does, as per his job title, is direct everyone else on how to to their job, and give final approval.
If a director has picked a good script, hired a good cast and crew, then his work is already half done before it's even started filming. Isn't Jaws considered an example of what many considered to be a B-movie script elevated by the director Spielberg into something more?
Originally Posted by inri222
(Post 11994900)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Film_director
Film Director A film director is a person who directs the making of a film. Generally, a film director controls a film's artistic and dramatic aspects, and visualizes the script while guiding the technical crew and actors in the fulfillment of that vision. Film directors create an overall vision through which a film eventually becomes realized. Realizing this vision includes overseeing the artistic and technical elements of film production, as well as directing the shooting timetable and meeting deadlines. This entails organizing the film crew in such a way as to achieve his or her vision of the film. This requires skills of group leadership, as well as the ability to maintain a singular focus even in the stressful environment of a film set. Moreover it is necessary to have an artistic eye to frame shots and to give precise feedback to cast and crew, thus, excellent communication skills are a must. Since the film director depends on the successful cooperation of many different creative individuals with possibly strongly contradicting artistic ideals and visions, he or she also needs to possess conflict resolution skills in order to mediate whenever necessary. Thus the director ensures that all individuals involved in the film production are working towards an identical vision for the completed film. The set of varying challenges he or she has to tackle has been described as "a multi-dimensional jigsaw puzzle with egos and weather thrown in for good measure". It adds to the pressure that the success of a film can influence when and how they will work again. Omnipresent are the boundaries of the films budget. Additionally, the director may also have to ensure an intended age rating. Theoretically the sole superior of a director is the studio that is financing the film, however a poor working relationship between a film director and an actor could possibly result in the director being replaced if the actor is a major film star. Even so, it is arguable that the director spends more time on a project than anyone else, considering that the director is one of the few positions that requires intimate involvement during every stage of film production. Thus, the position of film director is widely considered to be a highly stressful and demanding one. It has been said that "20-hour days are not unusual".
Originally Posted by Hokeyboy
(Post 11995011)
Every time a Whedon line stinks, it's the director's fault, right? ;) "Toad struck by lightning..."
Originally Posted by Jay G.
(Post 11995047)
Whedon's has had some choice words about the directing done on Alien Resurrection over the years:
Originally Posted by RocShemp
(Post 11995294)
^ Those comments from Whedon were meant to be tongue-in-cheek, right? Because taken as written he sounds like a whiny bitch.
Originally Posted by PhantomStranger
(Post 11995564)
Lucas was very dumb for attempting to make The Prequel Trilogy in mostly digital sets. The technology was certainly not ready for it in 1999.
Originally Posted by Rypro 525
(Post 11995576)
there's an infamous story where Lucas visited the Gangs of New York set, & after seeing that Scorsese & crew painstakingly built an entire block to look like the 1800s, Lucas told him "you know, all of that can be done with computers now"
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Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
Dogma. I like Kevin Smith but it could have been a classic with a better director.
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Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
Originally Posted by hanshotfirst1138
(Post 11997483)
Perhaps not, but given how thoroughly many directors storyboard and plan their scenes, it's arguable the director, especially a good director, is more the creative force behind a film than anyone else.
Isn't it customary to get a first-time director a top-notch ASC DP and a good editor to try to mitigate and problems which inexperience might bring. As far as the job being half-done, perhaps, but there's still a unifying magic to add. As for surrounding a new director with an experienced crew, that can certainly help, although I don't know if it's straight up standard practice. And yes, a bad director can overrule the director or script writer or whomever, but a bad producer can override a director too. The point is you can't tell by just what's on the screen what's the fault of the director, if anything. |
Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
Originally Posted by Rypro 525
(Post 11995576)
there's an infamous story where Lucas visited the Gangs of New York set, & after seeing that Scorsese & crew painstakingly built an entire block to look like the 1800s, Lucas told him "you know, all of that can be done with computers now"
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Given how much of Kong was rendered digitally, that's actually kind of surprising.
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Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
Great topic, I have not seen Resurrection actually I have not seen any Alien film but all those Wheldon quotes are pretty interesting.. Sucks he still sore about it
I agree with whomever said Les Miserables it coulda have been way better. Also I don't think Synder was the only problem with MOS but Watchmen with another director coulda have been a masterpiece, the script was there the visual were perfect but it all felt so disconnected. |
Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
Originally Posted by hanshotfirst1138
(Post 11997569)
Given how much of Kong was rendered digitally, that's actually kind of surprising.
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Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
There are movies that have good scripts and with good actors, but bad direction and giving good actors bad direction= shit film.
Did you guys know that 8mm, the Nicolas Cage cop movie was written by the writer of SE7EN? It's also staring Nicolas Cage before he was a parody, James Gandolfini and Joaquin Phoenix. Could have been so good. http://www.filmlinks4u.net/wp-conten...tch-Online.jpg And I know a lot of people wont agree, but you could take the exact same script of Batman Forever and get a more serious director and the film would be good. http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...rever_ver7.jpg |
See if a different director came onto Batman Forever, I'm inclined to think the first thing he'd have done is probably have rewrites done to the script. Although Akiva Goldsman does seem to be the opposite, one of those screenwriters who seems to make a bad script for even pretty good directors.
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Originally Posted by Jay G.
(Post 11997510)
The director is arguably the most influential voice in the creative process of making a film, more so nowadays than ever.
However, my point was that there's nothing on the screen that's the sole domain of a director. Even if a director draws storyboards for the entire film themselves, there's still dozens to hundreds to thousands of people that work on changing those storyboards into a full fledged movie. As a result, there's nothing in the finished product that one can point to and say definitively "that's solely the director's fault." Unifying magic is part of the hiring process too. For example, it's not just necessary to hire the best actor for each role individually, but to make sure that the actors work well with each other, which often means playing actors off each other in the casting process. Same with the rest of the crew. As for surrounding a new director with an experienced crew, that can certainly help, although I don't know if it's straight up standard practice. And yes, a bad director can overrule the director or script writer or whomever, but a bad producer can override a director too. The point is you can't tell by just what's on the screen what's the fault of the director, if anything. |
Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
Originally Posted by Nesbit
(Post 11997493)
Dogma. I like Kevin Smith but it could have been a classic with a better director.
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Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
Originally Posted by hanshotfirst1138
(Post 11997483)
Didn't Scorsese promptly ignore him, if I've heard correctly? |
Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
Originally Posted by hanshotfirst1138
(Post 11997667)
Stanley Kubrick might disagree.
Originally Posted by hanshotfirst1138
(Post 11997667)
I'd disagree completely "if anything." If you can't tell who did what on a film, then why does the director, DP, editor, etc. matter at all?
A director is like the conductor in an orchestra. Obviously it's an important role, and a talented one can leave their mark on an overall production, but you can't point to one particular note or instrument and say, "ah yes, that was solely because of the conductor."
Originally Posted by hanshotfirst1138
(Post 11997667)
You hear stories almost all of the time about titanic power struggles between directors and producers, films with multiple rewrites, etc, and you can usually tell when such things crop up...
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Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
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Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
Originally Posted by Jay G.
(Post 11997772)
I think you forgot to put it in past tense there.
Anyway, how would he have disagreed with that statement? Certainly, from directing Spartacus, Kubrick knew that simply being the director on a film wasn't enough to assert full creative control. He was writer or co-writer on nearly all of his films, so he knew the importance of that role, as well as producer on all his films past Spartacus, knowing the influence of that role. Kubrick asserted nearly full creative control on most of his films, but he knew from experience that just being the director wasn't enough to be able to assert that level of control. Again, the point is whether one can point to any one aspect of a film and say that's solely the responsibility of the director. Looking at just the film itself, you can't. Cinematography and editing are at least more distinct roles with visible effects on the final film; one can say "that's a bad shot" or "that's a poor edit," even if one can't definitively say that those are the sole fault of the cinematographer or editor. Directing is more nebulous, you can't point to any particular thing on the screen and say "that's bad directing." The effect of a director is more on the whole of the film and all the roles everyone else in the production plays. A director is like the conductor in an orchestra. Obviously it's an important role, and a talented one can leave their mark on an overall production, but you can't point to one particular note or instrument and say, "ah yes, that was solely because of the conductor." That's part of the problem; you need to know of behind-the-scenes info to really start peeling apart what could've been the fault of the director, or the producer, or the studio, or the script, etc. For example, with Star Wars there are behind the scenes reports of Lucas failing to properly direct the actors. However, all the actors still delivered solid performances. If we didn't know the behind-the-scenes info, there'd be nothing on the screen of that particular film to indicate Lucas was bad at directing actors. |
Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
Originally Posted by hanshotfirst1138
(Post 11998411)
Not intending any disrespect or sarcasm, I just assumed that since he'd passed away, the last tense was a given.
Originally Posted by hanshotfirst1138
(Post 11998411)
Kubrick was known for micromanaging his films to the last fine detail. Nothing the frame occurs which he didn't know about or OK.
Again, the question is whether there's something on screen that can be attributed as solely the responsibility of the director, and just by what's on the screen for a specific film, you can't say.
Originally Posted by hanshotfirst1138
(Post 11998411)
I see what you're saying, but even in this case, you have to allow for the broad amount of sway various people are given...
Originally Posted by hanshotfirst1138
(Post 11998411)
I disagree. Look at how crassly directed films by people like McG, Michael Bay, and Brett Ratner are. Their slightly leering attitude toward female characters, the rapid-fire cut action sequences, etc....
Also, those examples are ones where you have to look at trends in a director's films, looking at multiple films from a director to try and pinpoint commonalities, then attribute those commonalities to the director, perhaps incorrectly. Watching one particular film from one director, with no knowledge of their other work, nothing on the screen screams "this is the sole result of the director."
Originally Posted by hanshotfirst1138
(Post 11998411)
I'd argue that watching a good sequence or set piece vs. a bad one is the definition of "good direction" of a film.
Originally Posted by hanshotfirst1138
(Post 11998411)
Though they come at things from the opposite end, I'd think of a director far more like a songwriter...
Originally Posted by hanshotfirst1138
(Post 11998411)
This is broadly not necessarily wrong, but a few points. First of all, pattern recognition....
Originally Posted by hanshotfirst1138
(Post 11998411)
There are of course many stories about films with troubled productions, but the vast majority of the time, even in the pre-Internet age, when the director had a fight with the producers or any issues troubled productions, it was usually pretty highly publicized.
Also, bad stories can stay hidden for decades. Some people just want to keep their head down and keep doing work instead of pissing off powerful people, and indicating to other powerful people that they publicly bad-mouth the people they work with. Again, inference, behind the scenes tales, comparison with other films... this is all needed to really suss out what a director's influence on a particular film may have been. This is all because, while an incredibly important role and powerful creative voice, there's nothing in a single finished film, in and of itself, one can point to and say "the director solely did that," because there's nothing on a film production that a director does solely themselves. |
Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
First off, Batman Forever IS good. The big problem with it is that Schumacher didn't reign in Tommy Lee Jones. In fact, he seemed to have no understanding of Two Face at all. But the rest of the film is good. It would have been even better if WB had let Schumacher include the subplot of Bruce being affected (again) by the death of his parents. Obviously Batman and Robin is pure shit.
As for Whedon's comments on Alien: Resurrection, if you were given the chance to write a script for one of your favorite franchises, and you think you've written something really interesting and cool, and then some guy comes in and messes around with it to the point that you're watching it fall apart in front of you, wouldn't you be pissed about it? I actually have a soft spot for Resurrection, but you have to watch it as a Jeunet film and ignore the fact that it says "Alien" on it to enjoy it. |
Re: Good Script, Good Acting, Bad Director?
Originally Posted by Jay G.
(Post 11998655)
It's "past tense", not "last tense," and if it was always a given, it wouldn't be needed. Grammar is important.
Again, the question is whether there's something on screen that can be attributed as solely the responsibility of the director, and just by what's on the screen for a specific film, you can't say. Yes, directors can have a variable amount of influence on a film, and I'm not denying that directors can and often do have influence on a film. But that's what it is: influence. They influence all other aspects of the filmmaking process, but they don't actually do anything that shows up on screen themselves. A "leering attitude toward female characters," is somewhat vague, but that could easily be blamed by the script. Do those directors create a "leering attitude" in the script, or do they pick scripts that already contain those elements? Or do they hire screenwriters to rewrite existing scripts to those sensibilities? And rapid-fire cutting is obviously an aspect of the editing. Are the director's pushing the editor to that, or did they hire editors who are already inclined towards that style? Or maybe the directors themselves are merely serving the wishes of the producers that hired them in the first place? Also, those examples are ones where you have to look at trends in a director's films, looking at multiple films from a director to try and pinpoint commonalities, then attribute those commonalities to the director, perhaps incorrectly. Watching one particular film from one director, with no knowledge of their other work, nothing on the screen screams "this is the sole result of the director. Except most of the time, what makes a good sequence or set piece boils down to the editing. I'd already mentioned the first Star Wars, which had a disastrous first cut. Nope, bad analogy. The songwriter/composer is like the screenwriter on a film; laying the basic structure for others to perform. There's a reason why many of the great classical composers were also conductors; they knew the importance of controlling the performance of the piece they wrote. It's also why there's so many singer/songwriter combinations, as the only way to control the song you wrote is to perform it yourself. Yes, pattern recognition can help suss out a director's influence on the films they've worked on, if you're looking at the body of work as a whole. However, it's a process of elimination; as you point out to suss out the director's influence on the editing you have to see both films by the same editor under different directors, as well as the same director with different editors (if that's even the case). Even then, you still can't remove the editor's responsibility on any one particular work, even if you can make a strong case for the director's influence. This assumes the director had a problem with the producer's influence, which maybe they didn't. For example, you blame Michael Bay for the editing on his films, but I've never heard of his editors complaining about the editing style on his films. Michael Bay's first few films were with producer Jerry Bruckheimer, one of few producers who seem to have visible influence on the end product. Also, bad stories can stay hidden for decades. Some people just want to keep their head down and keep doing work instead of pissing off powerful people, and indicating to other powerful people that they publicly bad-mouth the people they work with. Again, inference, behind the scenes tales, comparison with other films... this is all needed to really suss out what a director's influence on a particular film may have been. This is all because, while an incredibly important role and powerful creative voice, there's nothing in a single finished film, in and of itself, one can point to and say "the director solely did that," because there's nothing on a film production that a director does solely themselves. |
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