James T Mather
Well-known member
Hi all,
I went to see Apocalypto last night and came out reeling. Tough, Hard, Great cinema. Whatever about Mel Gibson said or his religious politics - this man is a born director IMHO. The film is visceral, bloody and utterly compelling.
Hats off Mr. G.
That's the pros - now for the cons. Having watched Superman Returns and found the look pretty indistinguishable from clean Vision 2 stock on the whole - the opposite is true of Apocalypto. This is not geek nit picking - the look frequently kept dragging me out of the drama.
Only the fact that Gibson's direction was so strong that forced me back in.
A lot of the film had a very "video" like texture (occasionally this would disappear in favour of a film-like look but there seemed to be no rhyme or reason for this). Some running shots looked videoish, others not. Some night exteriors looked film like, others like 18db digibeta. The motion characteristics, throughout, often exhibited a video-news quality (and not just on high speed stuff).
I can only guess that Mr. Semler - pushed for light on occasion - opted to open the shutter to maximize his shooting time under a dense canopy of foliage where light would be at a premium - and thus the motion characteristics change (the opposite of skinny shutter, if you will) - or on the occasional night shot - to overcrank the Genesis chip and thus some video noise. But I was surprised at the almost random way it came and went. Maybe it's just a characteristic of the Genesis look.
Anyone else notice this?
I went to see Apocalypto last night and came out reeling. Tough, Hard, Great cinema. Whatever about Mel Gibson said or his religious politics - this man is a born director IMHO. The film is visceral, bloody and utterly compelling.
That's the pros - now for the cons. Having watched Superman Returns and found the look pretty indistinguishable from clean Vision 2 stock on the whole - the opposite is true of Apocalypto. This is not geek nit picking - the look frequently kept dragging me out of the drama.
A lot of the film had a very "video" like texture (occasionally this would disappear in favour of a film-like look but there seemed to be no rhyme or reason for this). Some running shots looked videoish, others not. Some night exteriors looked film like, others like 18db digibeta. The motion characteristics, throughout, often exhibited a video-news quality (and not just on high speed stuff).
I can only guess that Mr. Semler - pushed for light on occasion - opted to open the shutter to maximize his shooting time under a dense canopy of foliage where light would be at a premium - and thus the motion characteristics change (the opposite of skinny shutter, if you will) - or on the occasional night shot - to overcrank the Genesis chip and thus some video noise. But I was surprised at the almost random way it came and went. Maybe it's just a characteristic of the Genesis look.
Anyone else notice this?