Andrew Rieger
Well-known member
100%.
Dariusz is amazing.
I am so damn excited to see this movie I could scream .... in space.
In space no one can hear you scream.
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100%.
Dariusz is amazing.
I am so damn excited to see this movie I could scream .... in space.
The cool thing is that an Indie filmmaker can afford to own and shoot the same camera that is being used on the biggest budget/blockbuster movies. I can't remember that ever being the case...
Jim
From Dariusz Wolski ASC:
"In my opinion, the new Red Epic camera is about to revolutionize all spectrums of the film industry.
Seriously, i don't care about the fact that these industry big guys are making films with EPICS IN 3D, it can be good for us to see these big guys praisin for the Epics but in the end, these films don't have nothing to do with cinematography, they are just banal products that are easily forgotten over the years and it doesn't matter with what they film, its all about the franchising and the actors, just that. When RED announced that Sodenbergh was going to shoot CHE with a Red One, to me, it sounded more important. You people got to offer a EPIC RED to OLD CINEMA GUYS "WHO USED TO SHOT IN PANAVISION" like Terrence Malick, Paul Thomas Anderson. and other great people out there who does author films like David Lynch, Manoel de Oliveira, Godard, Herzog, …
...Rob Marshall, the Bertolucci of today, Dion Beebe, the second incarnation of Storaro...
Well, I beg to disagree 100% right there. A camera is a tool to tell stories, not just stories with a particular meaning, sensibility or style, but stories, period. And the films and/or cinematographers mentioned above are RENOWNED as some of the best visualists in the business, not just Hollywood, so any kind of ringing endorsement those people could give the camera carries a LOT more weight than whatever those auteurs you refer to could ever achieve, in as much as the merits of a camera as a technical tool for acquiring images are concerned. Riddley Scott is probably known as the strongest visual director we have working today, and everybody agrees that whether he makes a masterpiece (Blade Runner) or forgettable inconsequential garbage (Robin Hood, etc, etc, etc) his films ALWAYS look gorgeous. And he has the clout to shoot on film, to incur the time, the expense and the extra work that comes with it, because it is generally agreed, or it was until now, that the quality and aesthetic of film as a medium was one of the things that gave his work its distinctive visual seal. So for him to accept shooting RED, or digital for that matter, will go a LONG way, a much longer way in fact, to prove the validity of RED as a genuine film replacement than the whatever Soderbergh, Herzog, Lynch or PTA could do. Those directors are known for the dramatic quality of their work, but not the quality of their cinematography. They are, in fact, known mostly for being people that put plot and characters in front of every other technical aspect, chiefly the quality of their cinematography, for the sake of telling their story. And good for them, and for those of us who value a great story, but master painters they are not. The only one that is accepted as a a true visual story teller is Malick, but he is such an isolated force of nature, such an anomaly that creates by contravening every commonly accepted rule in the book, that his acceptance of digital will surely be noteworthy but not fundamental. Now, Darius Wolszki, the Jack Cardiff of his generation, Rob Marshall, the Bertolucci of today, Dion Beebe, the second incarnation of Storaro, John Schwartzman, Storaro's pupil, and Riddley Scott, who needs no comparison, are all people whose work is at the absolute top of the heap when it comes to the beauty, transcendence, quality and all around wow factor of their IMAGES, so their endorsement of a camera is all that camera company could ever ask for to shut mouths and make fodder irrelevant. No auteur cinema could ever do that.
If only it had about 3 paragraph breaks.Incredible post...
I feel like this is the cinematographic argument equivalent of throwing Molotov cocktails at the Louvre’s masterpieces. :smiley:"...than the whatever Soderbergh, Herzog, Lynch or PTA could do. Those directors are known for the dramatic quality of their work, but not the quality of their cinematography. They are, in fact, known mostly for being people that put plot and characters in front of every other technical aspect, chiefly the quality of their cinematography, for the sake of telling their story. And good for them, and for those of us who value a great story, but master painters they are not."