Why don't movies look like movies anymore?

1,965 Views | 19 Replies | Last: 1 day ago by citizenkane06
TCTTS
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AG
I often complain in various threads - increasingly so, it feels like - about certain modern movies and TV shows looking "flat," "gray," and "digital." Well, this great new explainer video delves into exactly what I mean, and exactly what I long for instead, in that even the most standard fare back in the day used to look incredible...

YouBet
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AG
Good video. I've had the same complaint but didn't know how to articulate it or thought maybe I was just romanticizing the past. Couldn't put my finger on it but this video explains it well what I've been feeling and seeing.

Analogous conversation which we've had on here before is sound editing - it's gotten worse with advent of streaming platforms. We have a thread on here about it. You probably started it. Every now and then I'll watch my Master and Commander blu-ray simply for the sound. I've never found another movie since that was so rich and layered from a sound editing standpoint.

The irony of all of this new technology is that we are entering sort of a Dark Ages period of movie making where skill sets honed using analog and early digital tech are being lost to history (to his final point in this video) that were superior to what we have now.
Chipotlemonger
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AG
Great posting and topic, TCT and YouBet.
Eliminatus
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I agree. I also have never really had to the words for it but this guy nails it for me.

With his explanation in mind, it really boils down to using ambiance and not just pure set design to help drive a story. His example of Se7en is the perfect example IMO. Those murder scenes were not just crafted to look dark(as in feel), they FELT dark in nature. It's the difference between just looking at an art piece and being moved by an art piece. For me at least. I just don't FEEL movies anymore. I just watch them. (with a few exceptions of course here and there storywise)

The comments also brought up a great point that I can see being very valid. That being, the art of cinematography itself not really being lost and not even the tech necessarily every time, but all the shenanigans that can occur in post production. Especially when creative differences happen. How may horror stories have we heard now of movies nearly falling apart at this stage? Could be a big role in this topic as well.
YouBet
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Quote:

I just don't FEEL movies anymore. I just watch them.


Great way to put it.
Quad Dog
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I randomly saw this Twitter thread the other day with a similar idea that modern lighting styles have changed to try and use realistic lighting source instead of fake unrealistic lighting sources.

EclipseAg
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He spent a lot of time on camera technology, a lot of which was over my head. So forgive my question:

Is his central premise that overreliance on green screens makes filmmakers lax about lighting and shooting scenes creatively because it's all gonna be tinkered with later? There's nothing really "there" to light because it's all just blank walls??
Brian Earl Spilner
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This video explains it perfectly also.

https://texags.com/forums/13/topics/3479117/replies/68215354
aTmAg
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Brian Earl Spilner said:

This video explains it perfectly also.

https://texags.com/forums/13/topics/3479117/replies/68215354
I think your video explains it way better.




However, I do not buy the "imperfect lens" part. I think things like lens flares, blood/water/etc. on the lens is really a nostalgia factor. That good movies in the past had those things, but they weren't good BECAUSE of that, they were good despite that.

I especially think that blood/mud/etc. on the lens ruins the immersion. Rather that it feeling like I'm there, it becomes clear that the camera is there. That if when mud splatters on my eye, then it doesn't cover 5% of my pupil, it covers the whole thing. So just have it do that. If you really want to insist on a "dirty lens" then make it through a window or something. That way it doesn't ruin the emersion.


Edit: I also think having impossible camera angles ruin emersion. Like in Masters of the Air when they had the "camera" zooming around bombs that were falling, that made everything look fake. Or that scene in your video where they were walking on that bridge in a Tolkien movie.
double aught
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Interesting video.
maroon barchetta
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The part in Avatar: Way Of The Water where they basically recreated the scene in Titanic where the gal is trying to escape a sinking ship, that went to 48fps or something and looked nothing like the rest of the movie to me and was distracting.
Brian Earl Spilner
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Just watched the vid. I actually rewatched The Parent Trap last year (one of my favorites as a kid), and had this exact same thought. Movies just aren't this way anymore.

Not just how the actual film looks, but the fact that it's genuinely a family movie. Neither for kids for adults, but something everyone would enjoy.

I miss the 90's.
BadMoonRisin
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Wow that was interesting.
AGinHI
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Are you saying modern movies suck?












P.S. Interesting video. Thanks for posting.
Lathspell
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I could have sworn I saw a video about the exact same topic over a month ago that was around half an hour long. Same ideas and very interesting for someone like myself who LOVES great cinematography and lighting in movies, but doesn't have the knowledge to properly vocalize what I love about them.

One of the reasons Raiders of the Lost Ark is my favorite Indy movie is because I believe it is the best shot of the three. The use of shadows in that movie give it a completely different feel from the others, and I love it.

But there are obviously a lot of consumers of **** movies out there who don't care about any of this at all. There was a poster on the Batman thread talking about how they didn't like how dark the movie was. There's a difference between a dark ****ty scene (Game of Thrones night battle) and a movie like that Batman that gives you plenty of light, focus, and contrast to see the things the director wants you to see.

I just love when we get great cinematography in movies like Dune Part II. It's just a feast for the eyes. Hell, it's one of the reasons I wish I liked Robert Eggers movies. I loved the atmosphere and way he shot a movie like The Lighthouse. Just didn't gel with the movie, as a whole.
Bruce Almighty
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Blade Runner is the beautifully shot movie of all time and it's 42 years old.
superunknown
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YouBet said:


The irony of all of this new technology is that we are entering sort of a Dark Ages period of movie making where skill sets honed using analog and early digital tech are being lost to history (to his final point in this video) that were superior to what we have now.


This is very much happening already in sound, everything seems so sterile and digitized. A buddy od mine sent me some stuff he did for his radio station and conceptually, I love the content. It just didn't hit well with me because the announcer voice (an impersonator doing a pretty damn good job) was overly processed to the point of sounding too clean, if that makes sense. In my opinion, too many sound options (its gotta sound punchy!) in use these days take the warmth and subtlety out of voice work and while I've used some very good AI voice tools, its still eons away from sounding as natural as someone who does voice work for a living, even if said voice is having a bad day or needs to tune in his mic chain more.
Snake Farmer
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Slightly tangential and a little political but I think this could be an interesting addition to this topic. The linked article talks about how culture has somewhat come to a standstill, from music, to fashion and others. The article is about USAID, amongst other things, but I think that it could apply here, in a way. We are stuck in 2000.

https://www.coffeeandcovid.com/p/the-big-thaw-thursday-february-6?r=dzrj0&utm_medium=ios&triedRedirect=true

Here is a slight excerpt

"But why? What, or who, is holding the culture back? Global culture has indeed been stalled, a sociological failure, winning only at participation. You might now begin the whataboutism. What about X? What about Venmo? What about AI? What about Elon's rocket ships? Stand by. Those gadgets are either part of the problem or exceptions proving the point.

Our modern world is populated by high revision numbers, stratospheric sequel counts, and recycled, geriatric celebrities. We check our iPhone Sixteen now with three cameras to find out when Need for Speed Ten starts, and then buy tickets online for an octogenarian Rolling Stones concert. In 2022, the hit Netflix show Stranger Things a futuristic sci-fi series set back in the 1980's and in its season four featured Kate Bush's 1985 single Running Up That Hill. The 40-year-old song hit the top 10 in 34 countries.

It's endless recycling. And it's not normal.

There are many examples, but perhaps the most obvious symptom of cultural freeze is stalled fashion. The handful of writers calling out stuck culture focus on how distinct was each decade leading up to the Millennium, right before the Patriot Act passed in 2001. Tracing backwards, the cultural evolution trend holds. But from the 90's forward, zip. Zero. Nada."
FL_Ag1998
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Sorry, interesting topic for possible discussion in its own thread, but completely unrelated.
citizenkane06
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My take is that movies are safe bets nowadays, which means lots of green screen action or fantasy backgrounds. As mentioned in the video, those situations are both easy to light and lit in such a way to maximize editing options in post. Nobody js taking a risk on an original concept because the data show exactly how much one type of film will net.
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