I'm sure people have brought this up before, but Spielberg does the old blocking style in most of his films. He still cuts way more than the goldenage Hollywood, but at least he blocks his characters in interesting ways.
@Moviewise Жыл бұрын
Absolutely! I made a video about Spielberg (How Spielberg Directs Your Attention) which I’m sure you’ll enjoy.
Indy in the Temple of Doom, when he barrels into Willie's room, looking for an assassin, and she thinks he's there to have sex - it's one of my favorite examples of great blocking.
@jimmyj1969 Жыл бұрын
Spielberg is a HUGE fan of old-style filming!
@jaf2378 Жыл бұрын
You have opened my eyes, now I'll never be able to watch a movie the same way again.
@ruurdm.fenenga2571 Жыл бұрын
Shooting only close-ups was called "Talking Photographs" by Sir Alfred Hitchcock.
@thePsykomanteum9 ай бұрын
one can tell how inexperienced a director is by their dependence on them. First-timers one can barely tell what's being depicted.
@thelemetric5 ай бұрын
what an outstanding quote. thank you.
@dennismason3740 Жыл бұрын
I hate push-ins. I hate shakycam. I hate clever people who show you how clever they are. I love this channel.
@natesmart9959 Жыл бұрын
I noticed this a long time ago in film. Once you do you’ll never not notice it. Shaky cam has to be my biggest pet peeve, so ugly. This is my favorite video by you, thank you so much for making it MW, took all my thoughts and made a video out of it. Bring back classical style filmmaking!
@johnjay370 Жыл бұрын
Me to. The shaky cam was never a good use of camera. Just use a handheld shot or a steadicam for a more natural movement. But there are times when intensified continuity does not bother me. For instance, a montage is good but shakey cam is bad. Fully choreograph action good vs lazy cut away action is bad. Great story with motivated intensified continuity is fine but non motivated intensified continuity is dumb. It about the assembly of the film and the story.
@Nine-Signs Жыл бұрын
Shaky cam has its place. As example of that: Star Trek Vs Battlestar Galactica 2003. On tng, voyager enterprise, you will rarely ever see any shaky cam style. The show runners at the time refused Frakes on many an occasion when he wanted to use different styles to what had been looooong established for the franchise. Meanwhile over at Battlestar galactica their use of shaky cam was pretty epic given the serious nature of the show and used such liberally when it came to external vfx which although not the first time I have seen such (the first being deep Space 9) was employed liberally but well. A battle from Star Trek Voyager here showing that they really really wanted to do a bit of shaky cam but it is so tacit on the internal shots that they should not have bothered meanwhile the external shots have no such direction and are in effect long flat shots. It's a good fight scene dont get me wrong, one of the best for Voyager, but you get the idea. kzbin.info/www/bejne/jaXWoGl8i7aartEsi=z7WMwepBp0zevYNT Meanwhile: a battle from BSG kzbin.info/www/bejne/oYHIiXmMbpmVqacsi=6d8wIoy5YFAzBBR- Shaky cam has its place.
@animatewithdermot Жыл бұрын
"Once you do you’ll never not notice it." God dammit. You're right. I'm screwed now. Will have to incorporate some of this into my future classes!
@achimdemus-holzhaeuser1233 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I hate shaky cam as well, especially if it is a certain horror movie genre that shakes the shaking up to include fear in a scene were absolutely nothing interesting happens. My second most hated thing in movies is screaming people.
@squamish4244 Жыл бұрын
The shaky cam only works if you're Paul Greengrass.
@majkus Жыл бұрын
I assisted with a Star Trek fan film project some years ago. All the sets were green-screen, and the entire studio was a small green-screen room in the producer's house. No wide shots here. The _only_ way to record scenes was with over-the-shoulder conversations (recorded twice, because only one camera), and static scenes like starship bridge scenes. And yet, it ended up looking pretty good (for an almost zero budget production) because its audience was accustomed to looking at the sort of lifeless staging you describe (and because the CG backgrounds weren't half rotten).
@Tamacat388 Жыл бұрын
Yea this is the problem with comparing 50s Hollywood drama blocking with heavy special effects driven action films. Like others have pointed out you cant have Boromir walking around all over the place in one single shot so easily when half the cast in that scene is several feet taller than their characters are.
@landofthesilverpath5823 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like a nightmare to film an entire movie on a Greenscreen. Especially for the actors. It'd find it really difficult to get Into character and stay focused. Even more so if you have to interact with other characters who aren't even there. Maybe directors and photographers were more creative back in the day because they had fewer options. Also, The fact that film was expensive meant you put a lot of thought into every single shit. Every shot was precious.
@cbuosi Жыл бұрын
@majkus do you remember the fan film name?
@majkus Жыл бұрын
@@cbuosi It was Star Trek Hidden Frontier (well, one of the followup series they did; I became involved fairly late in their history).
@cbuosi Жыл бұрын
@@majkus tks
@MCBosmans Жыл бұрын
You've basically just explained why The Grand Budapest Hotel is one of my favourite films ever! It deviates quite a bit from the modern standard and uses a mixture of old and new styles.
@guitarfan01 Жыл бұрын
Wes Anderson has some great blocking, although he has an obsession with symmetry. It's fun.
@totostamopo Жыл бұрын
Totally Agree!
@garlandstrife9 ай бұрын
Inauthentic, his whole spiel is a gimmick.
@keithklassen53207 ай бұрын
@@garlandstrife Film contains a lot of artifice. Artifice is what this video is about. You might not like the fact that Anderson makes his artifice *feel* like artifice, but the argument could be made that he is one of the few filmmakers being honest about it, lol.
@howard59923 ай бұрын
@@keithklassen5320 Anderson celebrates artifice. And of course he devotes a tremendous amount of attention to set design and staging his scenes (decor and "props").
@jerryschramm4399 Жыл бұрын
Hitchcock did some very nice tracking shots. The camera swooping down to show Ingrid Bergman holding "the key" in "Notorious". Or the wonderful camera movement when Arbogast goes into the house in "Psycho", only to end up tumbling down the stairs. Of course, "Rope" was interesting, if ultimately not all that interesting. Done much better in "Rear Window". Both enclosed spaces, but one stays closed; the other expands, and almost breathes with life. I also think a lot of this goes back to the introduction of music videos as MTV was launched in 1981, and shorter cuts became more the style. So, a new generation of directors learned this new technique, and adapted it for their movies. Also, for a master class in the use of movement and blocking to create tension, you have to look at "Twelve Angry Men."
@majkus Жыл бұрын
Earlier than music videos: Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In (1968-1973) was considered revolutionary at the time, and was much discussed by critics for its quick shots and frantic cuts. And it was pretty self-aware, as one of the quick-take jokes was Henry Gibson asking, "Marshall McLuhan, What're ya doin'?"
@neuroticnation144 Жыл бұрын
To be fair, TV in the 60s and 70s, etc. we’re very small. Movies didn’t fit on the small screen. You ended up with such horrors as the edges of peoples faces with a giant blank space in the middle or pan and scan.😱 It was a travesty to movie lovers. Made for tv shows had to come up with something different to keep people interested in the small screen. And music videos, well they have to keep up with the tempo of the music, the words and emotions of the songs, and the style of the musicians, it was a time of experimentation and ingenuity. Movies had no business trying to copy their examples. They waste the screen’s advantages.
@mattgottesmann3514 Жыл бұрын
I love "Rope". I'd probably have to rewatch, but, while he does show off a bit what he can do, I felt everything he did worked to its advantage of telling the story.
@denroy3 Жыл бұрын
Modernization and the reliance on green screens has almost destroyed the industry.
@sickandtired4926 Жыл бұрын
The one with Henry Fonda was actually shot as a play doing the whole play 20+ times from beginning to end with different camera angles and positions for each time, then the director cut these to form the one sequence for the movie!!! That is why it has that feel. I imagine it was a continuity nightmare though.
@conweez Жыл бұрын
Spielberg's blocking is pretty impressive. Soderberg desaturated Raider's of the Lost Ark into a black and white film, removed the sound and added a Trent Reznor soundtrack in order to highlight and study the staging and blocking in the film. The staging and blocking in Minority Report is pretty good too. One of the few modern, big budget directors who is a master at staging and blocking.
@Finsirith Жыл бұрын
When I saw Soderberg's desaturated study of Raiders, it was a revelation. I'd had no idea, as a young movie-goer, of the sheer craftsmanship that went into the marvelous experience of watching that movie.
@VultureClone Жыл бұрын
I totally understand where you're coming from. It can get boring when it's just face-to-face shots all the time, but it can go too far though when characters don't stop moving around and around and around and it gets annoying/distracting. I guess it all depends on the movie and scene.
@mundanepants Жыл бұрын
This! I feel like the older movies used as examples here are all very .. theatrical. Which by definition makes them feel staged and unnatural, where as I think the goal with a lot of modern film makers is the opposite. They want to create an immersive experience where the situations and characters feel real to the viewer. The story and how it's shown feels like how you'd see/experience real life events. It's one of the reasons I rarely enjoy plays: the movements of the actors tend to break my enjoyment of the story, even though they're doing "everything right" by stage actor standards and using the space, keeping the stage interesting and you focused.
@remnants9974 Жыл бұрын
Yes, it really depends on what the scene is going for. Like the face-to-face close-ups work well enough if you want an intimate scene, like the dinner scene from La La Land... you have a couple having a heated discussion over dinner, so the back and forth with their faces seems like the logic angle to go with. Could they maybe have added some different shots there to vary it a little? Maybe, but I don't think it would work with the characters moving all around the set like in All About Eve, since that rather has the effect of creating a sense of distance as the woman is trying to ignore the guy.
@denroy3 Жыл бұрын
@@mundanepants your opinion, but in reality, the "staged" seems more real to me than static head shots...static scenes. Nothing could be more boring in life than 2 heads not moving...that's why they do the quick cuts, to try to add life to a dead scene. You don't enjoy movement? Then in reality you want it staged, a very very very small stage.
@phoebexxlouise Жыл бұрын
Thank you for highlighting one of the reasons I quit working in the art department. The camera department could always be relied upon to make sure that none of the careful work I had done ended up on screen.
@Selrisitai Жыл бұрын
This is the kind of quote that you should be quoted by annoying college kids and Redditors for, but I'm sure some historical Figure of Repute will get the credit.
@spodergibbs5088 Жыл бұрын
The new style of film making is better than the old black and white.
@candide1065 Жыл бұрын
@@spodergibbs5088 XDDDD
@laniersmith1798 Жыл бұрын
@@spodergibbs5088 Poppycock!
@laniersmith1798 Жыл бұрын
@axileus9327 exactly my point. Brabo axileus9327
@Cabochon1360 Жыл бұрын
The addiction to never letting a shot run more than two seconds is especially bothering when it's a dance scene or fight scene.
@silverbirch-youtube Жыл бұрын
Totally agree. I loathe fight scenes in modern films. It's always just a blur of movement and I can't tell what's supposed to be happening or to whom. So boring, and they go on for ages. I genuinely have no idea why these set-piece scenes are hyped up so much by the industry press and its media shills - if I'm watching at home they're my cue to get up and make a cup of tea or play with my phone.
@SuperFunkmachine Жыл бұрын
If you can't lock the camera down and let them dance or fight then you need different actors.
@totostamopo Жыл бұрын
Or car chase- sorry Greengrass fans!
@Th3_Gael Жыл бұрын
My son pointed out in his young teens that all of the fast shots were to hide bad acting. His words were, "dad, why don't people get Mr chan (Jackie) to do their fight scenes. They just keep changing the camera cos these people can't act or fight"
@rpg7287 Жыл бұрын
I remember way back, when I was a teen, I saw a Pepsi commercial on TV. It was new, innovative, and different because it had all very fast cuts. I remember, after that, almost everything I saw on the big screen or small was edited the exact same way. I now loathe that simplistic, gimmicky editing.
@SpringNotes Жыл бұрын
That's interesting. Back in the day, I also noticed the random camera movement in commercials, that I thought was novel.
@topsuperseven7910 Жыл бұрын
Yes. I don't know if I remember a specific advert but somewhere, an 'MTV' new style of super fast cuts, wham, wham, and I think you're right that at first it was a WOW cool look. it was still unique so it was a 'Rad' eye-zinging fun thing in small doses and then.... ...yes, you're right, soon it was EVERY tv show, advert, short, movie :(
@JavaJunky Жыл бұрын
I haven't seen a tv commercial for several years. When I final watched something live, I immediately noticed: shorter runtime, more commercials in an hour long time slot, frantic/energetic cutting (camera doesn't linger like it used to).
@robkino61373 ай бұрын
My mom always called this "Sesame Street editing" because she said the same thing you did, except laid the blame at the feet of Sesame Street.
@krulidn Жыл бұрын
I think the problem is the over saturation of either style. Honestly, I don't find the wide tracked shot of him walking around in Executive decision all that appealing. Its slow and feels forced and contrived because no scene would ever actually play out like that. Maybe it is because I'm used to faster, more intense shots and edits. But those older classic age films do end up boring none film buffs/cinematography students from our era because they seem slow. It does suck to not have a greater mix of techniques though, that make for greater effect of these more intense shots
@MistbornPrincess Жыл бұрын
One problem is that LOTR involves people of varying heights who aren’t actually that height in real life: aka Elijah Wood was not 3’6. John Rhys Davies was not less than 5 foot tall. PJ was able to do some tricks, like forced perspective, little people doubles in some shots, and used digital tricks. He did everything he could, I think. But for the Council of Elrond, there was only so much they could do. Clearly a lot of tight close ups and digital editing and body doubles for the few wife shots. Could he have solved this with little people actually being the main actor of each character? Yes. But how many people with dwarfism were established, known actors? Two? That’s a shame. But just not feasible for four hobbit actors and an unholy amount of dwarves (if you count The Hobbit films too). Thoughts?
@Tamacat388 Жыл бұрын
Yea I think its an oversight in using LOTR and The Matrix as examples when those for the most part definitely had much smaller sets and more precise digital effects going on. The Matrix sequels are obviously still way too focused on back and forth shots for the dialogue scenes. Like its insane that they wrote the Merovingian the way they did and had him completely still in every single one of his scenes.
@hpoonis2010 Жыл бұрын
Time Bandits had a whole caravan of halflings travelling all over the shop. It isn't always hard to find a thing if you look for it.
@MistbornPrincess Жыл бұрын
@@hpoonis2010 . I didn’t bring it up because I’ve never seen it. Also, wasn’t it about twenty years before LOTR films?
@kama-kiri6496 Жыл бұрын
The more general driving force is actors can't interact with a set that doesn't physically exist.
@robertpearson8798 Жыл бұрын
@@hpoonis2010 Time Bandits used actual dwarf actors that do not fit the physical description of Hobbits as proportioned like full sized men but half the size.
@Dave5400 Жыл бұрын
To be fair with respect to "fast cuts", this would have been an agonising task before the advent of digital film. Constantly cutting between shots would literally have involved cutting and re-stitching frames of film to create desired effects. I may be wrong, but I'm pretty sure it was a specialised job at the time, not just something any Tom Dick or Harry was trusted to do.
@maddiekits7 ай бұрын
Yep I've definitely heard directors from that era saying they did some weird stuff to stay on budget like excessively avoiding cuts and doing sceens in super long takes 😂
@cube2foxАй бұрын
It's also that for fast cuts, you usually have to film with several cameras at once to capture all the different angles with different lenses. Back in the day, physical film was quite expensive, so this might have been a factor which contributed to using not as many cuts. Later film became less expensive, and in the digital age it's almost free (and cutting it with software is also much easier).
@IEnjoyChai Жыл бұрын
I thought I was crazy, thinking shots were cut too fast and that we didn’t have enough time to linger on certain moments. Vindication! Thanks for the interesting video.
@yoonahkang7384 Жыл бұрын
I thought I was slow and dumb because of this. I felt like a dumb watching Oppenheimet.
@chrisnewlovehorton6660 Жыл бұрын
I assume this change is because, in the past, a lot of people in film and TV also worked in theatre or had started out in theatre, where blocking is important and close ups impossible. Nowadays, I feel like most film/TV directs have only worked in -- and even only watched -- film and TV, so their vocabulary is more limited.
@samp.8099 Жыл бұрын
Never before I've fallen in love with a KZbin channel in just one video
@audreyquinn73 Жыл бұрын
"It would have saved us from 4 seconds of wall... (dramatic music soars) Twice." That comment slayed me... Twice. 😂😂😂
@TheSuzberry Жыл бұрын
When I see a closeup showing the acting partner’s back, I assume that’s a stand in.
@juanitocamelo Жыл бұрын
since i noticed this i have tried to tell people about it and they keep telling me im crazy
@maddiekits7 ай бұрын
Not everyone feels the same way about it tbf 😅 many people prefer the modern style
@kend19643 ай бұрын
Some people just aren't "visual" and literally can't see what you're talking about....like many studio executives.
@Qwerty-db1jsАй бұрын
Same!!!
@Remember_1565 Жыл бұрын
It is strange that you use LOTR, one of the most visually stunning and memmorable films of this era, as an example of the ills of modern cinema. I prefer the composition of old cinema to modern cinema too but of all modern movies you choose Fellowship? Maybe your point was to express that even the best of today is lacking when compared to the past, It distracts however when there are so many stunningly bad movies today that better illustrate these problems. If I were pessimistic I may take you for a contrarian, or hey maybe its your honest opinion. It is ironic that you include some brillitant and creative shots from 9:00 to 9:15, like Gandalf first riding upon Gondor lit in beams of light against the dark background of looming mordor, or the revealing of the armies of Sauroman, before focusing on one scene that is dialouge heavy and rather static. The closeups there are quite important as it introduces most of the important characters and its important to see in detail their personalities, emotions and motivations in a memmorable way.
@unvergebeneid Жыл бұрын
Interestingly, the council of Elrond scene apparently was a nightmare to shoot because of the number of shots and the eyelines.
@srinivaschilukuri-o4m Жыл бұрын
And it is the most boring sequence to watch. Even though storywise it is an important scene.
@unvergebeneid Жыл бұрын
@@srinivaschilukuri-o4m well, that's an opinion that you're unquestionably entitled to.
@prentrupathome5319 Жыл бұрын
Lucky they were sitting down. The real nightmare is having to stand up for hours on end. But the extras' lack of reaction isn't just because they've been told to for continuity reasons - its because they're brain dead after days of repetition. Or they're thinking "When am I going to be able to take a loo break?"
@afrosymphony8207 Жыл бұрын
@@srinivaschilukuri-o4m it wasnt boring to me and to alot of ppl who liked the movie. This entire video is pretty much based on the fact that ppl think old time=prestigious, good and modernity=sucks. The idea that in cinema, people have to move around in a room anytime they are in conflict is just terrible terrible analysis. finchers entire filmography absolutely debunks this claim.
@TomMMul Жыл бұрын
@@afrosymphony8207no but most films don’t experiment and stick to their boring styles because they continue to make money and that’s all they care aboutb
@Saturn2888 Жыл бұрын
I'm noticing a lot of these issues are from the aspect ratio. Heads are cut-off in newer movies. Older ones were in 4:3 where the shots are taller.
@calebfuller4713 Жыл бұрын
"Widescreen" should really be called "shortscreen". It's just as accurate a description. Especially modern films where the aspect ratio is well over 2:1 - that is ridiculous.
@Saturn2888 Жыл бұрын
@@calebfuller4713 2:1 should be wider, but older CinemaScope on film used an anamorphic lens to get more picture into a 35mm frame. Today's cameras are digital, and it appears that 4:3 is actually the "open matte" aspect ratio. Then those movies are cut down to 2.39:1 (unless they're in IMAX 1.90:1 or 1.37:1). I find that movies in "artificial" CinemaScope look like "shortscreen".
@atrus38238 ай бұрын
Pretty much all film criticism on YT is about movies made in the past 30-40 years. I love your focus on classical cinema. It adds a really interesting perspective.
@malafakka8530Ай бұрын
Yeah, it says a lot about their cinema education. I also often feel that there is a very strong bias towards the 80s and 90s (best movie decades, some like to say to which I just say NO). Or they don't mention older movies because they think nobody would be interested (and they probably wouldn't be too wrong).
@narvi2 Жыл бұрын
Great video! I've rewatched Kurosawa's To Live recently and it's just some crazy magic! He does incredible things arranging and moving people and decorations in a frame. I think Kurosawa goes far beyond just conveying emotions and making a scene more powerful with blocking and movement. In his movies it's a whole new language which tells its own story, that can't be translated into verbal language. It's one more extra layer in a movie. And it's a thing lacking in many modern movies. Blocking and framing seems to be just a sort of utility in them, just a component without which you unfortunately can't technically make a movie) I personally prefer the old style. Yet it's worth mentioning, that it looks a bit more like theatre while the modern one feels more natural. You know, people don't always act so dramatically in real life) When people sit, eat and talk, they often just sit, eat and talk) Never the less, when such approach becomes as ubiquitous as it is today it turns out to be, as you said it - lazy and boring. Also, who said that everything has to feel natural all of the time?
@iona_1970 Жыл бұрын
Oh, yes, Kurosawa was a genius - every frame he shot was so beautiful - and especially in Ikiru!
@RaysDad Жыл бұрын
My whole life has been a series of fast cuts, shaky cams, and push-in closeups.
@TheTonyEntertainment6 ай бұрын
Lol same thanks Bourne trilogy
@Trenz0 Жыл бұрын
You're a brave man using LotR as an example. Those movies are religious to me and many others. Unfortunately, I can't be mad because you're making sense...
@tatehildyard5332 Жыл бұрын
In the case of that, I'd argue it's fine. Considering they were basically making all 3 simultaneously and producing anywhere from 12-15 hours of extremely elaborate, expensive footage, I think it's fair to give them as pass for wanting some wiggle room to adjust the rhythm of each scene in post.
@pagliacci2942 Жыл бұрын
@@tatehildyard5332 Yet the point he made is that it goes beyond mere wiggle room. LOTR's has expensive looking backgrounds with mostly flat shots presenting the actors with little or no dynamics. The green-tint is also abhorrent.
@tatehildyard5332 Жыл бұрын
@@pagliacci2942 Yes, but I’m saying that I don’t think it’s entirely fair to put LOTR in this camp of “lazy coverage” because there’s clearly so much work, thought, attention and care put into each aspect of LOTR that you do see on screen, that I think they’ve earned the right to have a little insurance where each scene can cut together at the expense of visual density.
@pagliacci2942 Жыл бұрын
@tatehildyard5332 I understand your point, but as is pointed out in the video: what a waste, especially, then to keep zooming in on actors' faces when such effort has been made to the world around. It's like eating off paper plates on a mahogany table.
@StinkyCheeseYodeler Жыл бұрын
I find the direction in those films horrible and said so at the time. They are great productions but some of the choices are just "meh". This video called some of them out but thing like endless close ups of Elijah just go too far. They could've been stellar with a better director.
@fernandoaldado Жыл бұрын
I also would prefer more films focused on blocking and composition and let my own eye decide where to look. But I think nowadays directors and the audience want to focus on the actor’s performance with micro facial expressions. Great examples of this is Isabelle Hupert and Cilian Murphy on Oppenheimer. Also, people are drawn to other’s people faces. As Sergio Leone puts it: “The human face is the more beautif landscape”
@robertm3951 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, even without closeups only whatever the director wants us to look at is in focus.
@CharlesFVincent Жыл бұрын
Kurosawa used the long lens well by being really far away and making it a mid or full shot with multiple characters, but all the same size on screen. Some parts of the early Star Wars movies and The Clash ‘London Calling’ video are shot the same way. I don’t go to the movies much anymore.
@marieparker3822 Жыл бұрын
I LOVE the background music to Moviewise. It is totally brilliant!
@Moviewise Жыл бұрын
This is the first time I’ve ever gotten a compliment on the background music, thank you very much!
@dansmith1518 Жыл бұрын
I love your delivery, and for that... SUBSCRIBED!
@samuelodihumbo6764 Жыл бұрын
These are the most entertaining video essays on KZbin
@Sonsequence Жыл бұрын
No, this is silly. Heavy use of dynamic blocking is a hangover from theatre. The Manciewicz example is distracting, it dissipates the tension. If Davis' character is feeling rising, repressed emotion you can't feel it. Midshot singles or closeups are a much better default for dialogue when the characters would naturally stay seated like at a kitchen table. The fact that some directors don't break from that default when they should says little. Why didn't you look at celebrated modern directors like Nolan, Spielberg, Aronofsky, Fincher, Mendes, Wright, Villeneuve?
@Heffalumpswoozles85 Жыл бұрын
I’ve always loved and preferred the way shots were set up in old movies but for a long time couldn’t put my finger on what was different about them. But as I’ve learned more about filmmaking terminology, I’m now able to describe it: The style of filmmaking during Hollywood’s golden age was more akin to composing a scene in a play, or even a painting or illustration. The actor’s positions in relation to each other and the set was more deliberately composed, the same way a painter composes the subject matter in a painting. The audience was assumed to be spectators rather than participants, with more emphasis on the master shot, a lot less “first person” close-up cuts during dialogue, and utilization of the concept of “mise en scène”, where the set and set pieces were considered just as important in the composition of the shot as the actors. This style of filmmaking just feels more grand and theatrical and fun to me. Like what you are witnessing before your eyes is a fantastical event that’s at least slightly removed from gritty reality. It feels more magical. Whereas the intention of most movies today is to make you feel like you are inside of the scene, seeing the action with your own eyes rather than watching it as a spectator. I’m not completely against realism in movies. Realism can be really exciting depending on the subject matter of the film. But the pendulum has swung in the completely opposite direction. Filmmakers today ONLY want realism. They’re overly obsessed with it, believing that everything has to look and feel 100% real. Why I don’t know.
@Selrisitai Жыл бұрын
I don't know if I'd equate over-the-shoulder shots as any more real than any other kind of shot. They're certainly more dull.
@LordBaktor Жыл бұрын
I have a feeling that relying on tighter shots like closeups and mostly static actors is way faster and therefore cheaper to setup, making producers happy. Same reason CGI is so overused these days, the cost of CGI might sound expensive but the amount of control of the result it gives after the fact makes producers really, really happy. Audience satisfaction be damned of course.
@kend19643 ай бұрын
Love this comparison. It's be great to see more videos of great blocking in classic films.
@LK041 Жыл бұрын
You're mostly right with your video, current Hollywood is incredibly bland, but I loved the effect of "intense continuity" in Man on Fire and Bourne Ultimatum. I think for some films, if done right, it's very moving, enthralling, and immersive. Conversely in the extended example you gave I felt the same problem I have with a lot of old films, which is that they actually feel more stilted and 4th-wall-breaking because they're obviously choreographed and (literally) melodramatic. The shot/reverse shot does indeed need to get semi-retired. I'm trying to think of any directors who regularly ditch it in the modern era now...
@cobra8888 Жыл бұрын
I might be wrong but Tarantino rarely does it. All the scenes in my head from his infamous movies doesn't have shot-reverse shot. Considering the amount of dialogue his movies has.
@CarbonComs Жыл бұрын
Bourne Ultimatum felt so good and purposeful with the shaky cam. Then basically every action movie for years copied it and did it poorly or with no real thought. I feel like half the reason John Wick blew up is because they actually dared to show the action.
@Thirteen31Music Жыл бұрын
I think there is a genuine argument to be made that in golden age of Hollywood you actually had to be talented as an actor. There was is where for you to hide on screen in longer scenes with less cuts where you have to respond to other actors and use the set to sell the story. Now it feels very much like all you need to be able to say lines at a camera
@someguy3763 Жыл бұрын
What makes good acting nowadays is a good editor.
@totostamopo Жыл бұрын
Close ups are unnerving to execute in my opinion, especially for the classically trained theatre actors among us. Much easier to convey what you need to with the whole instrument. Having to reduce a performance to just a face is maddening. Your dissection of James Dean in your what makes a great performance video is case in point. We would miss so much if he was forced into a close up there. My Dad was constantly sitting on the couch or in the theater yelling at modern directors to "go to medium shot, go to medium shot for ^&%#% sake!" He would have loved this analysis! Thanks!
@aglimmerofhope5321 Жыл бұрын
You have not ruined my love of movies. Movies did that all on their own. 💔
@RecSteady Жыл бұрын
people use to frame shots like it was a stage production and the movement was intended to make it all visually, as much as dialog driven, to keep the shot interesting. Now a days, I think it almost works so that you could have two people who hate each other and refuse to be in the same room together, never actually need to be in the same place to make a romantic movie with 1-2 ish scenes where they would need to hug/kiss.
@peterkerj7357 Жыл бұрын
Very much not a romantic movie, but The Other Side of the Wind was shot like this out of necessity. It works for me.
@MrGadfly772 Жыл бұрын
Excellent observations. I feel like I can understand my boredom with modern movies better now.
@tmac9972 Жыл бұрын
You bastard I will never watch a film the same way after watching your highly entertaining back and forth on framing a scene.
@goatpie882 Жыл бұрын
I feel like this video put into words the subconscious reason that I pretty much don't watch modern day movies anymore I love your channel, your videos are always great
@LearnCompositionOnline Жыл бұрын
Me too
@johnjay370 Жыл бұрын
Sometimes it bothers me other times it does not. For instance a montage is good but shakey cam is bad. Fully choreograph action good vs lazy cut away action is bad. Great story with motivated intensified continuity is fine but non motivated intensified continuity is dumb. It about the assembly of the film and the story.
@sailingsolstice Жыл бұрын
My thoughts, exactly.
@hgilbert Жыл бұрын
Same. Wouldn't be excited to a watch recent film at the cinema today, even if it was completely free. Even if someone actually paid me an extra small cash amount on top. Getting there. Choosing screening times. Already too much the effort. Disappointment almost guaranteed.
@criztu Жыл бұрын
@@johnjay370 I wanted to check out Hunger Games. after 3 minutes of camera shake I stopped watching
@bigprobllama6 ай бұрын
Dude, why doesn't this channel have a mil subs yet... Mister, you are great. Thanks for these videos!
@jackstraton1 Жыл бұрын
So much to learn and understand... Appreciate the kind of videos you're making on Film's technicalities
@JackChurchill101 Жыл бұрын
Peter Jackson had reasons what what he did. He needed to keep the CGI to a minimum, and he needed to keep the height differences between characters to a minimum. - technical requirements for the style, which was quietly hidden from the audience. So please don't critique this, - best to focus on another example.
@Mrjmaxted0291 Жыл бұрын
This was a brilliant video and really helped me to grasp exactly what it is about old movies that feels so different compared to newer films from around about the late 80s to early 90s onwards. The trend towards shaky cam by the late 2000s in movies like Babylon AD really seems to suggest that filmmakers from around about this time were getting more and more desperate to find ways to make shots appear more intense and began leaning on an increasingly narrow bag of tricks to achieve it. I recently rewatched Children of Men and contrasting its use of handcam tracking shots, particularly in the warzone that erupts at the end of the movie, with the egregious use of them in Babylon really spells it out to me; one captures a kind of documentary quality, of being directly involved in the action that's unfolding on screen, while the other fails to actually capture any of the action at all.
@SuperFlashDriver Жыл бұрын
I think also, if you do remember, The Blair Witch Project, was one of the films that inspired shaky cam/found footage in general. Before that, shaky cam was inspired by people using 8mm tape camcorders you would buy form an electronic store, but had no tripod screw mount at the bottom, so you were FORCED to carry it around on your hand or attach it to some custom made modification to your camera, just to keep it still, or place it on a book or a flat surface, even though the bottom part of it was a border and only the middle top was clear.
@iwestez Жыл бұрын
Bro this is the channel I've been looking for. Great content. Love the explanations. Guess I'm gonna binge watch all the vids now
@alexzappa1726 Жыл бұрын
The reduced use of moving masters and dynamic blocking wasn't a loss of craft, it was mainly a symptom of changing technology and how that manifested different artistic techniques over time. Film cameras in the golden age didn't have a viewfinder you could look through during a take; once you loaded the film you couldn't see what the lens saw, you could only see a horizontally skewed approximation through a sidefinder periscope. Therefore, accomplishing a dynamic shot relied more on the actors' spatial position and movement relative to the camera itself, rather than movement within the frame, which was inaccessible to the crew during the take. Once viewfinders could be used while rolling film, this allowed filmmakers to capture a frame in the moment more precisely. Of course, Master-A-B coverage is uncreative, but it also reflects a shift to performance-focused directing. Being able to precisely compose a closeup without worrying about actor movement disrupting said composition means that you can do more closeups and get the performance in as much of the frame as possible. Almost all scenes are about a scenario and the characters within it, and Master-A-B makes sure you get that, then some inserts for whatever happens in your scene. For the record I prefer more 'classical' filmmaking, but this narrative you present of the slow decay of craft does not reflect the reality and history of the industry and filmmaking itself.
@Selrisitai Жыл бұрын
I don't know from Hollywood or history, but I think boring directing is bad directing, and bad directing can't be excused by precedence or happenstance, in my opinion.
@alexzappa1726 Жыл бұрын
@@Selrisitai I am talking about a shift in craft that new technology creates. A closeup is less visually dynamic than a master, but you can capture small details of facial performance that a master doesn't allow for. The visible craft is less impressive but the storytelling effect is much the same. If you are relying on a shot to be visually dynamic to carry the drama or the scenario, I think that reflects a lack of immersion in the characters and the story/world. A lack of blocking is not necessarily what should be blamed for that.
@SoftBoiledArt Жыл бұрын
@@alexzappa1726 What you get from a dynamic "full" shot it's absolutely not the same you're telling with a closeup, in any way, I think it shouldn't need an explanation. And having a new toy doesn't mean you have to use it and even less this way, same manner not "needing" to go through a certain process anymore with the new tech doesn't mean you shouldn't...
@alexzappa1726 Жыл бұрын
@@SoftBoiledArt I've specifically discussed the differences in utility between a master and a close-up in my previous reply. A close-up lets you capture performance in a more natural, immersive way. You're not paying attention to what someone's doing with their hands when you're talking to them. You're looking at their face and eyes. I haven't said blocking and capturing performance in the master should go away. I'm pointing out that the relative rarity of closeups in golden age of cinema was most likely a product of available technology for capturing performance. If Billy Wilder had viewfinders available to him at the time, I bet any money he'd shoot a lot more close-ups.
@SoftBoiledArt Жыл бұрын
@@alexzappa1726 I doubt that, you can only abuse something as simple as a portrait to some extent before the audience is immune and stops meaning anything. Talking with someone can contain anything from body language, attempts at pulling a gun, a stranger approaching, the reaction of multiple characters, displaying relationship dynamics with the position of the characters in relation to each other...and irl you're not looking at a close shot of whoever you're talking most of the times. Even then you could argue it's more natural (I'm not seeing it) in the same way a first person shooter is more "natural" than cinema, subjetive view, real time action instead of being a secuence of frames, and a 3D environment instead of just shots, but that's kinda souless and kinda not the point of the media as you'll understand.
@bluepeteblue Жыл бұрын
UNMOTIVATED CAMERA MOVEMENT!!!! Thank you! I've stopped watching SO MANY films and TV shows for this reason alone. (Sorry for the all caps. I'm just excited to hear someone else say it.)
@langolier9 Жыл бұрын
You make some very good points for years I have consistently hated the super fast cuts in the super close-ups nonstop all the time
@PaulMcCaffreyfmac Жыл бұрын
This and your I,Claudius tell it all. Brilliant! I dread the re-makes of The Third Man or The Apartment or Hobson's Choice or any number of others. Thankfully I am old and have them all on dvd 🙂
@ericbergman9701 Жыл бұрын
Brilliant and devastating analysis.
@bobbyokeefe4285 Жыл бұрын
Good point modern filmmaking tends to be dull in deed,that said,one must not fall into the opposite trap and have characters being hyperactive,sometimes in life things are simply uneventful,a husband and wife in bed talking,is just that,what's the point of having them move around the whole room just for the sake of it,also sometimes people are in a public place and can't move as they please,take the opening scene of Pulp Fiction,they are in a dinner eating,the only way to shoot it is,in a "sit and deliver" way.
@Zed-fq3lj Жыл бұрын
A very valuable video that should be seen by everybody who are into movies! Thank you again!
@MattHingstman3 ай бұрын
Great video. Though to defend La La Land, I think the stillness and bland cross cutting of the dinner scene stands purposely in contrast to the wild blocking and camera movements of the song and dance numbers. The scene is about the breakdown of their relationship. If it was anywhere as dynamic as the the big moments involving joy, passion, and wonder, it would feel strange. Their love is decaying and the LACK camera, editing, and blocking reflects that.
@psy_crone99 Жыл бұрын
I already felt quite certain, but when you came out against long lenses, that’s when I knew that we were destined to be married.
@MamadNobari Жыл бұрын
I love how you used the least boring conversation scene from the least boring movie as an example of the modern boring way of dialoguing.
@ivosamuelgiosadominguez6649 Жыл бұрын
I don't think he meant to say it is boring, but rather that the directing is unmotivated. The close ups are used for everything and there is little in the way of blocking, interesting camera movement or shot diversity. Whether you like the scene or not is up to you, but the directing isn't as obviously purposeful as on the old movies example. Interestingly enough, though, people in the comments have pointed out that the directing on LotR actually was motivated: to hide the difference between the actors height. In that shot you have dwarves, hobbits, humans, elves and Gandalf, all of whom are supposed to be different in height, and the actors weren't. So that's why the scene is shot that way, it's just not done for story reasons.
@MamadNobari Жыл бұрын
@@ivosamuelgiosadominguez6649 Yeah, I didn't even think about that. It would've been way harder to keep the perspective if everyone was strolling around like idiots. Though I understand his point and that's something I've been aware of for a long time. I don't thing really think it applies here honestly. Sometimes the dialogue is so intense and good that you don't need the camera to move and to cut as many to keep the audience interested. That's more for slow-burn dramas with long af dialogue scenes, not movies like LOTR or like the opening of Inglorious Basterds.
@icecreamhero23757 ай бұрын
Also there were a ton of people. How else could it have been shot and been coherent?
@jaykaufman9782 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely outstanding! Thank you, Moviewise. You've justified the existence of KZbin for one more year.
@afelias Жыл бұрын
I would still defend Fellowship's stand and deliver in the Council of Elrond because it does actually achieve a lot by avoiding the intentions of what you're talking about. The idea to use blocking and shot composition is to establish things like main characters. Meanwhile, the Council scene is all about everyone there thinking about themselves, essentially all of them seeing themselves as the protagonist. Boromir most especially; when he looks like he's speaking to no one in particular, it's because he really isn't speaking to anyone in particular. A lot of the "bad shots" of Fellowship only really add to the feeling of danger, especially the danger of temptation, which is why it probably wouldn't work as well if you put "too much effort" into camera work - you might end up convincing the audience that someone was the protagonist, someone was in the right, when the whole point of those scenes was to show the fallibility of all peoples. Even Galadriel could have been tempted by the Ring. Same goes with things like the super close ups if Gandalf at the start - that was intentional. It's supposed to not just be intense, but also give you this feeling of unnaturalness. I don't think your criticism is invalid, but I also don't see that the conclusion would be that Fellowship ought to have been done like Executive Suite.
@denroy3 Жыл бұрын
When he sat down and the characters were stone faced and unmoving...lol, now that's all I see. Horrid. Horrid. The problem with sycophants....
@Elven. Жыл бұрын
thaaaank you for not wasting my time with music and video section intros or redundant explanations. You went straight to the point!
@cbz6017 Жыл бұрын
It's clear that the classic style is more akin to a theater play, because it was back when cinema was still developing its own language based on it's closer medium 'cousin'. The thing is that real people rarely move all over the place like that. It makes sense in theater when you can't see close ups so you need action to keep it emotional and engaging, but modern cinema is more comfortable now blocking in a realistic way. Not saying there can't be a more creative twist to it, but I do not see it as necessarily worse in comparison
@cube2foxАй бұрын
You are right that stage blocking isn't realistic. On the other hand, modern cinema uses a lot of cuts, which is also not realistic. Stage performance uses zero cuts, just like reality! So I wouldn't say modern cinema is overall more realistic than classic cinema.
@daniellabra4186 Жыл бұрын
Wonderful video... a truly eye opener.
@VidhathShetty3 ай бұрын
This is a wonderful masterclass on how to know the movie is perceived. From the experience of the focus of the object and also how the context is captured without wasting space. Well done
@rociomiranda5684 Жыл бұрын
I do hate close ups. In old movies they are very effective because they are used sparingly. Too many close ups are overwhelming.
@aclockworkpeon2 ай бұрын
By far the best and most analytical observer of film today.
@timpea9766 Жыл бұрын
Can you make one about the lazy use of torches? It drives me nuts how every scene immediately shines the torch into the viewers eyes! I don't want to be blinded, I want to see what's in the torchlight beam, the fear on the actor's faces, the tension of the search, and then the reveal.
@UncensoredScion Жыл бұрын
nah I'm sorry but your depiction of the Boromir speech scene is incorrect as you're missing the direct references to the seating placement which you should see when you take a step back from it, this isn't a united council, it's factionalised in segments, we've got the Elves facing Boromir with them is Gandalf and Frodo, between the Elves and the Men are the Dwarves with Gimli, and when Boromir is speaking, he's pointing directly at the Elves and the Dwarves. On the other side of the Men, between the left side of the circle are the Rangers led by Aragorn and when he brings up the Ring's true owner, Boromir confronts him, to which Legolas blurts out who he is and further drives a wedge between the Gondorians and the rest of the Council as they know who Aragorn Son of Arathorn is. So the Stoic and Silent people either side of Boromir are now thinking along the lines of "we've been set up by the Elves, they have everyone surrounding us and they have the supposed Heir of Isildur here, and they have the One Ring." There doesn't need to be a sweeping look at the other characters as this is entirely on Boromir and the broken nature of Gondor and its people, they're suspicious, dying in their thousands and feel surrounded by enemies, it's why we see Boromir slump afterwards as he's bearing all that weight on his own shoulders and he already has the weight of his Kingdom and the fact that his Father's rule is failing. It's all there for people to see if you take the time for it.
@solomonrichards599 Жыл бұрын
14:38 Angel Eyes introduction scene from The Good, The Bad and the Ugly and the coffee shop scene from Heat are shot in that kind of way and I think those are incredible scenes.
@balamstudios Жыл бұрын
Here as a member of the 'I hate shaky camera' club and honorary member of the 'Stop with with the closeups' club
@skoyashiki3923 Жыл бұрын
Excellent explanation of what makes a great film. Composing a shot is not easy; it takes time. No wonder everyone is self obsessed. We are taught, through the visual medium, that all that matters is our own experience of reality. But what really caught my respect was the poopy-faced description. You can't get better than that.
@SpringNotes Жыл бұрын
My goodness, you're an overlooked channel. I've only watched 2 of your videos and I'm very impressed. Are you also in the film industry and make movies ?
@hemanthkarri107 Жыл бұрын
honey wake up!! new Moviewise video just dropped
@VaQm11 Жыл бұрын
I remember seeing Lord of the Rings in the theater and not enjoying it very much for some reason, something was bothering me... Now I understand, this montage and filming as a "collage of faces" was exactly it.
@RustyOrange71 Жыл бұрын
This is funny but oh, so true. Old time movie actors learnt their craft on stage and I expect film directors did their apprenticeships there too. Thanks!
@alchemystudiosink1894 Жыл бұрын
Yeah many of the older great actors had skills, talents, and training in other areas than "Stand in front of camera and deliver lines." that more of the newer types have. Christopher Lee for example was an actual spy back in the day.
@denroy3 Жыл бұрын
Some did, some didn't. Camera size and mobility may have played the bigger role. Nonetheless, they did more with less.
@topsuperseven7910 Жыл бұрын
Yes to these criticisms. As far as I can figure, the old school directors understood 'teleplays' and they were doing film versions of a play with a stage and the thought that you were supposed to see all the actors or many and from a medium to long range. When a key dialogue or emotional moment occurs that character may get a spotlight and be front and center to the stage - the play version of the up-front single closeup. In more modern times I don't think they are attached to the concept of live plays. All I know is that there is something I really dislike in a lot of newer movies and its pointed out here: each thing said is a single closeup. then a single closeup of "Ya, i agree" to the fast cut to the other single closeup "okay" then to the other again "we leave tomorrow" then flash to the other "right, tomorrow". i didn't know the name 'intensified continuity' but it annoys me UNLESS its some sort of key moment where (like the old school) it's telling us about that single characters important emotional moment or the character is dropping some key gamechanger info etc. now? they just go entire movies where its 300 close-ups and changes for every new speakers sentence.
@TokyoXtreme Жыл бұрын
4.3 _thousand_ subs!? I thought for sure it would 4.3 million! Looks like I’m getting in early.
@pedroalexandredillemburg3751 Жыл бұрын
What an awesome video, your videos about blocking has changed the way I percieve cinema, and I graduated film school.
@A_few_words Жыл бұрын
You're good. Interesting video. I think i learned something new. Thank you
@OuterGalaxyLounge Жыл бұрын
"I suppose you think you're the one to do it." (Comment Section) Haha, brilliant.
@herecomesyouknowwho Жыл бұрын
legitimately hilarious! also a great analysis
@AnnoyingMoose Жыл бұрын
"...close-ups in their close-ups. OH MY GOOOOD!!"
@S_raB Жыл бұрын
That old school style of "The Cross" is indicative of theater & plays brought into film. They still use this today on stage so i don't understand why film has moved away from using this style.
@SzalonyKucharz Жыл бұрын
This is because most film actors are horrible as stage actors, so instead it makes more sense for cameramen and editors to take care of choreography and direct the viewers eyes exactly where they need to be. It takes a very talented actor to capture one's visual attention when watching a stage play, where the viewer's field of attention remains static and potentially one can look at whatever they want, unless the stage lighting will guide the viewer's eyes to a certain spot at some point of the play. With closeups employed by the intensified continuity style in movies, the viewer has very little to no choice but to look exactly at what the director wants them to look at. Thus, the actor's work is reduced almost to that of a talking prop. And the story gets delivered as intended.
@S_raB Жыл бұрын
@@SzalonyKucharz In summation: directors are lazy these days. Literally their primary job is "directing" actors, which should include placement within a scene & movement through those frames of reference.
@SuperFunkmachine Жыл бұрын
@@S_raB And there paid to work fast, the days of getting weeks to rehearse are long gone.
@hinduismwithpremananddasbhagat Жыл бұрын
Maybe this is why I find so many modern actors iffy. They don't have to learn how to act like Bette Davis. They just stand there and let the camera do all the work.
@WKogut Жыл бұрын
True directing is utilizing a wide variety of tools in a creative and visually interesting way that reinforces the story being told and actors performances. I'd like to see more modern films shot in a more old school way but with the technological advancements we've made since
@ryanwarren2970 Жыл бұрын
I didn't agree with all of the opinions in this video but I learned a lot. Good work.
@PatrickBartholomew-t8k Жыл бұрын
In my mind much of this from lack of staging. Older films where directed more like plays and the camera was the audience
@thewhitewolf58 Жыл бұрын
You committed a sin. You forgot to include the f tier quick cut "fighting" scenes that people put in the modern movies. Shots go so fast and are so tight that the actor could be getting beat up by a doll and you would still barely be able to notice.
@fourth1000 Жыл бұрын
Woody Allen shoots the old style, tracking with characters movements
@PsychedelicChameleon Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for this explanation of methods and style! I suspect that most modern directors are very well aware of what they are doing, and choose to do it even understanding these legitimate criticisms. Sort of like how music producers choose to pass vocalist's singing through auto-tune and pitch correction: they know that it is the style the audience is used to and wants to see/hear.
@KnjazNazrath Жыл бұрын
Intensified Continuity is to video what BWOOOOMP is to audio. I have to watch Tarkovsky on the reg to clean my eyeballs, and listen to flashcore to clean my ears after watching any modern picture. Also, what's the film with the guy putting chalk lines on the floor? Looks like a great comedy!
@Moviewise Жыл бұрын
Twentieth Century (Howard Hawks, 1934) and it truly is a great comedy!
@timpea9766 Жыл бұрын
Perfect dissection of framing/blocking fails, thank you :)
@ElectroVenik90 Жыл бұрын
Old movies didn't use INTENSIFIED CONTINUITY not because it's bad, but because CUTTING FILM is hard compared to cutting digital. Get real
@flyingfox20057 ай бұрын
Except intensified continuity predates cutting digitally by decades... nice try but it's not the reason older movies used to block scenes with more thought.
@meansoftolerance3 ай бұрын
Precisely , and it is exactly this limitation that boosted creativity as it happens with many art forms, music, painting etc even today. Music was way more exciting before. The same with paintings and sculpture. So, despite your truthful comment, the end remains the same.
@MadNumForce Жыл бұрын
Damn. I can't remember last time a YT video taught me something entirely new. Just to test you theory, I watched a B tier French movie from 1968, and even this familly comedy showed all these signs of using camera depth, angles, movement, mirror reflections, transitions of focus, actual room for the actors to use, move around, in and out, to just leave scenes unfold before our eyes, and visually tell a story that completes the spoken words and even the body language of the actors. Just watching a random snippet of a French movie from 1959 (Jean-Pierre Mocky's first film actually). A women has brought home two dudes, one she's attracted to, and a guy he's sticking with. The woman was in the kitchen to change to casual clothes, and the unattractive guy caught her naked. In a single shot, we see the unattractive guy come to the attractive guy to tell him about him seeing her naked, they are close to the camera in waist shot. Then she enters the main room from a door behind them, and the camera follows her, while attractive guy crosses out of the shot and unattractive guy follows her. She comes to a table, pours herself a drink, and unattractive dude comes awkwardly close to her kinda creeping. They are both in frame, facing the camera, but none is speaking. Then she turns to the attractive guy and immediately starts talking to him, and the unattractive one, while still just there behind her, is taken completely out of the frame, even when he's talked about or pointed to, while the general framing hasn't changed, just paned right a bit. The woman and the attractive guy are facing each other and speaking actively. kzbin.info/www/bejne/m5yQqqCdmpmYedEsi=iickMIrJjQCShkgZ&t=1034 I would have never noticed the story it's telling without this video pointing out that it is actually telling a story. These are kinda simple visual narrative devices, but I never realized it was (though at some unconscious level it probably played a significant role in my enjoyment of these old movies). This brings a whole new level of appreciation. Currently in French cinemas there's a movie from Quentin Dupieux playing, Yannick, which I quite enjoyed with my first watch. I wanted to see it again, but now I have an extra reason to go watch it again, to see if this "indie maintream" director has, as I believe he has, some of this cinemacraft flair of old times.
@heinoustentacles5719 Жыл бұрын
That scene sounds great. But the video is unavailable...
@valeriacaissa4552 Жыл бұрын
The youtube video you linked to is unfortunately set to private.
@Cabochon1360 Жыл бұрын
God, yes. Thanks for enhancing my cinematic vocabulary. I've got more understanding now of why I watch more movies from the 1930s-1950s than I do modern movies.
@rufuspipemos Жыл бұрын
Outstanding video!
@fatemehpezhman Жыл бұрын
when I was watching your video that argument scene from "Marriage Story" popped into my head. I loved that scene and now it suddenly clicked why it seemed so good. I went and watched the scene again. It's great!! the director uses stand and deliver when needed but also actors are constantly moving and crossing, they engage with different props and it's truly amazing. I knew it was good when I watched it the first time but I didn't know why!
@S_raB Жыл бұрын
Better example of the old school would be 12 Angry Men. Similar to Executive Suite but with a shifting focus on the actors throughout several scenes. One of the best films ever made & still one of my favorite stories about human character.
@denroy3 Жыл бұрын
The scene shown was an excellent example.
@58icarus Жыл бұрын
Can't help wondering if the shift toward the over use of some of these techniques is a result of television production, and what production people got used to in that medium.