tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8256060.post3211169116894709969..comments2024-03-17T10:11:46.952-04:00Comments on Film Experience Blog: LFF 2010: What I Love the MostNATHANIEL Rhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11597109147678235399noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8256060.post-35558963682376871902010-10-24T10:58:05.836-04:002010-10-24T10:58:05.836-04:00Nat, I think you're essentially right here. I ...Nat, I think you're essentially right here. I have plenty of time for slow-, fast- and all in between paced films, but it's in the wheedling out of the wheat from the chaff which is where the interest lies - and the good stuff resides. There's going to be good and bad in both camps, essentially. Is it easier for a filmmaker to trick folks into thinking their film is great and/or meaningful because every scene lasts for 15 mins? Or because they cut every 3 seconds, is ohh-ahh what-the-f**k meaningful? Both are debatable approaches.<br /><br />I get fed up with the worst indulgences within BOTH slow and fast etc filmmaking, and continually impressed with the best practices of both. But - as with my thoughts on Boonmee - some films will get a free pass (b/c they're festival/award friendly) and some get earmarked for constant assault (Tony Scott? Tim Burton?... these are top-of-the-head examples, folks). Does a festival appearance guarantee a film a free pass? Sometimes it often feels as if it does. <br /><br />What I Love the Most, for me, was nice to look at for a while and had some nice moments, but it wasn't really saying a great deal - or maybe whatever true depth it had was too firmly embedded behind all the obviously topical visual affectations familiar from several other festival faves of recent times.<br /><br />And it's an 'ongoing trends in (world) cinema' thing, too. One or two films - or a batch of films - will be inordinately praised and get full releases thereafter - so therefore more of "those" type films will be selected for festivals on that policy. Arthouse films can certainly be just as supply and demand as Hollywood blockbusters. Luckily the LFF, so far for me, has been quite varied. But you are onto something interesting for sure! So I'm glad you raise this for consideration, Nat. It's something I've often thought goes largely unmined in film commentary circles.<br /><br />In saying this, I'd like to see some directors employ a more relaxed or thoughtful editor, too. But someone who knows when to leave a scene running for impact, AND when to cut it down for arse-numb avoidance, is ideal.Craig Bloomfieldhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01675432352369719901noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8256060.post-1021098359756350672010-10-24T10:27:47.091-04:002010-10-24T10:27:47.091-04:00I have quite a bit more patience for "slow&qu...I have quite a bit more patience for "slow" cinema than your average moviegoer. i mean i would be <b>so</b> happy if we could significantly raise the "shot length" average again -- so sick of the cutting before I've even fully seen what they're showing me -- but i have noticed this problem with festival films. It's as if slow, drifting, hazy, contemplative, minimal dialogue are always considered cardinal virtues. <br /><br />To me no style is inherently good or bad... so long as the film has something to say in using whatever approach it's taking.<br /><br />but sometimes when you sit through so many back to back films at a festival (<i>i haven't seen this film so i'm speaking generally</i>) the slow and hazy starts to seem as lazy, uninspired and homogenous as Hollywood's paranoid mantra: "THE AUDIENCE WILL GET BORED. CUT AWAY CUT AWAY. MORE ENERGY. FASTER. DON'T WORRY ABOUT COHERENCY. JUST KEEP MOVING!"<br /><br />unrelated: i feel like i need to see more Argentinian films.NATHANIEL Rhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11597109147678235399noreply@blogger.com