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sircosick View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2007 at 07:37
Originally posted by Visitor13 Visitor13 wrote:

Cinema is overrated in general. I hardly ever bother to watch, much less re-watch, a movie nowadays, commercial, artistic, modern, classic, whatever.

Unless there's some cute gal in it...

But apart from that, music owns cinema in so many ways it's not even funny. So I listen to music, instead.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2007 at 12:22
Originally posted by Visitor13 Visitor13 wrote:

Cinema is overrated in general. I hardly ever bother to watch, much less re-watch, a movie nowadays, commercial, artistic, modern, classic, whatever.

Unless there's some cute gal in it...

But apart from that, music owns cinema in so many ways it's not even funny. So I listen to music, instead.
 
lies...
 
i wouldnt really even start to try compare the two...they'er way to different
 
however, technicaly speaking... cinema has waaay more dimensions to get the point/emotion/story accros then music
 
musics got sound
 
cinema had: sound AND visual
 
visual being such a crucial powerfull factor, and adding it on with sound just has to = good things
 
but, alot of the time, people do mess things up, and there is way more dirt films out there then good...
 
however,i guess the real question is:
 
would you turn off a boring movie like you'd turn off a boring album?
 
does a boring film still have more pull factor then a boring album?
 
etc. etc. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2007 at 14:24
^ How many times you can watch a movie before get bored? And how many times an album? The answer is the reason why. Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2007 at 14:29
Pirates of the Carribean

"LOOK I"M A PIRATE! YOU LOVE ME!"


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2007 at 14:31
Originally posted by Kotro Kotro wrote:

LORD OF THE RINGS SUCKED. And I'm a Peter Jackson fan... Cry

You disgust me.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2007 at 14:37
Originally posted by sircosick sircosick wrote:

Originally posted by Visitor13 Visitor13 wrote:

Cinema is overrated in general. I hardly ever bother to watch, much less re-watch, a movie nowadays, commercial, artistic, modern, classic, whatever.

Unless there's some cute gal in it...

But apart from that, music owns cinema in so many ways it's not even funny. So I listen to music, instead.


Yep. Clap
 
That post is horribly overrated....DeadWink
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2007 at 14:41
Originally posted by Shakespeare Shakespeare wrote:

Originally posted by Kotro Kotro wrote:

LORD OF THE RINGS SUCKED. And I'm a Peter Jackson fan... Cry

You disgust me.

Well, it was a little different than Braindead.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2007 at 14:43
Originally posted by Shakespeare Shakespeare wrote:

Pirates of the Carribean

"LOOK I"M A PIRATE! YOU LOVE ME!"



I never quote myself either.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2007 at 20:33
Jesus christ...cinema paradiso overrated?   An almost perfect movie.....would be nice to know what the Norwegian liked?
Usually overrated movies are bummed up by critics....try reading the Daily Mail.
One of the worst movies has to be Sean of the Dead...dreary ufunny and typically English.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2007 at 23:25
I thought Rocky Horror was really lame.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 09 2007 at 23:37
Originally posted by sircosick sircosick wrote:

^ How many times you can watch a movie before get bored? And how many times an album? The answer is the reason why. Wink
I tend to watch movies, but it never occured to me that I could watch an album, I usually put them on and dont spend that much time looking at it. So I guess I watch movies more times than I watch albums.
who hiccuped endlessly trying to giggle but wound up with a sob
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 00:04
Originally posted by darqdean darqdean wrote:

Originally posted by el böthy el böthy wrote:

Originally posted by Atavachron Atavachron wrote:

Gone With the Wind


YES!!! YES!!! YES!!!!
When Harry Met Sally?

I want what darqdean´s having!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 02:08
Originally posted by sircosick sircosick wrote:

^ How many times you can watch a movie before get bored? And how many times an album? The answer is the reason why. Wink

There are movies I can watch again and again without ever getting bored in the least. "Don't Look Now!" by Nicholas Roeg or "Rashomon" by Akira Kirosawa are examples for that (though there are people who can't even watch them once without getting bored). I could list dozens of movies I could watch again and again (and actually did).

The reason you can listen to an album again and again is that you don't really have to concentrate on the music to listen to it; it just becomes a background to you. If you try to really "listen" to an album, fully concentrating on it, you will find it as impossible to listen to again and again (at least in succession) as watching a movie more than once.

Of course the Hollywood bullsh*t that is being dealt out nowadays is really not worth more than one look. Not worth a casual glance even.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 03:56
Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

Originally posted by sircosick sircosick wrote:

^ How many times you can watch a movie before get bored? And how many times an album? The answer is the reason why. Wink

There are movies I can watch again and again without ever getting bored in the least. "Don't Look Now!" by Nicholas Roeg or "Rashomon" by Akira Kirosawa are examples for that (though there are people who can't even watch them once without getting bored). I could list dozens of movies I could watch again and again (and actually did).

The reason you can listen to an album again and again is that you don't really have to concentrate on the music to listen to it; it just becomes a background to you. If you try to really "listen" to an album, fully concentrating on it, you will find it as impossible to listen to again and again (at least in succession) as watching a movie more than once.

Of course the Hollywood bullsh*t that is being dealt out nowadays is really not worth more than one look. Not worth a casual glance even.
 
yeah, thats true
 
i guess as i was previously saying, the same thing with film is that they have the other resource of visual images, and image is prob the most powerfull tool
 
9 times out of ten, if you were shown a basic image and asked to pick it out of a line up a few days later, it'd prob be easier then hearing a basic accoustic picking riff and having to pick that also out of a line up of other recordings of accoustic picking riffs
 
so as you said, ya concentrate more on films, and your going to remember the cinematography more vividly etc.
 
aswel...if you think about it, in films that you've seen you can always recall what the actors looked like, or maybe certin scenes/shots....however, can you ever as vividly remember the soundtrack?
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 04:31
Originally posted by TR!P TR!P wrote:

Originally posted by BaldFriede BaldFriede wrote:

Originally posted by sircosick sircosick wrote:

^ How many times you can watch a movie before get bored? And how many times an album? The answer is the reason why. Wink

There are movies I can watch again and again without ever getting bored in the least. "Don't Look Now!" by Nicholas Roeg or "Rashomon" by Akira Kirosawa are examples for that (though there are people who can't even watch them once without getting bored). I could list dozens of movies I could watch again and again (and actually did).

The reason you can listen to an album again and again is that you don't really have to concentrate on the music to listen to it; it just becomes a background to you. If you try to really "listen" to an album, fully concentrating on it, you will find it as impossible to listen to again and again (at least in succession) as watching a movie more than once.

Of course the Hollywood bullsh*t that is being dealt out nowadays is really not worth more than one look. Not worth a casual glance even.
 
yeah, thats true
 
i guess as i was previously saying, the same thing with film is that they have the other resource of visual images, and image is prob the most powerfull tool
 
9 times out of ten, if you were shown a basic image and asked to pick it out of a line up a few days later, it'd prob be easier then hearing a basic accoustic picking riff and having to pick that also out of a line up of other recordings of accoustic picking riffs
 
so as you said, ya concentrate more on films, and your going to remember the cinematography more vividly etc.
 
aswel...if you think about it, in films that you've seen you can always recall what the actors looked like, or maybe certin scenes/shots....however, can you ever as vividly remember the soundtrack?
 

That depends. If the soundtrack has a certain recurring theme, yes. And certain moments of the soundtrack definitely stick with you; just think of the fast violin glissandi in the shower scene of "Psycho". But you must not forget that soundtracks are functional music; the music is there to enhance the atmosphere. It is not there to be concentrated on; you are supposed to concentrate on the pictures and the dialogue.
What a difference it makes can clearly be seen if you see a movie of a concert or a rock opera that has been turned into a movie. Suddenly the music becomes the pre-eminent thing.


Edited by BaldFriede - August 10 2007 at 04:33


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 04:51
Originally posted by Hyperborea Hyperborea wrote:

Jesus christ...cinema paradiso overrated?   An almost perfect movie.....would be nice to know what the Norwegian liked?



I love Bergman, Monthy Python, Truffaut, Lynch, Nicholas Roeg, Roy Andersson, Herzog, Jarmusch, Tarkovsky, (selected) Kubrick, Allen, Polanski, old Disney... &  everything starring Peter Sellers mm.

I just don't like 'heartwarming' sentimental crap with overtly cute characters. Here's a short version from a reviewer that agrees with me (and writes better):

-I’m fully aware that Giuseppe Tornatore’s Italian tearjerker Cinema Paradiso is beloved by many, but I can’t drum up much goodwill for it. Telling the story of a young boy’s relationship to a projectionist and, more importantly, to popular film, it never is afraid to simplify itself further so that no one watching feels left out of its banality. When the young boy’s mentor tells him not to give into nostalgia, the sentiment feels laughable considering this film’s reverence to all things wistful. There are never-ending emotional climaxes here, but the film drags on despite the fact that things keep happening quickly.

...The movie is hopelessly manipulative. No emotion remains unnoted by Ennio Morricone’s ever-present score. There’s never any doubt about what we’re supposed to think during a scene, and that emotional simplicity seems a cheat.Jeremy Heilman

Cinema Paradiso is
(along with all the others on my list) truly one of the most overrated movies in modern history!




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 05:35
^
'I just don't like 'heartwarming' sentimental crap with overtly cute characters' ... Except in old, animated Disney movies, that is.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 06:13
I'm aware that cinema and music are apples and oranges, but in this case, I believe oranges are superior to apples, or at least, the best oranges are superior to the best apples.

Music (not all music, obviously) has just so much more room for ambiguity and tension, mainly because its ties to 'reality' seem just so much looser than cinema's.

Someone mentioned music as a resource cinema makes use of. Funnily enough, that Cinema Paradiso review Rocktopus quoted relies on an argument that I could somehow reuse here. While image and music can work together really well, there is a danger that the result will be 'hopelessly manipulative', that the ambiguous music will be tied to a less ambiguous image, and therefore will lose some of its depth and independence. To the observers, there will 'never be any doubt about what they're supposed to think' when they hear the soundtrack afterwards. While we're not talking film music here, the recent Tchaikovsky vs Stravinsky discussion is a good case in point. Some people said Tchaikovsky was cheesy. I think there's quite a lot of people who think that way. Would this be the case if Tchaikovsky's music wasn't hopelessly attached (in the popular mindset) to the scenes from his ballets? There you go, I guess in the long run music can only suffer from attachment to visuals, not necessarily cinematic ones.

Another thing - this is probably quite flimsy, but what the hell - it seems that the adjective 'musical' is considered to be the greatest compliment one can award the product of a non-musical art. A 'musical' painting or poem seems to be synonymous with a truly great or beautiful painting or poem. Samuel Beckett and Harold Pinter are just some of the artists who wanted their work to be 'musical'. Whereas a piece of music does not have to be 'illustrative', it does not have to 'tell a story', it does not even have to be 'colourful' to be beautiful.

And finally, why should I spend money to watch people act? I might as well go out and take a stroll round the city, I'll see enough people act to last me a whole week :P     

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 10:54
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 10 2007 at 11:29
Originally posted by Visitor13 Visitor13 wrote:

I'm aware that cinema and music are apples and oranges, but in this case, I believe oranges are superior to apples, or at least, the best oranges are superior to the best apples.

Music (not all music, obviously) has just so much more room for ambiguity and tension, mainly because its ties to 'reality' seem just so much looser than cinema's.

Someone mentioned music as a resource cinema makes use of. Funnily enough, that Cinema Paradiso review Rocktopus quoted relies on an argument that I could somehow reuse here. While image and music can work together really well, there is a danger that the result will be 'hopelessly manipulative', that the ambiguous music will be tied to a less ambiguous image, and therefore will lose some of its depth and independence. To the observers, there will 'never be any doubt about what they're supposed to think' when they hear the soundtrack afterwards. While we're not talking film music here, the recent Tchaikovsky vs Stravinsky discussion is a good case in point. Some people said Tchaikovsky was cheesy. I think there's quite a lot of people who think that way. Would this be the case if Tchaikovsky's music wasn't hopelessly attached (in the popular mindset) to the scenes from his ballets? There you go, I guess in the long run music can only suffer from attachment to visuals, not necessarily cinematic ones.

Another thing - this is probably quite flimsy, but what the hell - it seems that the adjective 'musical' is considered to be the greatest compliment one can award the product of a non-musical art. A 'musical' painting or poem seems to be synonymous with a truly great or beautiful painting or poem. Samuel Beckett and Harold Pinter are just some of the artists who wanted their work to be 'musical'. Whereas a piece of music does not have to be 'illustrative', it does not have to 'tell a story', it does not even have to be 'colourful' to be beautiful.

And finally, why should I spend money to watch people act? I might as well go out and take a stroll round the city, I'll see enough people act to last me a whole week :P     


A somewhat strange argument, since some of the most famous works of Stravinsky ("Firebird", "Rites of Spring", "Petrushka", "Pulcinella")  are ballet music!!!


Edited by BaldFriede - August 11 2007 at 02:21


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