M Night School
Though I'm not fully in agreement that he's the worst. My vote will probably go with Michael Bay.
Who directs the Fast and Furious films? Who directs the Scary Movies and all those other satires?
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Interesting. Your example of Lucas fits this profile, but he's one-of-a-kind and exceptionally dweeby about his vision, which was harmless in the first place. Cameron is another one who probably gets to do exactly what he wants with half a billion dollars, but Avatar was practically financed out of his own pocket and anyway his return rates have always been phenomenal, unmatched. And despite this total freedom, what do you see? Other than that he's free to take his time, Avatar has the same hero-story conventions, act structure, sequencing of fights in order of the villain's importance, and predictable outcomes as in all the other big budget movies. ("But Pandora feels so real!! I wanna live there!!")
Generally I believe the opposite of what you say applies. Lower budgets mean lower stakes, more risks allowed. You can make an indie about two cowboys falling in love, but a studio and the bankers are not going to let Return of the Jedi end with Luke Skywalker and Han Solo happily married and having a swinger's foursome with Chewbacca and a robot on the deck of the Millennium Falcon, no matter how much Lucas may want that. (Pat Robertson probably thinks it already happened.)
Small production means one person might exercise control over all aspects. They may have more original ideas when young, thus produce more interesting work. If they succeed and access huge budgets that means more bankers and insurers, more rules, simultaneous crews in diverse locations, battalions of animators in Korea, etc. You can't cast an ensemble of unknowns. A 100 million dollar budget will be run on commercial algorithms with sequels in mind. If you fuck up one of those, it's much worse than if you make an indie flop. (And actually there's no such thing as an indie flop, since most barely make any money in the first place and it's success if you get to haunt festivals and cable channels. Ever wonder why the thank-you lists are so long? At least half of those entries should be listed instead as "Unpaid Labor," from family and friends.)
How many current blockbusters ever really surprise you? It's all formula. Big budget places limits on creative control in a million ways. Transformers 3 will not see Earth destroyed, unless it ends with "To Be Continued" and T4 is already in the can with the story of how they un-destroyed Earth. There will not be a 20-minute interlude in which Shia LaBoeuf takes a ballet lesson. "The Amazing Spiderman" is not going to see the hero beheaded on screen halfway through the movie, and then turn into a poignant bitter comedy about Peter Parker's funeral, not even if David Mamet writes the script and wins a Nobel Prize for it. Etc.
JackRiddler wrote:brekin wrote:One thing I think makes critiquing directors (or any other professional) who have done good or great things in the past and then later birth monstrosities is that I would think those first projects there were more obstacles, compromises, collaborations and limitations that they had to work with. As they get more successful they get more options, access, autonomy and power and so their work is a closer estimation of who they are and what they really want to accomplish.
Interesting. Your example of Lucas fits this profile, but he's one-of-a-kind and exceptionally dweeby about his vision, which was harmless in the first place. Cameron is another one who probably gets to do exactly what he wants with half a billion dollars, but Avatar was practically financed out of his own pocket and anyway his return rates have always been phenomenal, unmatched. And despite this total freedom, what do you see? Other than that he's free to take his time, Avatar has the same hero-story conventions, act structure, sequencing of fights in order of the villain's importance, and predictable outcomes as in all the other big budget movies. ("But Pandora feels so real!! I wanna live there!!")
Generally I believe the opposite of what you say applies. Lower budgets mean lower stakes, more risks allowed. You can make an indie about two cowboys falling in love, but a studio and the bankers are not going to let Return of the Jedi end with Luke Skywalker and Han Solo happily married and having a swinger's foursome with Chewbacca and a robot on the freshly pimped-up deck of the Millennium Falcon, no matter how much Lucas may want that. (Pat Robertson probably thinks it already happened.)
Small production means one person might exercise control over all aspects. They may have more original ideas when young, thus produce more interesting work. If they succeed and access huge budgets that means more bankers and insurers, more rules, simultaneous crews in diverse locations, battalions of unknown animators in Korea, etc. You can't cast an ensemble of unknowns. A 100 million dollar budget will be run on commercial algorithms with sequels in mind. If you fuck up one of those, it's much worse than if you make an indie flop. (And actually there's no such thing as an indie flop, since most barely make any money in the first place and it's success if you get to haunt festivals and cable channels. Ever wonder why the thank-you lists are so long? At least half of those entries should be listed instead as "Unpaid Labor," from family and friends.)
How many current blockbusters ever really surprise you? It's all formula. Big budget places limits on creative control in a million ways. Transformers 3 will not see Earth destroyed, unless it ends with "To Be Continued" and T4 is already in the can with the story of how they un-destroyed Earth. There will not be a 20-minute interlude in which Shia LaBoeuf takes a ballet lesson and finds himself. "The Amazing Spiderman" is not going to see the hero beheaded on screen halfway through the movie, and then turn into a poignant bitter comedy about Peter Parker's funeral, not even if David Mamet writes the script and wins a Nobel Prize for it. Etc.
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Nordic wrote:As far as guys who hit it big and then start making crap movies, I dunno, it's a real mystery to me, unless they're falling into that "I'm brilliant, so anything I come up with must be great!" syndrome, which any artist is capable of falling into, at least for a time.
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