i did actually. interesting indeed.sunrise wrote:Did you guys notice that Anthony Dod Mantle is on the credits of most of the films you have mentioned?
/matt
Moderator: Andreas Wideroe
it would have been just as revolutionary had it been shot in the same style but on super 8, which is what i/we meant. it wouldn't have looked romantic or "nice", but pretty much the same but "better". it's a fact that it is ugly, and i don't mean that it looks like video or that it's not sharp, that's part of the beauty, but that some scenes have horrible digital artifacts that take you out of the story. if you think we're suggesting kodachrome colors and good exposure, you're so mistaken, at least as far as what i had in mind is concerned. i was suggesting this movie because it almost looks like super 8 already, not because i don't like the look.gliptitude wrote:i have to disagree with everybody about festen/the celebration, on two counts. (1) it is not ugly, it is visually revolutionary (the savage video medium only improves the presentation)
sure it could. switching carts takes no time, and there are film stocks that work just as well as video in available light situations. and remember that they *were* actually planning on shooting it in super 8.and (2) it could/should not possably have been filmed in super8 without sacrificing the pace and some of the fundamental aspects of the film
Jarmusch didn't shoot any of "Coffee and Cigarettes" on Super 8. It was all 16mm and 35mm. He did work with Super 8 on his Neil Young film, "Year of the Horse."paul wrote:He did shoot some of the films on super 8. I didn't like all of them either. although I found some of them quite good.maybe he should have shot "coffee and cigarettes" on super8. then i'd have something to say about it besides "hated it".
I did find some of the shorts on the larger formats quite a relief in terms of image quality.
Paul
Nice guy, yes. And lots of his earlier work I do like.beatnik326 wrote:Jarmusch didn't shoot any of "Coffee and Cigarettes" on Super 8. It was all 16mm and 35mm. He did work with Super 8 on his Neil Young film, "Year of the Horse."paul wrote:He did shoot some of the films on super 8. I didn't like all of them either. although I found some of them quite good.maybe he should have shot "coffee and cigarettes" on super8. then i'd have something to say about it besides "hated it".
I did find some of the shorts on the larger formats quite a relief in terms of image quality.
Paul
As for the merits of C&C, I loved it, but I'm a deep admirer of Jarmusch's work. He's also a damn nice guy, as I've had the chance to meet him twice (once in Chicago after a Q&A and last year at SxSW in Austin). Anyway, if you're interested, Jonathan Rosenbaum's review of C&C is quite insightful.