Uh, Scorsese has had more then a few cinematographers over the years. His films always look like Scorsese films. From Hugo to Taxi Driver. It is the same with the vast majority of great directors. It is why SPECTRE does not look removed from Skyfall, even without Deakins.
You missed my point in all of this. Whomever Bay works with, his films always look like bay, similar deal with Burton and various others people with distinct aesthetics. It's their choice, their will done by the cinematographer(if the
talent is there). Same as with a production artist and how a director brings their choices and proclivities but it's that artists drawing ability(talent)...
You distinctly said something along the lines of Brid is a more talented cinematographer! I responded with something along the lines of, if you want to compare the talent of the cinematography in both films, perhaps this measure should pertain to that of the actual cinematographers. I find it odd that they actually have an award given to these people for their work yet in your language you would assert something that undermines this.
Just like stunt teams, just like composers if you want to actually compare the talent on display, do just that. What you are doing is comparing the directors preferences and proclivities and consistent habbits imo and that's why sky fall/spectre look similar at the outset, the director wants them too but it's not actually his light measuring and photography at work here. Not in a discussion of 'talent'. If you meant to say Bird has a better aesthetic for you, cool.
I have no problem with JJ. Love him actually. But MI3 is small because of his direction. Bird brings the fantasy, the animated element, but unlike most it has grounded weight to it. So while the frame might hit like something from the Incredibles, it feels appropriately different do to it being live action. The opening jail break is a lovely example.
Bird did with GP what all Bond directors between Thunderball and Casino Royale failed to do. He brought to life the childhood super spy fantasy.
Like I said, not for me. It has it's strengths clearly, as does the prior one. For MI3 also does what dozens of bond films(up ill recently) fail to do also, personalize the drama on screen and take the villain beyond a childhood fantasy with the twirling stache...
As for MI3 feeling small. It did? If it felt 'small' I would describe that as a story choice not so much directing. The same way the bourne film 'feels' small but mainly because it's not about something the avengers would get up to in story. I thought the tokyo stuff was a 'big' as TDK imo.
You felt birds movie: 'animated but had a weight to it', I felt it had an animated to it period. Surely you can understand how if I felt the later without the former it would teeter on kinda lame? I can only imagine Ulimatum in that same circumstance. Fun throw back for some I suppose.
I still take that bridge scene over most. That to me harked over to 90's James Cameron.