You are completely contorting it. Other people said lenses wouldn't work in the context that it would affect the individual dramatic scenes AND the entirety of the performance. You came in and said they would work. Then I pointed to those previous posters who talked about "performance" in the specific sense and you then tried to bring up the technicality that EVERYTHING in a movie is the performance, which ignores the scenarios the first posters addressed.
No this is not what happened. Not saying you're lying or "contorting" though, just that you misunderstood and I also did, probably. You showed up and replied to my message, saying that full-time lenses were unnecessary and they were just a nod to fans. I replied to you saying that I never said the contrary, just that they did not lessen an actor's ability to perform. You replied to me saying he was not performing while wearing them anyway, so I corrected you, cause this was an aberration (Although I know understand that you meant it as in "emoting" as well). But before that, I wrote a few lines to reply to what you had said about lenses affecting his ability to perform in a general way anyway (including "emotion" scenes of course, so I did take into account what others were saying. You can check for yourself, message number 7130 of this thread, on page 286.
Also, you can't talk about the lenses in ONLY the context of that scene (which you are doing if you can't see the correlation between other scenes and the lenses) and say they don't hamper is performance as there is likely to be very little to actually critique.
I'm afraid I may be misunderstanding this part of your message.
And you haven't put one forth to convince those of us posting in response to you.
Well, man, seriously it's not such a big deal, I'm not saying that anyone who doesn't have my opinion is a fool as it is what it is: an opinion. The only thing that ticked me off was receiving so many answers who did not actually reply to my post but to things I hadn't said.
If a film is completely dialogue driven then you would be right. Unfortunately, film is a visual medium and dialogue very rarely (or at least should rarely) be the source of exposition and emotion.
I agree that movies are meant to give something visual to audiences. My point was just that your voice is enough to convey an emotion, and that is true for radio, movie and real life as well.
But when it all comes down to it all you are arguing is that lenses would leave "just enough" modes of emoting to squeeze out a good performance
"just enough" implies that it's a bit on the down side. I'm just saying that it's enough, as in... It could very well be ann award-winning performance. It's not just "alright". It can be good if the actor's good. Again, it all comes down to the talent of the actor (and director). I'm not saying everyone can do it, nor am I saying that it's easy.
ignoring the fact that more ways of emoting could constitute a greater range of expression and a better performance, either in quality or variety.
But I agree with that completely. If you're saying that if an actor is in full control of his body, facial features, and that they are all exposed to us, it will be a) easier for the actor to convey emotions and b) easier for a lot of people to understand what he wants to convey, then I say yes.
Again, my point is not that eyes are irrelevant to a performance but just that they are not necessary, and again, many good performances show that. The fact that Ray Charles was blind does not mean that people watching Ray were expecting less emotions out of him. Just that he had to find other ways to convey those emotions to us than through his eyes. And he did it brilliantly, didn't he?