Gitesh Pandya
@GiteshPandya
$19.8M opening day for #Dunkirk at #1, 24% from IMAX scrns. Wknd heading to about $52M. 60% male, 76% over25, playing just like WW2 pics do
But then again, this summer has been the summer of exceptions, where both Homecoming and Apes has had terrible legs despite being loved. The second weekend will really tell the tale of Dunkirk's box office run.
Yes it was simple in some terms but it worked and fit in with the fairly simple and straight forward story being told, the tension was there is spades, at least for me, guess it just didnt work out for you.
Yeah, again, simple but highly effective.
Yep, good observation. If there was anything really good and interesting about the score it was this thing. It felt like a part of the *film* itself, not a music.The soundmixing of the soundtrack is insane. It's mixed like it's part of the ambiance of the setting. You start to wonder if it's the horn of the score or the horns of a ship. Much like how Nolan has taken his style to its essential purity, so has Zimmer. He has experimented with score as sound effects in other films before, but never to this degree. I was listening to the score of the film on youtube and it sounds dramatically different in the film because of how it's mixed.
It won't make it to 50 million at this rate, but still impressive.
Guess that's why it didn't felt like a Nolan movie for me and felt so underwhelming. The script was just very weak in comparison to his other films, I mean, Memento, Prestige, c'mon, those are totally different league.
Soundtrack was effective at some places, but overall, it actually felt to me it substituted the "intense" which was not in the film but needed to be, I really think even small Following was much more intense film than Dunkirk, I don't know what happened to Nolan, but this was not him.
Yep, good observation. If there was anything really good and interesting about the score it was this thing. It felt like a part of the *film* itself, not a music.
harlequinade said:What's the fixation on the script? Here it's structure that hid surprises and was so challenging and complex. Not every movie out there needs to have super elaborate, long script
t: we're talking about Christopher Nolan here, the master of super elaborate mind-blowing scripts. He dropped the ball with Dunkirk.Was it Consona who said Apocalypse Now is overrated?
t:I'm a pure nolanite, I utterly love his mind-bending precise absolutely insanely thought out film-making, Memento, The Prestige... this wasn't it. This was not Nolan in his prime.
Go watch those two films and you'll notice what I'm talking about.
C'mon, harlequinade,t: we're talking about Christopher Nolan here, the master of super elaborate mind-blowing scripts. He dropped the ball with Dunkirk.
C'mon, harlequinade, we're talking about Christopher Nolan here, the master of super elaborate mind-blowing scripts. He dropped the ball with Dunkirk.
Come on what? He dropped nothing. It's a ridiculous complaint. Why would a movie about Dunkirk evacuation need 'mind-blowing' script?
but even his Batman films which were far from Prestige level of screen-artistry were better written than Dunkirk.I'm a pure nolanite, I utterly love his mind-bending precise absolutely insanely thought out film-making, Memento, The Prestige... this wasn't it. This was not Nolan in his prime.
Go watch those two films and you'll notice what I'm talking about.
C'mon, harlequinade,t: we're talking about Christopher Nolan here, the master of super elaborate mind-blowing scripts. He dropped the ball with Dunkirk.
I have seen those films many times. While I have yet to see Dunkirk (going tomorrow), I am fully aware that this film is not meant to be a "mind-bending, super-elaborate" film like some of Nolan's previous efforts. It seems odd to hold that as a strike against this film and what Nolan was trying to accomplish.