redhawk23
Wrestlin'
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2008
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Trying to pass of 2012 as 1996(ish), would work equally as well as trying to pass off 1975 as 1960.
American Graffiti.
Trying to pass of 2012 as 1996(ish), would work equally as well as trying to pass off 1975 as 1960.
What I mean is they had to go out of their way to present the time period. 1962 represented a drastically different setting that could be romanticized as a kind of lost era barely 10 years later.
Thought had to be put into costuming, choice of cars and music to capture that moment.
Meanwhile, you can have the twist ending of a film from 2011 be that it is secretly set in 2000 with very little effort. Hell FD5 had to go out of its way to include clues.
Things have changed since 2000 no doubt, but the things that changed aren't the same signifiers that we associate with the drastic changes in style, cars, and music from decades past.
Add cell phones to any scene from the 3rd season of Buffy and it could pass as a modern show 13 years on.

Something I had noticed in May/June on my second viewing was that everything the father gave the son at the ice cream shop came back to the son in the same order. The ice cream (intimacy), sunglasses (crime), motorcycle (identity).Just saw this - it was freaking amazing. The callbacks in the film down to the kid learning about his dad while eating ice cream again at the same place as when he was a baby, to the picture again at the same place, the mirroring shots of the kid on the bike and the father on his (both on the road to the pines and their respective robberies), also forgetting his glasses for the son to get it in the future, the kid becoming a wreck like his father feared once he found out about the truth (which he made the mom not tell), the way the son's nose is bleeding due to AJ mirroring Luke's blood on his face due to Avery. Avery's money toss is comparison to Luke's and the shift in roles of their children vs the previous generation.
The characters are all VERY well fleshed out and beautifully acted.
It was also shot beautifully (God, I love film) and considering they cut down their budget on lighting to get more shooting days because Cianfrance wanted more days to work with the actors, the film was actually incredibly lit.
The music was beautiful, as was the sound design (especially that sound of the gun in Robin's mouth). A couple shots were a little out of focus, but it's to be expected with film - harder to get playback + optimal exposure, and the film was already running on a small budget - reshooting takes with film is very difficult with no money.
Also how all four of the main characters' first appearances were done by a tracking shot from behind (Luke, Avery, AJ and Jason).
The pacing in the film was masterfully edited - kudos to the editor.
All around a fantastic film.