Interstellar - Part 4

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^ Did you get flashbacks to the reports of studio people giving TDKR standing ovations and men openly crying because it will change cinema forever? :oldrazz: :awesome:

:woot: I remember those from the TDKR days. Was always skeptical. This however is completely different for me as it is Edgar Wright saying it and not some random twitter account. With all the films and filmmakers Nolan had said inspired him over the last few years and just the way he approaches them I would have been surprised if he didn't nail this. He still has a 100% success rate for me.
 
https://***********/TheDanielWolf/status/487006919622950912
Little birdie told me they spoke to someone who saw an early cut of Nolan's INTERSTELLAR & said its "mind blowing awesomeness." #YesPlease
 
:woot: I remember those from the TDKR days. Was always skeptical. This however is completely different for me as it is Edgar Wright saying it and not some random twitter account. With all the films and filmmakers Nolan had said inspired him over the last few years and just the way he approaches them I would have been surprised if he didn't nail this. He still has a 100% success rate for me.
:up:

Aaaaaaah I can't waaaaaait.
 
No surprise that this is apparently great. He had a good backdrop and concept. Nolan does wonders with good concepts (Dreams, Magic and now interstellar travel along with [blackout]time travel[/blackout]).

I need to finish up Kip Thornes book pronto. I've been slacking.
 
I'm pretty excited about this movie. I love Nolan's more original movies, and I'm a big sci-fi fan. Also, I've avoided all the spoilers, and haven't come close to reading that script. I'm going in pretty blind. should be good.
 
That's cool to hear from a solid source like Wright. Everything I've seen so far looks great, so I'm pretty optimistic.

Also, has anyone managed to get a hold of Nolan's Wall Street Journal Op-Ed that came out this week? It's about the future of the film industry, a bunch of film sites gave reported on it with some excerpts but I'd like to read the whole thing...unfortunately I don't have a WSJ subscription.
 
Kip Thorne's involvement should be enough to get us genuine sci-fi fans excited about this movie... but from the little pieces of info we have seen/heard about plus the trailers and I am as hyped for this as any movie I've ever wanted to see.
 
Also, has anyone managed to get a hold of Nolan's Wall Street Journal Op-Ed that came out this week? It's about the future of the film industry, a bunch of film sites gave reported on it with some excerpts but I'd like to read the whole thing...unfortunately I don't have a WSJ subscription.
Here's the entire Op-ed:
In the '90s, newly accessible video tech- nology gave adventurous filmmakers (such as Lars von Trier and his colleagues in the filmmaking movement Dogme 95) an unprecedented wedge for questioning the form of motion pictures. The resulting 20-year process of radical technical and aesthetic change has now been co-opted by the very establishment it sought to challenge.

Hungry for savings, studios are ditching film prints (under $600 each), while already bridling at the mere $80 per screen for digital drives. They want satellite distribution up and running within 10 years. Quentin Tarantino's recent observation that digital projection is the "death of cinema" identifies this fork in the road: For a century, movies have been defined by the physical medium (even Dogme 95 insisted on 35mm film as the presentation format).

Savings will be trivial. The real prize the corporations see is the flexibility of a nonphysical medium.

As streams of data, movies would be thrown in with other endeavors under the reductive term "content," jargon that pretends to elevate the creative, but actually trivializes differences of form that have been important to creators and audiences alike. "Content" can be ported across phones, watches, gas-station pumps or any other screen, and the idea would be that movie theaters should acknowledge their place as just another of these "platforms," albeit with bigger screens and cupholders.

This is a future in which the theater becomes what Tarantino pinpointed as "television in public." The channel-changing part is key. The distributor or theater owner (depending on the vital question of who controls the remote) would be able to change the content being played, instantly. A movie's Friday matinees would determine whether it even gets an evening screening, or whether the projector switches back to last week's blockbuster. This process could even be automated based on ticket sales in the interests of "fairness."

Instant reactivity always favors the familiar. New approaches need time to gather support from audiences. Smaller, more unusual films would be shut out. Innovation would shift entirely to home-based entertainment, with the remaining theaters serving exclusively as gathering places for fan-based or branded-event titles.

This bleak future is the direction the industry is pointed in, but even if it arrives it will not last. Once movies can no longer be defined by technology, you unmask powerful fundamentals—the timelessness, the otherworldliness, the shared experience of these narratives. We moan about intrusive moviegoers, but most of us feel a pang of disappointment when we find ourselves in an empty theater.

The audience experience is distinct from home entertainment, but not so much that people seek it out for its own sake. The experience must distinguish itself in other ways. And it will. The public will lay down their money to those studios, theaters and filmmakers who value the theatrical experience and create a new distinction from home entertainment that will enthrall—just as movies fought back with widescreen and multitrack sound when television first nipped at its heels.

These developments will require innovation, experimentation and expense, not cost-cutting exercises disguised as digital "upgrades" or gimmickry aimed at justifying variable ticket pricing. The theatrical window is to the movie business what live concerts are to the music business—and no one goes to a concert to be played an MP3 on a bare stage.

The theaters of the future will be bigger and more beautiful than ever before. They will employ expensive presentation formats that cannot be accessed or reproduced in the home (such as, ironically, film prints). And they will still enjoy exclusivity, as studios relearn the tremendous economic value of the staggered release of their products.

The projects that most obviously lend themselves to such distinctions are spectacles. But if history is any guide, all genres, all budgets will follow. Because the cinema of the future will depend not just on grander presentation, but on the emergence of filmmakers inventive enough to command the focused attention of a crowd for hours.

These new voices will emerge just as we despair that there is nothing left to be discovered. As in the early '90s, when years of bad multiplexing had soured the public on movies, and a young director named Quentin Tarantino ripped through theaters with a profound sense of cinema's past and an instinct for reclaiming cinema's rightful place at the head of popular culture.

Never before has a system so willingly embraced the radical teardown of its own formal standards. But no standards means no rules. Whether photochemical or video-based, a film can now look or sound like anything.

It's unthinkable that extraordinary new work won't emerge from such an open structure. That's the part I can't wait for.
 
Pretty positive this will be the second or third best film this year. The reports only help that!
 
It's going to be interesting to see if this beats out my top 2 or 3 for this year.
 
I think the stories of this hitting the festival(s) are legit.
 
I don't see this beating Inherent Vice or Birdman for me. I'm too big of a PTA fan and I love long takes so Birdman being shot(and tricked) to look like one long take the whole film is pretty much guaranteed to make me wet my pants(not with pee). This looks fantastic though. May surprise me.
 
Yeah can't wait for Birdman....I didn't even know it was doing a single shot take like Silent House. Nice.
 
Foxcatcher is that movie for me.
 
Here's the entire Op-ed:
In the '90s, newly accessible video tech- nology gave adventurous filmmakers (such as Lars von Trier and his colleagues in the filmmaking movement Dogme 95) an unprecedented wedge for questioning the form of motion pictures. The resulting 20-year process of radical technical and aesthetic change has now been co-opted by the very establishment it sought to challenge.

Hungry for savings, studios are ditching film prints (under $600 each), while already bridling at the mere $80 per screen for digital drives. They want satellite distribution up and running within 10 years. Quentin Tarantino's recent observation that digital projection is the "death of cinema" identifies this fork in the road: For a century, movies have been defined by the physical medium (even Dogme 95 insisted on 35mm film as the presentation format).

Savings will be trivial. The real prize the corporations see is the flexibility of a nonphysical medium.

As streams of data, movies would be thrown in with other endeavors under the reductive term "content," jargon that pretends to elevate the creative, but actually trivializes differences of form that have been important to creators and audiences alike. "Content" can be ported across phones, watches, gas-station pumps or any other screen, and the idea would be that movie theaters should acknowledge their place as just another of these "platforms," albeit with bigger screens and cupholders.

This is a future in which the theater becomes what Tarantino pinpointed as "television in public." The channel-changing part is key. The distributor or theater owner (depending on the vital question of who controls the remote) would be able to change the content being played, instantly. A movie's Friday matinees would determine whether it even gets an evening screening, or whether the projector switches back to last week's blockbuster. This process could even be automated based on ticket sales in the interests of "fairness."

Instant reactivity always favors the familiar. New approaches need time to gather support from audiences. Smaller, more unusual films would be shut out. Innovation would shift entirely to home-based entertainment, with the remaining theaters serving exclusively as gathering places for fan-based or branded-event titles.

This bleak future is the direction the industry is pointed in, but even if it arrives it will not last. Once movies can no longer be defined by technology, you unmask powerful fundamentals—the timelessness, the otherworldliness, the shared experience of these narratives. We moan about intrusive moviegoers, but most of us feel a pang of disappointment when we find ourselves in an empty theater.

The audience experience is distinct from home entertainment, but not so much that people seek it out for its own sake. The experience must distinguish itself in other ways. And it will. The public will lay down their money to those studios, theaters and filmmakers who value the theatrical experience and create a new distinction from home entertainment that will enthrall—just as movies fought back with widescreen and multitrack sound when television first nipped at its heels.

These developments will require innovation, experimentation and expense, not cost-cutting exercises disguised as digital "upgrades" or gimmickry aimed at justifying variable ticket pricing. The theatrical window is to the movie business what live concerts are to the music business—and no one goes to a concert to be played an MP3 on a bare stage.

The theaters of the future will be bigger and more beautiful than ever before. They will employ expensive presentation formats that cannot be accessed or reproduced in the home (such as, ironically, film prints). And they will still enjoy exclusivity, as studios relearn the tremendous economic value of the staggered release of their products.

The projects that most obviously lend themselves to such distinctions are spectacles. But if history is any guide, all genres, all budgets will follow. Because the cinema of the future will depend not just on grander presentation, but on the emergence of filmmakers inventive enough to command the focused attention of a crowd for hours.

These new voices will emerge just as we despair that there is nothing left to be discovered. As in the early '90s, when years of bad multiplexing had soured the public on movies, and a young director named Quentin Tarantino ripped through theaters with a profound sense of cinema's past and an instinct for reclaiming cinema's rightful place at the head of popular culture.

Never before has a system so willingly embraced the radical teardown of its own formal standards. But no standards means no rules. Whether photochemical or video-based, a film can now look or sound like anything.

It's unthinkable that extraordinary new work won't emerge from such an open structure. That's the part I can't wait for.

Thanks! :woot:
 
So, a poster somewhere oddly has 'IMAX 3D' on it. isn't that a typo...?
 
I don't see this beating Inherent Vice or Birdman for me. I'm too big of a PTA fan and I love long takes so Birdman being shot(and tricked) to look like one long take the whole film is pretty much guaranteed to make me wet my pants(not with pee). This looks fantastic though. May surprise me.
Whoa, this is the first I'm hearing of that, but if true, my anticipation just went through the roof on that one. :wow:
 
That's cool to hear from a solid source like Wright. Everything I've seen so far looks great, so I'm pretty optimistic.

Also, has anyone managed to get a hold of Nolan's Wall Street Journal Op-Ed that came out this week? It's about the future of the film industry, a bunch of film sites gave reported on it with some excerpts but I'd like to read the whole thing...unfortunately I don't have a WSJ subscription.

Seemed pretty paranoid. He's worried about studios being able to flip a switch to kill a movie if it does poorly during Friday afternoon shows. I don't think the industry will get to that point.
 
So, a poster somewhere oddly has 'IMAX 3D' on it. isn't that a typo...?

Yep.

https://***********/IMAX/status/487326886985363456

Xsgo2yb.png
 
I've yet to see a non blurry, non saturated, non off-centered 3D film.

While, my all 3 of my IMAX and numerous lie-MAX viewings have all been beautiful and sexy.

The helicopter flyover into the blown window at the beginning of TDK (at the Navy Pier) is still the most realistic-in film feeling I've ever had.
 
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