Armageddon was never intended to be anything but fun,
Which is irrelevant to my point.
Bay tried to add a "tear jerker" and a "teen love story" to that film, not to mention the love for a father and his child and tried to make them a center peace of the film....
And he failed.
to do anything else with that script would have been a big mistake
Which proves my point.
Thanks
(and astroid is coming and they send drillers...bay is such an idiot for not giving that the full apollo thirteen treatment...(not)
He would have failed if he tried that too.
it's summer camp drama, intended to read but not actually move
Agreed....and he and the movie failed because he tried to "move" people with the plight of the characters.
The father that cared to much for his daughter, the NASA administrator who always wanted to be the pilot, The true love that may never be, the other father who never knew his son,
All of these concept and characterizations were an attempt to "move" the viewer, to make the viewer identify with the characters and they all failed.
About the only part that rang true was how the Government almost messed everything up.
pearl harbor was a bad idea on a scriptual level, it worked for Titanic but that love story didn't take place during a war...
True enough and I dont know if many other directors could have made a better film useing that script but the concept of love and war may be out dated but its not a failed concept.
At the very least an other director may have called for a re-wrire and we may have gotten a better film.
in fact I'm drawing a blank as to the last time someone successfully mixed a love and war film
(the love story sucked either way)
Gone with the Wind (1939) It was nominated for thirteen Academy Awards and won eight including Best Picture, Best Actress (Vivian Leigh), and Best Screenplay (Sidney Howard).Not to mention it featured two of the most memorable characters in movie history.
Casablanca (1942) The film won three Academy Awards including Best Picture.
The Best Years of our lives (1946) won seven Academy Awards including Best Picture, Best Director (William Wyler), and Best Screenplay (Robert Sherwood)
From Here to Eternity (1953)Won eight Academy Awards including Best Picture, Best Director (Fred Zinnemann) and Supporting Oscars for Frank Sinatra and Donna Reed
Dr. Zhivago (1965) Won five Oscars including Best Screenplay and Best Music.
And More recently
The English Patient (1996)Winner of nine Academy Awards including Best Picture
None are exactly my kind of films thou
the island actually raises alot of deep questions and is full of substance, for it's as easy as filming a script that asks questions about the human condition and the value of life, to get credit for substance as a director
The script may have raised questions about the human condition and had substance but the directors job is to make that ring true on film....to make it seem real to the view threw the preformance of the actors.
And Bay failed in that sence.He was more concerned with the action and product placement then he was in creating an atmosphere of realizem and the effect of that world on the characters, and in retrospect, our possible futures.
and "The Island" failed in that department where other films like "Logan's Run" and "Fahrenheit 451" [ which shared the concept theme] did not fail.
Even the film that "The Island" stole its premise from did a far better job at being thought provoking....""Parts: The Clonus Horror".
Children of Men also did a great job of showing the plight of the human condition if things dont change.
Even the 5 Planet of the Apes did a far better job of conveying the general idea that "look at what our
society has created".
There were even a few Twilight Zone and Outer limit's episodes that did a far better job with the general concept in question then Bay did.
The Island just doesn't measure up.....at least not in my opinion.
you'd be wrong for doing so
...but i won't stop you
We'll see....after the movie is released.
I would
JP came out and people had never seen CGI applied like that, with that realism...it was half the reason to go
Correct there.
And thats where I wouldnt go as far in saying.
To begin with the robot designs were lacking in the same areas that the Dino designs fulfilled.[BTW this was also Bays fault]
You looked at the Dino's in J.Park and felt that you may have just seen what they really looked like.On the other hand, Bay took a lot of creative chances with the designs he chose and truth be told it hurt the way some of the characters were viewed [no pun intended]
You really didnt walk out of the TF film an say.... "boy the TF's looked like I always imagined they would look".
Besides that there were a lot of visual flaws in TF that just werent as apparent in JP.
Even the "Bumblebee "leaking" on the agent scene had an apparent flaw.
When Bumble bee let his cap hit the agent in the head the agent rubbed the wrong part of his head afterward.
I can name a few more visual flaws but I dont want to make this a CGI debate.