Bull **** at your so called "Real movie making".
You know what it's all really about...professionalism. You can back up Fox or X-3 all you want but facts are facts.
A movie that the studio pushes to start filming before the script is even done just to meet a deadline instead of rescheduling is very unprofessional.
It does not mean Vaughn is too soft to make films let alone a horrible director.
What you call taking risks(in this situation) is really called being a fall guy or even a 'yes man'.
It has nothing to do with a director's talent when it comes down to leaving a film that is going to be(and pretty much was)half assed due to the studio.
Actually, constantly pushing back a release date and NOT meeting said deadlines is the unprofessionalism, not actually MEETING a deadline.
You really need to stop looking at this from a fanboy perspective. It's a business.
You go into ANY business and see how they react to you not meeting deadlines - if they extend them so that you have all the time you need because you couldn't get the job done, or if they fire you for not doing your job and bring in someone else who can / will.
People act like these directors are such horribly treated victims.
They are employees. They are getting paid, by a movie studio, to get a job done. If they can't get the job done, they get fired.
These movies are an investment by the movie studios. They want results, not whiney crybabies who can't get the job done and cry for more time. I guarantee you that if I am given a deadline at my job that I can't meet, I'm out looking for another job.
These studios are making investments with these movies. They aren't giving the directors a forum to express their creativity. It's a job. It should be treated as such.
Vaughn to me comes off as the unprofessional one, not wanting to meet deadlines and such.