BatLobster
Trailer Timewarper
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I wouldn't go as far as to call Nolan's visuals weak, but they certainly are vanilla and often times very generic. I think one of the reasons is his LOS(length of shot). As Orson Welles famously said:
"A long-playing full shot is always what separates the men from the boys. Anybody can make movies with a pair of scissors and a two-inch lens."
Nolan's LOS for his filmography is 3.1 seconds. Compare it Michael Bay's who's is 3 seconds. Nolan's visuals when it comes to editing and shot selection aren't much different from the average blockbuster. His films, like most blockbusters nowadays, feel like they just shot a bunch of coverage and then threw it together in the editing room which shows a lack of a distinct vision from a visual perspective. Compare that to Hitchcock who shot only what he needed and said cut right when he knew he'd cut the shot in editing. His editor once said all he had to do to edit Hitchcock's films was chop off the slates and put the shots in order. I'm not saying Nolan needs to have a bunch of long takes and have an LOS of 17 seconds like Woody Allen, but he could visually becoming more clear and make each shot count. Spielberg, who's LOS is 6.5 seconds(not ridiculous like Allen's but twice as long as Nolan's) has a vastly distinct visual set up for each film, making each film feel meticulously planned and controlled unlike the cut/cut/cut of coverage that modern blockbusters like Nolan give off(not saying he doesn't plan, I'm sure he does, but it looks that way). Again, it doesn't mean he's gotta be Allen or Cuaron and have long ass takes, but it would be artistically refreshing to do something not so blockbustery. A good video example of Spielberg's great middle ground in this category can be found here:
http://nofilmschool.com/2014/05/study-steven-spielbergs-cinematography-help-you-master-long-take/
Furthermore, Nolan's cinematography is vanilla due to his choices in shots. Whenever you expect a close up, you get a close up. Whenever you expect a wide shot, you get a wide shot. It's just very vanilla, predictable and boring. Sure there's times when that works. The interrogation scene for example in TDK. All we need is a shot reverse shot of each characters face because the drama in the scene and acting is enough. That's a scene where minimalistic, vanilla cinematography is all you need. However, Nolan sticks to the norm through out all of his films. I'm never wowed, surprised or thrown off (in a good way) by a shot selection of Nolan's like I am with many of the other directors mentioned in this thread. Nolan doesn't challenge the audience visually. Look at this shot from Taxi Driver:
http://youtu.be/UeLbZEalGus
Scorsese elects to dolly right not when De Niro walks right like a traditional move, but instead does it as De Niro continues to talk on the phone. We sit watching the empty hallway for seconds as we hear De Niro talking on the phone, then he walks down the hallway. Is it confusing to the audience why we're staring at empty hallway while the action happens out of frame? Sure. Is it unique? Certainly. Does it have a purpose? Certainly. Scorsese said the scene on the phone is supposed to be extremely awkward. She won't return his calls, he took her to a porno, it a very embarrassing moment and one where we don't want to watch, and the camera doesn't wan to watch, so it quits watching. However, watching the hallway is extremely out of the norm in a film and extremely awkward in itself which is the point. It heightens the awkward feeling in the audience for the whole scene, putting us in a similar mindset as Travis and yet we don't even realize the magic trick. We don't get why we're so awkward in the heat of the film. Genius, subtle move by Scorsese. This is the kind of visual challenges and uniqueness that is missing from Nolan's films.
Nolan's visuals aren't unique in other ways as well. His visuals don't differ much from the generic drama/thriller. They especially look like Michael Mann's particularly. You can't watch a Nolan film and instantly pick up its a Nolan film like you can with Scorsese, Ophuls, Welles, Mallick, Kubrick, Truffaunt, PTA, Wes Anderson, Tarantino and Goddard.
Again, I don't think weak is the right word for his visuals and IMO, that is much too harsh of a criticism. Nolan's shot composition is at lest average, and his lighting is always really good IMO(though all of Pfister's lighting is great so that may be more him than Nolan, we'll see this November). In Nolan's case it seems each piece of the puzzle looks fine, even good, but the way he puts the puzzle together is rather vanilla and often boring.
Nolan's strength is narrative and creating characters who convincingly move the narrative themselves, which IMO, is a good strength to have.
I like Nolan. I hold him to a high standard because everyone else does and his popularity demands it. Some directors have evolved their styles over years. If he was to start handling shot selection in less traditional ways and not edit his shots so by the book, he'd have potential to be really amazing.
That's the subjective part of it though, because for me traditional and by the book isn't necessarily a bad thing at all. I feel that it's a good way to keep the audience grounded and orient them in the familiar which is probably a smart choice, when his narratives have a tendency to be a little more demanding and engrossing. And, like the video said, Spielberg's oners were really just a reflection of the old tradition of Hollywood filmmaking. So he wasn't really being that inventive or outside the box, but he certainly was being effective. I struggle to understand what average length of shot really proves as far as quality. There are different methods of achieving things. Maybe it's because I edit for a living, but I take somewhat of an opposition to the idea that abandoning editing as much as possible and letting things play out entirely in camera= better. There's a lot of possibilities that open up if you choose to let the editing take more of a front seat in the storytelling. It really just depends what you're trying to accomplish and what kind of rhythm you want your film to have. Concepts of what makes a film too fast or too slow are completely subjective.
I guess to me, the whole "film is a visual medium" thing has always felt like a half-truth. It's not just a visual medium. It's an audio medium, it's a literary medium, it's everything. Visuals are one piece of the puzzle, a very crucial piece, but it's very possible to be very effective while playing by the rules visually and someone like Nolan is proof of that. It's great when directors can challenge an audience visually, and I usually love Scorcese's visual choices, but for me being outside the box visually isn't the one true measuring stick of a great filmmaker, regardless of what Orson Welles said. There are many paths to greatness.
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