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30 votes
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Shinichiro Watanabe and the two-shot dynamic
14 votes -
The Creator is next-level sci-fi. So why isn't it being promoted that way?
46 votes -
Calling all analog photographers and cinematographers of Tildes
As a hobbyist, I do digital and film photography, but I tend towards film unless the situation calls for it (like doing motorsports photography, for example). I'm curious how many of this smaller...
As a hobbyist, I do digital and film photography, but I tend towards film unless the situation calls for it (like doing motorsports photography, for example).
I'm curious how many of this smaller community shoot film, and what everyone's relationship with film is. Do you shoot casually? Professionally? Part of this post is trying to gauge how much interest there could be in the occasional discussion of analog photography subjects. Would love to hear anything you have to say on the subject, be it film itself, gear (liking or collecting gear is not a bad thing!), or the process of shooting on analog formats.
If anyone is in the CA Bay Area there is a film group (organized through the Meetup app) that does semi-regular meets that we'd love to have more participants in.
Feel free to drop a link to wherever you post your work, if you do. I've really been enjoying posting on Glass for the last 6 months. It's paid but sure as hell beats Instagram, in my opinion.
26 votes -
Wes Anderson’s secret weapon: The camera moves of Sanjay Sami
8 votes -
‘Tár’ wins Golden Frog at EnergaCamerimage
3 votes -
When a modern director makes a fake old movie
3 votes -
How Taika Waititi shoots a film at three budget levels
5 votes -
The hook: Scene transitions in classical cinema
5 votes -
How Quentin Tarantino shoots a film at three budget levels
5 votes -
David Fincher’s impossible eye
6 votes -
Interviews → Cinedicate — The Truman Show
1 vote -
No Time to Die sounds like it has a lot of SPECTRE in it
4 votes -
Director Rian Johnson breaks down a scene from Knives Out
7 votes -
Are there any remakes as good as the original movie?
I was chatting with a friend today and this question came up - I drew a complete blank. Aside from a few foreign movies retranslated into a completely different context, like Seven Samurai and The...
I was chatting with a friend today and this question came up - I drew a complete blank.
Aside from a few foreign movies retranslated into a completely different context, like Seven Samurai and The Magnificent Seven, most remakes don't even approach the quality of the original, for my tastes.
Please enlighten me if you're aware of any superior, or even equivalent remakes that tell roughly the same story with the same characters.
17 votes -
Why Hayao Miyazaki's animation feels alive
9 votes -
The real fake cameras of Toy Story 4
8 votes -
The hardest effect I ever pulled off, by forty-two filmmakers, cinematographers, and effects artists
6 votes -
Motion smoothing is ruining cinema
25 votes -
Game of Thrones cinematographer: It’s not me, it’s your TV settings
13 votes -
Triumph of the will and the cinematic language of propaganda
7 votes -
Academy Awards to present cinematography and three other awards during commercials
6 votes -
Movies often contain chess games with basic errors. What motivates filmmakers to keep using a game they don't understand?
17 votes -
How do you make a sex scene sexy? (And keep the actors safe?) Five intimacy coordinators explain their craft
8 votes -
Bisexual lighting: The rise of pink, purple, and blue
8 votes -
Memories of Murder (2003) - Ensemble staging
5 votes