View Full Version : Full Frontal reviews
Doug Thompson August 6th, 2002, 08:14 PM <<<-- Originally posted by donatello : where's the 2 million ..
crews don't work for FREE just because steven is shooting dv.
if they worked 6 day week then the 6th day is at 1 1/2 X rate penalties for going over X hrs ( into 7th day)
this was a 18 day shoot ... probably at least 8 weeks of pre -production
it all adds up QUICK .... -->>>
Don't forget the advertising budget. It's usually factored into the cost of the film.
Daniel Chan August 8th, 2002, 08:17 PM To me, Dancer in the dark is the best looking DV movie thus far, that would be one to check out for sure, but I was turned away by the handheld shaky cam effect that Lars Von Trier used throughout the film.
I also like bamboozled but I thought that the color was a bit dull...
The Anniversary Party is also a great looking DV movie very vibrant colors but I found out that it was shot on digibeta...
I still have yet to see a very cinematic DV film...
Has anyone seen a DV film with great some great framing and movement? Steadicam may be???
I just don't like seeing DV films where everything is hand held just cos you can... what filmmakers call "dramatic" to me is just dizziness and headaches...
Daniel
Jim Harrington August 9th, 2002, 12:51 PM I'm sure Canon won't, but he (S.S.) made our camera look like a BAD VHS. If I was thinking of buying an XL-!, this film would have stopped me. Besides being a terrible movie with a poor script, it looks awful! I've seen Army training films that are more entertaining and look much better. Don't waste you money, like I did, on Full Frontal. It's a rip off and makes a great camera look real bad.
Jim Harrington August 9th, 2002, 12:54 PM Canon Should SUE!!! I'm sure Canon won't, but he (S.S.) made our camera look like a BAD VHS. If I was thinking of buying an XL-!, this film would have stopped me. Besides being a terrible movie with a poor script, it looks awful! I've seen Army training films that are more entertaining and look much better. Don't waste you money, like I did, on Full Frontal. It's a rip off and makes a great camera look real bad.
David Mesloh August 9th, 2002, 01:23 PM I remember a thread awhile back where folks were lamenting about having to have "real jobs" and weren't able to follow their dreams.
It's interesting that some members think it is amusing to bastardize a very succesful directors name (ie: sodaburger) as a form of critique. I think he deserves a great deal more respect than that.
I have always been of the opinion that film, music, theatre and book critics are just failed artists. They wish they could be out there doing something, but since they can't or won't, they bolster their own ego by degrading or falling all over the work of others.
The fact is...the majority of them haven't done squat artistically. If they were good artists, they would be creating art. But they don't.
If you don't like how he used the XL1 to shoot a movie for national distribution..shoot your own. Write a script, grap your precious camera, and shoot something. Take 18 days (what's that 9 weekends ?) and get off your ass and shoot your DV masterpiece.
The guy took a chance. Great !!! Hopefully he inspired a bunch of young kids to go out and make movies. That's more important than trying to please a bunch of cynical critics and camera hobbiests who would die for the chance to have their DV footage on the big screen. Most of us wouldn't even care if it was perfect or not. Just knowing you did something would be worth it.
Every hour we spend degrading another artists work, is an hour we could be spending on our own work....our own piece of art.
Don't get caught in the same trap that so many artists get caught in. The "I wish I would have" trap.
The is my opinion and not necessarily that of the management.
David Mesloh
Shooting good and bad DV daily.
elusive_kudo August 9th, 2002, 09:32 PM Very well said David, many good points, BUT just because he went out there and turned out a piece of bore does not mean we should sit here and applaud him for it.
Nobody was ever expecting a masterpiece from this guy, but most of us would settle for a decent work. No excuse for a half assed experiment! For a guy with his connections, power and means he should have done way better than this! Period!
Anyway, how come nobody is questioning how much money has Canon coughed up for this one? I don't think that the Canon ads are all over Full Frontal official site for no reason. And I also don't think that the full page Canon ads with Sodaburger's grinning mug with XL1 s are in every single damn DV magazine for no reason. And so, today Canon will sell you the dream that if you buy an XL1s you gonna make a movie like him. And they will milk it for all its worth.
I sincerely believed that they went to Canon and they struck up a deal. It is beyond my comprehension that no one here questioned or mentioned that possibility?
Doug Thompson August 9th, 2002, 10:36 PM <<<-- Originally posted by dmesloh@gimixfx.com :
If you don't like how he used the XL1 to shoot a movie for national distribution..shoot your own. Write a script, grap your precious camera, and shoot something. Take 18 days (what's that 9 weekends ?) and get off your ass and shoot your DV masterpiece.
The guy took a chance. Great !!! Hopefully he inspired a bunch of young kids to go out and make movies. That's more important than trying to please a bunch of cynical critics and camera hobbiests who would die for the chance to have their DV footage on the big screen. Most of us wouldn't even care if it was perfect or not. Just knowing you did something would be worth it.
Every hour we spend degrading another artists work, is an hour we could be spending on our own work....our own piece of art.
David Mesloh
Shooting good and bad DV daily. -->>>
David:
Very good points and I have to agree. I also don't think the film is a bore. It is a devastating look at moviemaking ala Hollywood and the Los Angeles culture (which is why I think it upsets so many movie critics).
So Soderbergh took an XL1S, cranked up the gain and added grain in post. So what? I'm not going to judge a camera's ability to produce quality work based on how any one director used it in a single film. He bleached out colors and added grain to the Mexican scenes in Traffic and I didn't see Panavision proponents claiming it would destroy use of 35mm. The different color palettes he used for different locations in Traffic made it a more compelling film.
Steven takes chances, which is what I admire about his work. He experiments and pushes the limits, which is what we all should be doing with the medium. I talked with a Canon rep the other day and he says the company has no regrets over its involvement with Full Frontal and looks forward to working with Soderbergh on future productions. I've seen Full Frontal twice now and appreciated it more the second time around. The audience in the second viewing was also more into the film than the first time I saw it. And there's a lot of subtext that is easily missed on casual viewing.
Granted, Full Frontal is not for everyone. It is a very personal film, one that Soderbergh admits will be the last he will ever shoot or edit in LA. It was a crititique of a town he finds too constricting for creative work. Instead of castigating the guy because he didn't use DV the way we would have liked, we should applaud his willingness to try something different.
Josh Bass August 9th, 2002, 11:43 PM Ah, we now have one (count it, one) favorable review.
Jeff Donald August 10th, 2002, 04:50 AM I just wonder how many of the armchair critics have actually spent a few dollars and gone to see the movie. If your want to critisize (or praise) something you should have at least experienced it. I don't want to hear arguments about wasting $10. Anyone who owns a $3,000 video camera + gear can afford $10 to see a movie and give an honest opinon. No arguments about wasting time, either. We waste an hour here and there every day. I know I'm guilty of that. So, go see the movie. You might come away with an idea for your next project or a technique you want to try. But, at least give me an honest and thoughtful opinon on something you've actually seen.
Jeff
Doug Thompson August 10th, 2002, 06:26 AM <<<-- Originally posted by Josh Bass : Ah, we now have one (count it, one) favorable review. -->>>
Actually, I've read a number of favorable reviews: Filmmaker Magzine, Time (Richard Corliss called it a "terrific new movie...intimate and innovative."), Res, The Independent, etc.
Doug Thompson August 10th, 2002, 06:42 AM <<<-- Originally posted by Jeff Donald : I just wonder how many of the armchair critics have actually spent a few dollars and gone to see the movie. No arguments about wasting time, either. We waste an hour here and there every day. I know I'm guilty of that. So, go see the movie. You might come away with an idea for your next project or a technique you want to try. But, at least give me an honest and thoughtful opinon on something you've actually seen.
Jeff -->>>
Jeff: Good points. I go to movies for two reasons: to be entertained and to study technique. Last night, I saw Full Frontal for the second time, along with The Kid Stays in the Picture (documentary on Robert Evans) and Tadpole (also for the second time). All were playing at a multiplex in Arlington that caters to indie film (it also has good popcorn). Seven hours well spent because all three of the films were good studies on technique.
The films also provided a good break after nine straight days cutting a documentary on the American mood on terrorism.
Liking or not liking what Soderbergh did in Full Frontal doesn't make any of us right or wrong. Any film that provokes thought and discussion proves its merit. When I got home last night, I popped Traffic into the DVD and watched it again (Soderbergh originally planned to shoot part of that film in DV). The Mexican scenes would have worked beautifully in DV.
Daniel Chan August 12th, 2002, 11:39 PM I feel that Steven Soderbergh has been an inspiration to me personally. It's hard to find many established filmmakers who are willing to talk about the technical aspects of filmmaking and in the process reveal their secrets and methods. I love David Lynch's work, he is one of those who are very protective of his work. He's reluctantly discuss or even talk about his films.
As a filmmaker, I have learned a lot from watching his movies and hearing him talk about his process.
To be honest, El Mariachi wasn't that good a movie but it was innovatove and fresh, and I think we'd learn more if we weren't so busy counting the grains on the screen and bad mouthing him for each one of them.
Daniel
Adam Lawrence August 19th, 2002, 09:46 AM This will be the last time i will be somewhat influenced by the critics.
This was a great movie, and very worthy of seeing more than once.....
----brilliant!
As far as the Xl1 footage quality....It did look worn and grainy but this was
OBVIOUSLY the directors intent. I for one loved this idea,.. like i said- brilliant!
Doug Thompson August 19th, 2002, 09:54 AM <<<-- Originally posted by dcny@hotmail : I feel that Steven Soderbergh has been an inspiration to me personally. It's hard to find many established filmmakers who are willing to talk about the technical aspects of filmmaking and in the process reveal their secrets and methods.
To be honest, El Mariachi wasn't that good a movie but it was innovatove and fresh, and I think we'd learn more if we weren't so busy counting the grains on the screen and bad mouthing him for each one of them.
Daniel -->>>
I agree that one can learn a lot from Soderbergh. However, Robert Rodriguez directed El Mariachi, not Soderbergh (Rodriquez remade El Mariachi as Desperado).
Interesting that we're starting to hear more positive comments about Full Frontal from people who have actually seen the film.
Doug
Daniel Chan August 19th, 2002, 07:52 PM Rebel without a crew is the reason I decided I want to make movies...
What I meant is that it's great to see both of these big league filmmakers shoot digital, it's the closes thing to a pad on the back for what I am doing...
Rodriguez shot Spy kids 2 and El Mariachi 2 : Once upon a time in Mexico both in HD 24p...
Can't wait to see them...
Daniel
Henrik Bengtsson August 28th, 2002, 03:39 AM Well .. having not seen the film myself, not even seen footage, and is probably to young to have an opinion *nudge nudge* ... here i go :)
First off, the movie sounds like its a "love it - hate it" kinda movie. Either you think he's brilliant or you think he's crap. Me, i personally think mr. Sondenberg is a very talented director. But it also doesnt' mean i have to like everything he does. I do however, do not need to call him Sodaburger (how funny it did sound) because i dislike one of his film. On the same note, i don't have to call George (F)lucas anything either just because i think the two new star wars movies are nothing but ILM showreels & aimed att selling more toys rather than telling a compelling story. But thats besides the point :)
On the other hand, me and several colleagues in Sweden have noted a change in the market right now. People ask less and less for "is it shot on Betacam or 35 mm" and are more concerned with lowering the budgets. A lot now is being shot on DVCAM/DVCPro and even MiniDV simply because the costs of doing it on 35 mm is not always appreciated by the client. And since times are fairly bad here right now, everyone is checking their costs. In short, the person going "uh. but we MUST have 35 mm or DigiBeta" wont be doing much work after a while.
And finally, regarding the "best" DV video film out there i must say i was very impressed with Chelsea Walls. It was very nicely shot & lit. Much impressed.
Regards,
Henrik Bengtsson
DocuWild
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