sems4arsenal
Member
Loved that movie. Not my fav Nolan flick but was on the edge of my seat the whole time.
In the sinking boat scene, why was that one dude (who drowned) unable to escape? Was he chained up or something?
I'm going to be this one but...
WTF Nolan... You didn't put ANY effort in historical accuracy ? I'm no history buff at all but... You didn't edit the GIANT SHIPPING CRANES in the back drop of the city ? We see them in a dozen shots. The huge ass plastic covered factory ? The opening shots, all the plastic covers and wires running on the houses ?
It's like... They just... Didn't care ? They removed the cars and said good enough. We are miles behind David Fincher's Zodiac in term of post process CGI to remove and replace to match accurately or trying, a time period.
Also, the Maillé Brézé, the huge ass grey ship we see standing IDLE in water several times (with men on deck waving)... It's a french post war destroyer (a musuem ship in France) it has no propulsion anymore and it was towed for the shooting but... They barely worked on it. It doesn't look anything like a RN ship and its so obvious it's sitting in water : none of the big ships had wake they just all stood there, sitting in water...
Same for the little boats... it felt so cheap, so few of them on screen...
Its very weird because on top of these comments I made, some shots are just out of this world, breathtaking or superb.
What do you say, GAF? Is a 9 year old boy who loves history too young to see this movie?
What do you say, GAF? Is a 9 year old boy who loves history too young to see this movie?
Eh, it wasn't that clear what the one week, one day, one hour mean. I didn't really understand until the end.Holy hell
Not sure how some people keep missing it... it's literally written on the screen at the beginning!
I have the exact opposite opinion on scale. I left the movie feeling like I was right in there because of the fact they didn't overscale it with CG and extreme shots. It felt lived in and like the camera was right there with the soldiers. Sure, this may have been under-exaggerated to make it more easy to film, but I think huge, sweeping CG shots of thousands upon thousands of soldiers and boats would've really taken me out of the experience. If I could use one word to describe it, it would be authentic. Not in the sense of historical accuracy, but everything felt in-place and self-consistent.
Anyway, I continue to appreciate it more after chewing it over more and more.
I have the exact opposite opinion on scale. I left the movie feeling like I was right in there because of the fact they didn't overscale it with CG and extreme shots. It felt lived in and like the camera was right there with the soldiers. Sure, this may have been under-exaggerated to make it more easy to film, but I think huge, sweeping CG shots of thousands upon thousands of soldiers and boats would've really taken me out of the experience. If I could use one word to describe it, it would be authentic. Not in the sense of historical accuracy, but everything felt in-place and self-consistent.
Anyway, I continue to appreciate it more after chewing it over more and more.
Man that was such a great movie. Suprised about the mixed reception tbh. It was beatiful and the music reminded me of there will be blood with how it was implemented. Doubt I'll ever see it again though, it was a movie made for the cinema through and through, my weak ass tv wont ever do it justice.
What mixed reaction? Film as been lauded as hell. It's his best reviewed work since Memento.
I can understand the mix of opinions on the movie after watching it. I've had an interest in what happened at Dunkirk for a few years but know little else about wars honestly. Knowing this was being made really piqued my curiosity and I've been desperate to see it for months now. But I think a lot of people went into the movie thinking either A) that this is a standard war movie with a Nolan feel, or B) that even if it wasn't A, it would be an action-packed movie with lots of big set-pieces with Hardy being center stage. Nolan made it pretty clear what he was going for with making a movie that focused on the tension set around that excruciating time where those forces were given orders to retreat (and for some of them it was a very long trek) and when they finally got there they simply found a beach packed with soldiers awaiting a fate they had no control over. It seemed pretty clear that there was no clear protagonist and that there would not be an enormous amount of dialogue. I expected something based on that and loved it, I've found movies that can create and hold such a high level of tension for so long few and far between and love it (No Escape from 2015 is the last one I saw and thought it did it superbly). But I think other people expected this to wow them in other ways and instead were disappointed as they felt they couldn't connect to the characters because there were a lot of them, and because the timeline moved around they felt it was a little too confusing.Did I watch the same movie as the rest of you?
What mixed reaction? Film has been lauded as hell. It's his best reviewed work since Memento.
Why is a diversity of opinions such a terrible thing, again?
Plus I think while it was an excellent trick of editing he showed off his timeline juggling skills at the expense of the tension tbh. Could have made for something better if he didn't keep cutting to something happening on an entirely different time period or show the same moment through a new perspective.
How did people find this boring? It was like one 1:50 tension sequence with no time to breathe
No it isn't. You'll find this in plenty of screenplays.It's also a trick of is great writing. He writes the crosscutting in the script. It's really quite unique his abilities to structure that particularity and it's pace immediately in the pages. He's not discovering that rhythm in the editing room but everything is conceptualized right away.
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That Dunkirk is essentially one long, extended montage, doesn't suddenly make cross-cutting between scenes at the script stage unique.Most movies don't crosscut extensively and recurrently through the whole film like Nolan ones. Off course it's extremely unique. Dunkirk script is entirely different from something like Inception for instance.
That Dunkirk is essentially one long, extended montage, doesn't suddenly make cross-cutting between scenes at the script stage unique.
Not to be pedantic, but you did.Nor did I said otherwise.
He writes the crosscutting in the script. It's really quite unique his abilities to structure that particularity and it's pace immediately in the pages.
Not to be pedantic, but you did.
Which is the only thing I was responding to.
Again, and I promise I'm not going to go around in circles on this; the extent to which Nolan uses this technique in Dunkirk, doesn't suddenly make the technique unique.Off course you are being pedantic. Did I wrote that in the context of a general movie thread? Or in the Dunkirk one? Show me films with so much crosscutting, where the entire thing follows exactly the script and then let's characterize it's uniqueness.
Whenever I think of Titanic, I will always remember RMS Gigantic's post. Just amazing.
Interstellar's Docking scene with the Supermarine track
Not bad. The transition in the middle of the song is pretty decent.
Nailed it. I saw this in IMAX yesterday and was completely floored by the movie. Expected to finally visit this GAF thread and see all the praise but I'm shocked to see so many people disappointed for seemingly petty reasons.
Did I watch the same movie as the rest of you? For me, this wasn't a film setting out to show the grandiosity of WWII with massive panoramic shots of beaches full of soldiers, giant naval armadas or intense gun fights. It became very evident early on in the film that the story was going to be uncomfortably personal with what some of these individuals may have experienced at Dunkirk. The authenticity of using intimate, upclose shots of real plants/boats and soldiers sold me on the personal experience far better than massive CGI scenes. Couple this with the fucking insanely loud sound effects and relentless score and I was seriously stressed out the entire movie.
In fact, some of these other criticisms about the character development or scenes not giving enough time or effort to allow for the viewer to connect also make me question if we were watching the same film. Yes, there was very little dialogue in the film and the little dialogue used was difficult to hear/understand. Yes, many of the scenes that showed loss, despair, tragedy, triumph and victory were short lived as the movie continued its pace to the next scene. As the credits began to roll, I had this huge emotional tidal wave hit me and I literally began to cry as the gravity of the film settled on me.
My personal experience of the film was that we purposefully weren't given enough time to appreciate the horrors soldiers saw/heard in combat,. Throughout the entire film, we hear the ticking clock in the score, maintaining tension and hurrying us on to the next scene.the elation of troops being rescued or the selfless sacrifice of British citizens using their civilian boats for rescueMaybe I'm giving Nolan too much credit, but given the entire package of this film, I thought this was a fairly powerful representation of the human experience in war. It was an exhilarating emotional roller coaster that didn't fully catch up to me until the very end where it hit me like a sack of bricks.The clock finally stops when the young man closes his eyes on the train to sleep.
Best way I could summarise the film is like it being a 90 min simulation at an amusement park. Watching on IMAX was thrilling and there was an intensity throughout which was helped greatly by the wonderful sound design and score.
However as a piece of storytelling it felt flat. There is practically zero emotional attachment to the characters, and with next to no character development it's hard to feel anything for the movie apart from this immersive journey I outlined before.
I also found the prominence of things like TV aerials jarring, in fact I'm pretty sure there's a modern apartment block in full view as the Spitfire flies over Dunkirk towards the end.
So in conclusion I think Dunkirk is a showcase IMAX experience without being an outstanding film.
Interstellar's Docking scene with the Supermarine track
Not bad. The transition in the middle of the song is pretty decent.
Was Cillian Murphy in any other part of the movie other than the old man's boat?
I could have sworn I saw him at the beach... this was before I realized that the movie wasn't exactly in order, so I wasn't sure if it was him or not.
The last time I wrote about a Christopher Nolan film on this blog, I was defending the unusual use of protracted exposition to explain Inception's complicated plot premises. (Critics had complained about the lack of character depth, though I daresay that we knew more about those characters than we do about the ones in Dunkirk.) Concluding that discussion, I said, "I don't see why we should get annoyed because Inception doesn't contain rich, fully rounded characters. It's clearly a puzzle film that takes the usual complicated premises of a heist movie and pushes them to extremes. Accepting the flow of nearly continuous exposition may remove some of the frustrations viewers face. After all, there's no rule against it."
Art occasionally does have rules, often imposed from without by government dictate or patronage preference. Artists can impose rules on themselves to guide their creativity, or groups of artists can agree upon rules that define specific types of artworks, like sonnets or sonata-allegro form. But mostly it has norms and conventions–rules of thumb rather than strict rules–and originality consists of playing with them in interesting ways. Now Nolan gives us a film that has even less character psychology and backstory than in Inception, but it also avoids that film's great lashings of exposition.