Guys give me a lowdown on IMAX vs Digital
My digital IMAX theater is really nothing like a 70mm IMAX experience. The screen is not all that large ... the sound is oppressive but the image quality is nice and sharp.
Guys give me a lowdown on IMAX vs Digital
Have people seen Unbroken? It's at the top of so many lists I've seen.
AKA Oscar bait.No one has, but Oscar predictions tend to have films that just "seem" like Oscar movies. And Unbroken, sight unseen, seems tailor-made for the Academy's taste. WW2 true inspirational story, starring Jack O'Connell who's been having a great year with Starred Up and '71, A-list craftsmanship across the board(Coen brothers rewrote script, Deakins cinematography, Desplat supplying the music, Angelina Jolie as the director?), etc.
Who knows if its any good or not, but on paper...!
So is John Wick a better movie?
I don't know how to feel about this.
I will admit that as ridiculous as that situation is, the very notion ofThat feels a little silly...
I will admit that as ridiculous as that situation is, the very notiondid raise my ire a little bit. So I guess the scene is succeeding at something.public schools/the very government endorsing that conspiracy theory bullshit
What I'm really confused about is thatresources are so depleted that hospitals don't have working MRIs anymore?
Oh shit, you just made me Google some articles about this. I had no idea this is a major looming problem.helium is getting less and less and MRI needs helium to function
seemingly mixed review from slate but this is interesting:
http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/movies/2014/10/christopher_nolan_s_interstellar_reviewed.html
lots of spoilers but I will show the interesting qoute
The protracted last act of Interstellar(The theoretical physicist Kip Thorne was a consultant.) How you feel about the movie may hang on your reaction to this sceneabout which Ill say only that,(which contains at least three discrete moments that could easily have been endings but arent) ties the outer-space plot up with the meanwhile-back-at-the-ranch one via a development thats at once metaphysical and sort-of-seemingly scientific.Going back over and over this crucial moment with a fellow critic on the train home, I could make no sense of itlike the end of 2001: A Space Odyssey, it takes place in a space that seems to exist in between the familiar world we know and some strange alternate dimension.But the sense of visual and spatial wonder this scene evoked in me lingered long after, accompanied by a begrudging respect for the Nolans sheer commitment to their own peculiar brand of visionary hokum.where was the encounter meant to be taking place? What laws of the universe, or of human relationships, did it purport to disclose?
also first clip from interstellar
http://time.com/3546528/interstellar-movie-clip/
Does your spoiler concern the scene withMatt Damon from an alternate dimension?
Sweet!
I don't know how to feel about this.
That feels a little silly...
If their intention was to make me as flabbergasted as McC in this clip, well it worked.
You've seen the movie Tunesmith?Sweet!
It'll make perfect sense once you have more context.
http://time.com/3546528/interstellar-movie-clip/[/url]
Just saw it. What can I say? You don't see a movie like this every other day.
Just saw it.
There was a premiere with Nolan live from Paris on screen just before the movie, talking a bit about himself and the movie, was pretty cool.
As for the movie, as my most anticipated movie in a long, long time (maybe ever), a space nut and rather neutral Nolan appreciator...
...Wow. Just fuckin wow. I'm not one to go overboard with hype and praise and all, but it blew me away. It's just, I don't know... I can't spoil anyway, but I'm gonna go see it a second time ASAP (in IMAX this time).
It's just grandiose.
It touches upon my favorite subjects related to space travel. It's quite ambitious. More importantly the characters and emotion work.
Since his breakthrough with the backward-running "Memento," Christopher Nolan has made a plaything of time. In "Interstellar," he slips into its very fabric, shaping its flows and exploding its particles. It's an absurd endeavor. And it's one of the most sublime movies of the decade.
As our chief large-canvas illusionist, Nolan's kaleidoscope puzzles have often dazzled more than they have moved, prizing brilliant, hocus-pocus architecture over emotional interiors. But a celestial warmth shines through "Interstellar," which is, at heart, a father-daughter tale grandly spun across a cosmic tapestry.
There is turbulence along the way. "Interstellar" is overly explanatory about its physics, its dialogue can be clunky and you may want to send composer Hans Zimmer's relentless organ into deep space. But if you take these for blips rather than black holes, the majesty of "Interstellar" is something to behold.
But that rhyme though...But if you take these for blips rather than black holes, the majesty of "Interstellar" is something to behold.
Theres so much space in Christopher Nolans nearly three-hour intergalactic extravaganza Interstellar that theres almost no room for people. This is a gigantosaurus movie entertainment, set partly in outer space and partly in a futuristic dustbowl America where humans are in danger of dying out, and Nolan -- who co-wrote the script with his brother, Jonathan -- has front-loaded it with big themes and even bigger visuals. Interstellar is supposedly all about what it means to be human, but it's supersized in case we really are so out of touch that we need to have everything blown up IMAX-big. We used to look up at the sky and wonder at our place in the stars, says Matthew McConaugheys farmer-astronaut-dreamer in one of his many, many proclamations about life, family, and the cosmos. Now we just look down and worry about our place in the dirt. But even the dirt in Interstellar looks spectacularly art-directed. Nolan may be invoking Walker Evans, but Interstellar is really just Jethro Bodinesized.
It'll be okay. Just take my hand.JESUS FUCKING CHRIST THIS IMPRESSIONS!!
I CAN'T TAKE IT!!
http://www.villagevoice.com/2014-10-29/film/the-fault-in-his-stars/ negative review from a top critic, she gave the dark knight, rises and inception all negative reviews
http://www.villagevoice.com/2014-10-29/film/the-fault-in-his-stars/ negative review from a top critic, she gave the dark knight, rises and inception all negative reviews
Knew it was Stephanie Zacharek when you posted this lol, she hates nolan's films.
What on earthgave rotten marks to Guardians of the Galaxy ,12 Years a Slave,The Grand Budapest Hotel,The Wolf of Wall Street and fresh marks to if I stay and 300 sequel