greg x wrote: ↑Thu Sep 19, 2019 4:27 pm
All of this might be because film was much more relevant for society and people in general during the 20th century, while it is pretty irrelevant nowadays (cause there are different audiovisual media and artforms which weren't available to people back then, like video games and stuff). Maybe filmmakers back then were also more interested to express themselves through film as a medium, cause there wasn't that much to choose from or it had much lower prestige. I don't know exactly which is the case.
This is true, but I don't think you're following through with the implications of this fully. One of the things that's changed is that more filmmakers are able to make movies that aren't devoted to finding the largest commercial audience, which itself points to why many movies today are different and why filmmakers aren't able to build the same kind of body of work that they might have had in a different era.
I never complained about difference. Actually I love and appreciate difference. Surely, there's a huge difference between a commercial US studio film from 1920 and a commercial US studio film from 1980, and between an Iranian social portrait from the 1970s and a bollywood musical from the 1970s and a film from Syberberg, etc. etc. etc. I love diversity and I lvoe different perspectives, but that's not stufff I'm criticizing.
And I'm not complaining that filmmakers have to build the same kind of body of work, cause time's change. Still, on the one hand it's easier and cheaper nowadays to make a lot of films. but I have no problem with filmmakers making one film every 5 years, either.
If filmmakers are able to make films that don't have to necessarily work commercially (like in a state-funded apparatus like in Germany for the past 40 to 50 years), shouldn't they be able to work regularly and in fact make more films? Like Fassbinder did in the late 60s and 70s, cause almost all of his work was funded and he wasn't dependent on commercial success.
There are commercial filmmakers, who tend to get denigrated for making commercial films even though that aspect of filmmaking hasn't changed overmuch, more that living through the moment tends to make commercial films of the time feel less meaningful for dealing with watered down versions of things we live through or exaggerated metaphoric handling of the same. The distance of time can give older commercial films a greater feeling of vitality for the tension that comes from that moment having past and the manner of expression no longer feeling "current", which provides interest for how they gain attention in a style that isn't "in the air" of the moment. Commercial filmmaking always adds an element of impersonal construction to the work and broadens the main themes so they can appeal to a wider audience. Removing that necessity means filmmakers can focus their craft on narrower areas of interest, which more often require effort on the part of the audience to "get" in the same way as a more commercial film. The audience, in other words, has to go part of the way to meet the filmmaker rather than having everything delivered to them from the start.
I think that aspect has changed a lot as well. I personally have no problem whatsoever with commercial cinema, but while in the past we had commercial directors with a vision and an incredible knowledge of cinema (Ford, Curtiz, Coppola, Corman, etc. etc. etc.), nowadays we have a lot of clueless hacks. I also don't believe at all in what you say about the present making it difficult to appreciate current commercial art, etc. Film is film, aesthetics are aesthetics. I can appreciate them for what they are, no matter how much "distance" from an era I have or not. I'm not looking at the past as a sociologist or an anthropologist, and if I am, I am looking at current films the same way.
The audience, obviously has no problem with current filmmaking (as they never had any problems with any commercial filmmaking of the past) and always prefer new stuff to older stuff. I'm generally just talking about me and my perspective, which is very different.
I guess you and me look at films very differently, if what you describe influence your film viewing (cause it doesn't influence mine).
At the same time, the whole point of many current films is in addressing the imbalance created by the impersonal distance of the history of commercial filmmaking because that distance was structured around certain dominant viewpoints that created the illusion of accepted belief even as that accepted belief was limited to a certain range of cultural biases that reigned for most of the history of filmmaking. The basic view points of many "great works" are inherently flawed for coming from this history of bias that ignored or downplayed other perspectives. Even at best it usually meant someone from outside the effected perspective spoke for those affected by translating their lives into the social dominant mode of expression, which is unavoidably weakened for that.
I don't judge great works of art by their "viewpoint". I don't go criticizing a great renaissance painter because he painted portraits of kings instead of peasants. So I simply take what's there, what the film does, and try to appreciate it on its own terms. I have no problem with "view points" of today, as I don't have any with "view points" of the past. I don't care what somebody expresses or wants to express. I mostly care about
how they do that - aesthetics, not ethics.
Maybe we look for completely different things in art, cause I couldn't care less about what an artist wanted to express, I'm mostly interested in how he went about it, how he expressed something through his craft.
Many filmmakers today are speaking "more personally" and intentionally addressing the neglect of history towards non-dominant or minority perspectives, which both helps explain why those films don't find wide audience acceptance, as people want what they already know or are comfortable in seeing, and why they don't fit the same patterns of craft or meaning as films from earlier eras. Many filmmakers today are saying the old ways were flawed and are right for doing so even if those old films were entertaining or well made in some broad sense. That kills something of the "mythic" quality to many movies and does so by necessity as mythic is so often predicated on archetypes that carry bias and flaws of conception.
I have no problem with filmmakers speaking personally or impersonally. I guess I'm simply not interested in politics, or nowhere as interested as you are. What you write here seems to me totally unimportant when it comes to art and artists. I'd love it if "progressive" view points would lead to "better" art. But they don't. A racist, people-hating asshole fascist can still make better films than a humanity-loving just all-around great and tolerant and open person, if he's a better artist, if he's more devoted to art (or maybe simply more talented). Art is art and has its won "rules". There's no morality in art. A guy I loath and hate and would like to see dead might be a better painter/musician/filmmaker, than my best friend whom I love and whom I wish all the best.
All in all what you write sounds very belittling, as if people in the past were somehow unable to see the flaws of the past. I don't think that is the case. Same as people nowadays are not able to not see the flaws of the present. They might choose to ignore them or live with them, but I don't think all are idiots.
In terms of craft, of course there have been great filmmakers from all eras, but the craft of filmmaking is developed over time and can be best seen in hindsight once the developments have taken root and grown into new forms, leaving the contrasts of "then" and "now" easier to see and appreciate. There is no less craft in a Justin Lin Fast and Furious movie than any commercial filmmaking that came before in roughly similar use, the amount of "Innovation" may not be as clearly visible or obvious, depending on what era and films one would use as a counter, since filmmaking like all arts builds on the past, it doesn't erase it, making innovation seem less vital the longer the artform exists, save for moments of radical technical growth and rare moments of major change in "language" that don't happen often or often stick when tried for not having wide application.
Nope again, sorry, can't see why you have that affectation with the past and seeing something in hindsight, and seeing the contrasts and such only later. And yes, what I am saying is exactly that there is way less craft in Justin Lin's Fast and Furious movie than in William Wyler's Ben-Hur. Cause Justin Lin just hasn't got the vision and the talent of past commercial filmmakers.
"Innovation" is not important in making great art.
Filmmaking, like all arts,doesn't build on the past. There is no "progress" or progression in arts. Every artist has to find their own voice. It won't work if you simply try to learn from the past and rely on past achievements.
I'd agree that artiszts are prone to be victims or at least heavily dependent on the (current) technology and techniques available, (which are still never inherently better or worse than those from the past)
Asking for lists of filmmakers who started in the 2000s who compare to those of previous eras is also a mistake based on these same issues. Filmmakers can't easily build the same kinds of bodies of work that filmmakers did in earlier eras because the business model has changed, the way the movies find audiences has shifted and the filmmakers themselves are doing different things. It also doesn't account for the way people found those "great directors" of older eras as they were presorted by time and other movie goers for appreciation in ways that current filmmakers can't be. Pointing to eras like the sixties and asking for the current moment to duplicate that time period misses out on why the sixties played out as they did, requiring a world war and baby boom to happen to get that result, while comparing that winnowed group of known careers to an entire cohort of people still developing their histories. It doesn't make sense as a comparison in anything other than random preference of individual viewing selections.
No, I don't think that's a mistake at all. I mostly agree with everything else you write in this paragraph, though I'm not asking for anybody to duplicate anything.
But I might be asking
"where are the great filmmakers of the past 20 years who made exceptional films in the last 20 years, and who didn't started making films in the 20th century?"
That's one of my questions and a pretty easy one.
List me 30 or 40 great filmmakers who have merely made films from 2000 onwards, no matter if they have merely made one film or two or three. Quality is what counts, not quantity. (Not to be included are of course filmmakers by whom you've seen 5 films and while you loved one, four sucked).
"I too am a child burned by future experiences, fallen back on myself and already suspecting the certainty that in the end only those will prove benevolent who believe in nothing." – Marran Gosov