greg x wrote: ↑Thu Nov 19, 2020 2:04 pm
The cinematography, a normal Fincher strong point, also looks awful, like shot on vid in color and cheaply converted to black and white rather than feel at all like old film stock. I'm giving it a hard pass.
That's interesting that it reads that way, since it was shot on the Red Monochrome sensor. It's essentially one of the very few digital to films to
not have a color negative out there somewhere. Though I agree it has a "digital b&w" look as opposed to a celuloid one. That kind of a clash between the Fincher aesthetic and the style of the film is intriguing enough to me.
Also, from what I hear, Fincher's dad definitely subscribed to the Raising Kane speculations, but Fincher himself overall disagreed with his father on those basic facts. So that's another bit of dissonance that I think leaves some room for interesting ambiguity.
My reservation is that Eric Roth apparently ghostwrote the script (leaving Fincher's dad with sole credit, I'm assuming for sentimental reasons (or a sly jab at director's overtaking a writer's input?)) And I kind of despise Roth's wikipedia-style screenwriting. So depending on how much work he put in, I can imagine it becoming a huge slog.