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Zack Snyder's Justice League - Official Trailer
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<blockquote data-quote="Snarf Zagyg" data-source="post: 8208928" data-attributes="member: 7023840"><p>Oof. No. </p><p></p><p>Sometime I jump on the "make fun of Zack Snyder" memetrain, mostly because it's funny, but he's a successful and accomplished director. That said, he's no Nolan. He's not even in the same conversation.</p><p></p><p>In the most favorable light, Snyder is Guy Ritchie. A director who broke out by having a visually inventive style (he directed <em>Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels</em> along with <em>Snatch</em>), was way overhyped, and later turned out to be a perfectly good director once he moved past the early stages ... I still think that <em>The Man From U.N.C.L.E.</em> was criminally underrated. </p><p></p><p>The best (and worst) thing that ever happened to Snyder, on the other hand, is the unexpected success of <em>300</em>. Whether you think it's a masterpiece of inventive filmmaking, a paean to Miller's barely-hidden neo-fascism, or both, he has continued to go to that same well (color palette, slow-mo, pacing issues making everything go to 11, Manichean conflict/shots) over and over again with diminishing returns. I don't want to say this as a back-handed compliment- in much the same way that people "mock" one-hit wonders in music without realizing that even being a "one-hit wonder" means that a band was more successful than 99.99% of all musicians, ever, I can say that Zack Snyder is a good director, a distinctive (if limited) visual stylist, and someone that can manage a major Hollywood Production (which is no small thing). But he's not a great, or subtle, or "artsy" director. He's a visual stylist, who can be a little one-note, who loves comic books and genre works. That's not a bad thing. </p><p></p><p>Which is not true of Nolan. Yes, there are certain things that you often find in most Nolan movies- a Hans Zimmer score. Michael Caine. Tom Hardy. The plot unfolding in a strange manner (often with some element of a "puzzle," that usually involves time in some fashion). A meta-element, wherein the film elements (including the score) and the plot itself in someway reflect each other. </p><p></p><p>But the movies themselves are usually quite different visually and thematically; it's not like he's Wes Anderson with an easily parodied style. Dunkirk is not Interstellar is not Inception is not The Prestige is not Memento; while each of them use different techniques, they are, quite clearly, a WW2 Film; a post-apocalyptic meditation on love, loss, and sacrifice; a mind-bending thriller; a period piece about truth, deception, and art; and a B&W 'art' film that is a shocking 'M. Night' twist-y puzzlebox. </p><p></p><p>In other words- very different directors.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Snarf Zagyg, post: 8208928, member: 7023840"] Oof. No. Sometime I jump on the "make fun of Zack Snyder" memetrain, mostly because it's funny, but he's a successful and accomplished director. That said, he's no Nolan. He's not even in the same conversation. In the most favorable light, Snyder is Guy Ritchie. A director who broke out by having a visually inventive style (he directed [I]Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels[/I] along with [I]Snatch[/I]), was way overhyped, and later turned out to be a perfectly good director once he moved past the early stages ... I still think that [I]The Man From U.N.C.L.E.[/I] was criminally underrated. The best (and worst) thing that ever happened to Snyder, on the other hand, is the unexpected success of [I]300[/I]. Whether you think it's a masterpiece of inventive filmmaking, a paean to Miller's barely-hidden neo-fascism, or both, he has continued to go to that same well (color palette, slow-mo, pacing issues making everything go to 11, Manichean conflict/shots) over and over again with diminishing returns. I don't want to say this as a back-handed compliment- in much the same way that people "mock" one-hit wonders in music without realizing that even being a "one-hit wonder" means that a band was more successful than 99.99% of all musicians, ever, I can say that Zack Snyder is a good director, a distinctive (if limited) visual stylist, and someone that can manage a major Hollywood Production (which is no small thing). But he's not a great, or subtle, or "artsy" director. He's a visual stylist, who can be a little one-note, who loves comic books and genre works. That's not a bad thing. Which is not true of Nolan. Yes, there are certain things that you often find in most Nolan movies- a Hans Zimmer score. Michael Caine. Tom Hardy. The plot unfolding in a strange manner (often with some element of a "puzzle," that usually involves time in some fashion). A meta-element, wherein the film elements (including the score) and the plot itself in someway reflect each other. But the movies themselves are usually quite different visually and thematically; it's not like he's Wes Anderson with an easily parodied style. Dunkirk is not Interstellar is not Inception is not The Prestige is not Memento; while each of them use different techniques, they are, quite clearly, a WW2 Film; a post-apocalyptic meditation on love, loss, and sacrifice; a mind-bending thriller; a period piece about truth, deception, and art; and a B&W 'art' film that is a shocking 'M. Night' twist-y puzzlebox. In other words- very different directors. [/QUOTE]
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