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Freshman

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Sorry if this point has been brought up already, but i'm just too lazy to read all that :P Anyway... Cinema has one
problem: recurring ideas. I had this problem a while ago where i kept coming up with amazing ideas an then they were almost
always "stolen." I can't think of an example at the moment, but i remember me getting REALLY ticked off. Same with cinema
in general. If it has an idea, it's gotta build on it. The problem is, that idea almost always is built upon multiple times
or flat out duplicated. For instance: the three biggest titles in the theatres this summer (so far) have been Spider-Man 3,
Shrek 3, and Pirates of the Carribean 3. Instead of thinking of something new, they had to make a sequal to a sequal, but
the original would've stood on it's own. Then there was Deja Vu, which had some relation to the short lived series Daybreak.
Land of the Dead? Suck... Remake of Dawn of the Dead, good, only because the original idea was great. Originality makes
good movies, but they won't be original for long.
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"Now you don't know what I'm sayin'... But you know what I'm sayin'?"
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| Posts: 34 | Location: Lake Jackson, TX | Registered: June 13, 2007 |
 
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Sophomore

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Yeah and I freaking hate Jaws... so boring, but everybody tells me it's because I wasn't actually alive when it came out.
Then [allegedly] I would've been totally scared.
==How many lives are living strange?==
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Moderator

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Have you seen Adaptation, khaos?
"Important dialog is only in Hollywood films" - Kyle Phillip Johnson
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Sophomore

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quote: Originally
posted by braininabox: Have you seen Adaptation, khaos?
Yeah, Kaufman alone pretty much
proves the idea that nothing can be original any more to be completely wrong. There are plenty of film makers out there who
prove that wrong. Film is a very young medium. It has a loooot of evolving left to do.
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| Posts: 206 | Location: Dothan | Registered: April 02, 2007 |
 
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Senior

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I love Kaufman's work, but he bothers me in the sense that I think he often chooses to plug things into his scripts that are
original, sort of stream of concious, but they ultimatley distract from the core story. Originality should be our
concern but as film is used to explore humanity, there will be some reoccuring themes. I believe an originality of perspective
is more important than originality of execution. If you can honestly express yourself, you add more to the medium than just
trying to be original. And you can't go into a seafood restaurant and complain about the smell of fish. Oh
great, another movie with a person it. What a ripoff. Buy Product http://studentfilms.com/film/view/play.do?id=2325
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| Posts: 664 | Location: Killafornia | Registered: July 02, 2004 |
 
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Sophomore

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Cinema is too popular!
"Fuc*ing Fascist!"
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Moderator

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quote: I
believe an originality of perspective is more important than originality of execution.
Yes! You've
hit the nail on the head, if you'll excuse my unoriginal figure of speech.
"If not actually disgruntled, he was far from being gruntled." Wodehouse
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| Posts: 5203 | Location: Tisch at New York University | Registered: June 03, 2003 |
 
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Senior

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quote: Originally
posted by Kyle Johnson: haha. 6your perception determines how you execute it. theyre the same thing!
No
not at all, although i enjoyed the maniacal laughing. Perception is a point of view, in film often called a world view,
it's your cognition or understanding of a subject or situation. Execution is a a mode or style of performance or use
of your technical skill. It's a choice of delivery method for communicating your perception. One does NOT have to inform the
other. In fact it's great when they are in opposition. Say a balzing social satire delivered in the form of choppy, cut out
animated kids from Colorado. So you could have the same perception communicated over a varied array of executions
or styles without one determining the other. They are certainly not the same thing.
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| Posts: 664 | Location: Killafornia | Registered: July 02, 2004 |
 
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Moderator

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Meh. I am going to have to side with Kyle on this one.
"Important dialog is only in Hollywood films" - Kyle Phillip Johnson
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Moderator

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I disagree. Perspective/perception is entirely different from execution. Are you defining execution and perception the same
was as Red, cause that's how I understood them. Execution is style, mechanics and architecture of the piece, visual
and aesthetic themes. Perspective is your take on the subject. Themes, moods, story-lines, morals, fairness, consequences,
etc.
"If not actually disgruntled, he was far from being gruntled." Wodehouse
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| Posts: 5203 | Location: Tisch at New York University | Registered: June 03, 2003 |
 
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Moderator

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Perspective and execution may be two seperate entities, but they are so delicately entwined in their interaction that you
really can't seperate them.
"Important dialog is only in Hollywood films" - Kyle Phillip Johnson
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Moderator

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Alright I see where you are coming from now.
"Important dialog is only in Hollywood films" - Kyle Phillip Johnson
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Freshman

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(Now pointless to say since the conversation has moved on, but here goes.) I'm not saying that there's nothing original
anymore, sorry if it sounded that way. I'm just saying that with CGI and millions of dollars, it sometimes doesn't try to
be original. The poeple with little finance or who are new to the business seem liklier to have more ambition about their
work, therefore, making good movies. Fantastic 4, Rise of the Silver Surfer sucked. (That's because all it cared about
was, in fact, the silver surfer, leaving the rest to shrivel up into crappiness.) it's not an original story, and it wasn't
good because it wasn't the writer's own idea, therefore, he wasn't ambitious. Most movies aren't good because of that, that's
all i'm saying.
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"Now you don't know what I'm sayin'... But you know what I'm sayin'?"
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| Posts: 34 | Location: Lake Jackson, TX | Registered: June 13, 2007 |
 
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Freshman
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I think saying perception determines execution (as a rule) is going too far. However, I also think they can't actually be
isolated from each other as people here are suggesting -- there IS a relationship between perspective and execution. So I'm
going to side here with braininabox.
Take D.W. Griffith's introduction of the close-up. On the one hand, this is
a radical change of execution. It caused a huge shift in the way we understand movies, and changed the basic unit of film
from the scene to the shot. In narrative terms, the close-up allowed a new kind of intimacy with the character -- it influences
the way we understand what we're looking at, it changes the situation, the world view of the picture. Here, suddenly, the
world of film has this new intimacy as a possibility, a character's inner life can become our focal point. By the definitions
we're using, this has to belong to Griffith's perspective or perception.
In the case of South Park, the reason the
choppy, cut out execution is meaningful at all is precisely because it DOES have to do with the show's point of view. One
does inform the other -- this the purpose of the opposition. In South Park, it creates irony.
In general, I think
the reason we can have a sense of point of view or perspective at all in a film is because of the execution. Perspective
comes out of an accumulation of choices made about execution, and nothing else, because a film is physically nothing else.
You may not have unlimited resources, but you make choices about the resources you have -- you express your perspective nonetheless.
For example, a three-act structure is also a world view -- it's a world where every loose thread is likely to get tied up
at the end, though we know this isn't what life is like. A perspective, a specific point of view is at work.
(Also,
since this thread was started by Nervous Larry, and since I didn't have a chance to try to make amends on the "No Country
for Old Men" thread before it got locked -- Nervous Larry, my apologies for the way I responded to your very sincere post.
"Jaded stupidity" was a pretty fair assessment.)
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| Posts: 112 | Location: Singapore | Registered: April 01, 2007 |
 
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