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Martin Scorsese: I Said Marvel Movies Aren't Cinema. Let Me Explain. (nytimes.com) 225

Martin Scorsese, writing at The New York Times: [...] In a way, certain Hitchcock films were also like theme parks. I'm thinking of "Strangers on a Train," in which the climax takes place on a merry-go-round at a real amusement park, and "Psycho," which I saw at a midnight show on its opening day, an experience I will never forget. People went to be surprised and thrilled, and they weren't disappointed. Sixty or 70 years later, we're still watching those pictures and marveling at them. But is it the thrills and the shocks that we keep going back to? I don't think so. The set pieces in "North by Northwest" are stunning, but they would be nothing more than a succession of dynamic and elegant compositions and cuts without the painful emotions at the center of the story or the absolute lostness of Cary Grant's character. The climax of "Strangers on a Train" is a feat, but it's the interplay between the two principal characters and Robert Walker's profoundly unsettling performance that resonate now.

Some say that Hitchcock's pictures had a sameness to them, and perhaps that's true -- Hitchcock himself wondered about it. But the sameness of today's franchise pictures is something else again. Many of the elements that define cinema as I know it are there in Marvel pictures. What's not there is revelation, mystery or genuine emotional danger. Nothing is at risk. The pictures are made to satisfy a specific set of demands, and they are designed as variations on a finite number of themes. They are sequels in name but they are remakes in spirit, and everything in them is officially sanctioned because it can't really be any other way. That's the nature of modern film franchises: market-researched, audience-tested, vetted, modified, revetted and remodified until they're ready for consumption.

[...] In the past 20 years, as we all know, the movie business has changed on all fronts. But the most ominous change has happened stealthily and under cover of night: the gradual but steady elimination of risk. Many films today are perfect products manufactured for immediate consumption. Many of them are well made by teams of talented individuals. All the same, they lack something essential to cinema: the unifying vision of an individual artist. Because, of course, the individual artist is the riskiest factor of all. [...] Today, that tension is gone, and there are some in the business with absolute indifference to the very question of art and an attitude toward the history of cinema that is both dismissive and proprietary -- a lethal combination. The situation, sadly, is that we now have two separate fields: There's worldwide audiovisual entertainment, and there's cinema. They still overlap from time to time, but that's becoming increasingly rare. And I fear that the financial dominance of one is being used to marginalize and even belittle the existence of the other. For anyone who dreams of making movies or who is just starting out, the situation at this moment is brutal and inhospitable to art. And the act of simply writing those words fills me with terrible sadness.

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Martin Scorsese: I Said Marvel Movies Aren't Cinema. Let Me Explain.

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  • Fair points (Score:5, Interesting)

    by nagora ( 177841 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @09:11AM (#59382942)

    I'd maybe quibble about the avoidance of risk being new - Hollywood really still doesn't know why one movie works and another fails (otherwise they'd not make the failure) and has long had the tendency to remake the last hit until it stops being a hit. What's maybe unusual is that superhero films have had a strong run for a while. but not, I would think, as long a run as westerns did back in the day.

    • Re:Fair points (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Rockoon ( 1252108 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @09:36AM (#59383076)
      One could argue that westerns are also superhero films. See anything Clint Eastwood from the era.
    • by goombah99 ( 560566 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @09:36AM (#59383078)

      He saying they are made with craft, and the artisans make it extraordinary dynamic and visual but that as far as literature and story telling go it's not art. It doesn't surprise, it is like myth and canon where there is a formula that can be epic without leading someone to new thoughts and emotions.
      He's basically right in the characterization. Where one draws the line between Art and craft can be hard. Personally, I am filled with elevated feelings when I'm in a Frank Lloyd Wright building. I like traveling through Dulles just for that. And the Bauhaus style was a design aesthetic that some people found spiritual, perhaps like a consumer version of Zen simplicity. It's what Apple strives for. Can a consumer pleasing item be art?

      But he's also wrong. If you go back and look at the comic books. Many of these are clearly visual art. THe stories are not. So the question is do the movies retain that visual art?
      THings like Sin City and Revolver have tried to really bear down on the black and white nature to make you see the lighting and perspectives and composition more. I think they are very effective and I love to watch these visuals. Movies can be painting with light or stylistic composition. Here's an example of a terrible movie in the comic book vein that is visually a compositional masterwork: Sucker Punch. Or consider the movie "The Fall".

      So comic book movies can easily rise to art. But that's not what the Marvel movies are striving for. They are simply great entertainment. I'm totally satisfied by them. Just like I am by Blackberry Ice cream. Things don't have to be Art to be good.

      I think the key thing then is that Art inspires or elevates the soul just a bit.

      • But he's also wrong. If you go back and look at the comic books. Many of these are clearly visual art. THe stories are not. So the question is do the movies retain that visual art?
        THings like Sin City and Revolver have tried to really bear down on the black and white nature to make you see the lighting and perspectives and composition more. I think they are very effective and I love to watch these visuals. Movies can be painting with light or stylistic composition. Here's an example of a terrible movie in the comic book vein that is visually a compositional masterwork: Sucker Punch. Or consider the movie "The Fall".

        So comic book movies can easily rise to art. But that's not what the Marvel movies are striving for. They are simply great entertainment. I'm totally satisfied by them. Just like I am by Blackberry Ice cream. Things don't have to be Art to be good.

        I think the key thing then is that Art inspires or elevates the soul just a bit.

        I don't think he's saying that they can't be "cinema", by definition, just that the recent Marvell/DC stuff isn't.

        Because they're all planned around creating an endless stream of movies from their "cinematic universe" to ensure consistent revenue flow to Disney, not because somebody came up with a great story to tell.

        Of course Hollywood is business, but you can clearly see the difference between a Scorsese or Tarantino movie and most comic films.

    • He didn't actually mention westerns though. What's unclear is whether that's because he thinks they were different and better than superhero movies, or because his problem is not the existence of "audiovisual entertainment" but rather that its "financial dominance" is driving out artistically creative cinema whereas westerns co-existed (perhaps because they were not as fabulously expensive and profitable as superhero movies today).
      • by Alci12 ( 698263 )
        The market is very different now. The middle sized movie is all but dead. You have small art house/indy pics with small budgets then blockbusters. The studios just aren't interested in the middle ground much now which is very restrictive.
        • I wonder why those middle-sized productions aren't finding a home at HBO Originals / Netflix / Amazon / Apple? They're all pouring money into content production. But as far as I know, almost exclusively into series, for some reason.
          • by TWX ( 665546 )

            Probably because they cost more to make than they bring in profit.

          • by Rhipf ( 525263 )

            With streaming services it doesn't really make sense to make one shot movies. For a starter you need to compress a story line into ~2hrs for a movie. Most stories really aren't suited to such time constraints. Secondly, the streaming services need to keep their subscribers which is easier to do with a series than with a one and done movie.

            • Oops, I just looked up showtimes for The Irishman (Scorsese's new Film) and it's a Netflix film.

              Now we could say he's just miffed that he couldn't get a mainstream theatrical release for his new film, but I agree with him, that's weird for a Scorsese/DeNiro/Pacino film.

    • Re:Fair points (Score:5, Interesting)

      by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @09:50AM (#59383160)

      Not that he doesn’t have a point... but it’s not anything new. Eighty years ago some of the most popular pictures featured Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers - all of which featured the same basic silly story line and banter.

      I really enjoy those old Astaire & Rogers movies, but by Scorsese’s metric they probably “weren’t cinema” either.

      • ..and those were just the biggest reiterations.

        Danny Kaye basically did 23 reiterations of the same story.
      • Re:Fair points (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Rob Y. ( 110975 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @10:53AM (#59383390)

        But they were cinema. Just at a different level. Leaving aside the incredible dancing and music, there's a scene in one of them where the silly Edward Everett Horton character sees something shocking - and the next shot is a pan of him lying on the floor. He obviously fainted in between, but the director chose to leave that out, and the result is hilarious - pure visual storytelling. It doesn't have to be big and flashy to be art.

        • by TWX ( 665546 )

          So let me get this straight, a jump-cut is what makes it cinema?

          Hell, by your measure, the episode of the X-Files where Mulder shows a teeny-tiny miniature insect-shaped machine to a machine researcher who thinks he's going to look at a bug and sees his whole life's work superseded, followed by Mulder and the researcher sitting together with a couple of half-drank glasses and an open bottle is cinema.

          • by Rob Y. ( 110975 )

            Yep. If deployed cleverly - and if it hasn't been done that way before. By the time the X-Files came along, jump cuts were a cliche. That's not to say the X-files didn't have other stuff going for it. Anything can become a cliche. It's why that 'Jackson Pollock' your kid made with the chocolate syrup isn't art. Feel free to be entertained by it - but don't rag on Scorcese just because he cares about the art of cinema.

      • by TWX ( 665546 )

        I like some of the older musicals, but damn, they sure liked making movies about making movies, or making movies about making stage shows, or making movies about touring acts.

  • by RadioD00d ( 714469 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @09:14AM (#59382948)
    I agree with Scorsese's assessment - movie making today is about the thrills, the special effects, the CGI, the car crashes, etc. I first recognized this in Peter Jackson's adaptation of Lord of the Rings. Those films were epic, and deserved every award they got. BUT - the stories were modified to focus so much on the battles, that we lost a lot of the characterizations and interactions that made the books what they were. Older movies moved slower, with less excitement, but you really got to know the characters, and when the movie ended, you wondered what happened to them next. We've lost that, and I miss it.
    • by bobm ( 53783 )

      I agree that the current craze is to see how much action they can get on the screen at one time. The size of the battles are (IMHO) actually overkill now, having more characters in a battle actually dilutes the story and I guess I'm just becoming numb to CGI.

      • by fuzznutz ( 789413 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @09:38AM (#59383092)
        The CGI has gone so over the top because every movie has to outdo the last. When the action defies physics by such a margin that it stands out as cheesy you better have a good suspension of disbelief going. I always use the example of the slow moving deliberate light saber fight between Obi Wan and Darth Vader in the original Star Wars versus the very forgettable crack induced Olympic Gymnastics fight scene between Yoda and Count Saruman. Even hardcore fans cringed at that.
    • Older movies moved slower, with less excitement, but you really got to know the characters, and when the movie ended, you wondered what happened to them next. We've lost that, and I miss it.

      Netflix's "The Highwaymen" is an old-school movie. Slower-paced, good character development, less focus on pew pew. Still plenty of it, but not like a modern cops n' robbers flick. I highly recommend it if you like film.

    • by lgw ( 121541 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @10:02AM (#59383214) Journal

      I agree with Scorsese's assessment - movie making today is about the thrills, the special effects, the CGI, the car crashes, etc. I first recognized this in Peter Jackson's adaptation of Lord of the Rings. Those films were epic, and deserved every award they got. BUT - the stories were modified to focus so much on the battles, that we lost a lot of the characterizations and interactions that made the books what they were.

      This is the real change to cinema, not what Scorsese's going on about. It's not about "risk aversion", which is nothing new, it's about watching movies at home. Unless a movie is a special effects explosion spectacular, why see it on a big screen? The home viewing experience is otherwise superior. The potential audience for a drama or a comedy at a movie theater is just too small these days - people want to watch those at home.

      People still like dramas and comedies and think pieces and so on, but they'd just rather watch them at home. The small-budget non-action movie is gradually disappearing - but only from the theater. Netflix and Amazon and all the rest are trying to figure out how to make those again. We'll see a resurgence of all the genres other than "screen explosions and punching" soon enough, once the streaming studios grow up.

      • by Rob Y. ( 110975 )

        Maybe. But try comparing, say, "Lawrence of Arabia" or "2001 - A Space Odyssey" on a big screen vs. at home. This problem isn't new - television was supposed to kill the movies, but they responded by making the big screen experience more compelling. Today, the difference is less pronounced, but it's still there.

        I'd say people don't prefer to stay at home and watch Netflix. But the movie theater experience has become less compelling - and more of an ordeal. Tickets are way too expensive, they blast you

      • This is the real change to cinema, not what Scorsese's going on about. It's not about "risk aversion", which is nothing new, it's about watching movies at home. Unless a movie is a special effects explosion spectacular, why see it on a big screen? The home viewing experience is otherwise superior. The potential audience for a drama or a comedy at a movie theater is just too small these days - people want to watch those at home.

        Completely disagree with this. It's not about explosions, I think the difference is exactly between "cinema" in the sense that Scorsese means it and just random movies. The last film I went to watch was Once Upon a Time in Hollywood an it was a great experience, definitely enhanced by seeing it at the theater. There's a few fights and some fire, but no major action going on. Yet I sat there for 2.5 hours just soaking in the atmosphere of the 60s Hollywood and enjoying every frame of it, focused on the story

    • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @10:07AM (#59383234) Homepage Journal

      Not only that, but they degraded meaning in order to sell their orc battles. Boromir died because he succumbed to lust for power, and his father because he gave in to fear, and gave up. But Faramir was worthy because he resigned himself to serving his people as best he could, and resisted the lure of power. But Jackson's bastardization threw that lesson in the fire (where, unlike The Ring, it burned away to nothingness) for the sake of a little more peril for the ring bearer, and in doing so let one of the finest lines in the whole epic fall to the floor. I'm paraphrasing, but he said "Not even if I found this thing by the side of the road would I take it." Jackson instead turned him into Boromir part II. Of all the changes in the whole trilogy, that was the one that pissed me off the most, more than any dwarf-tossing or Mumakil-surfing.

      In fact, I disliked it so much, I haven't seen The Hobbit. Has anyone edited that down to the proper story yet?

    • by TWX ( 665546 )

      You know what? There was a previous era in which complaints were levied against the new changes in filmmaking. Actors like Cary Grant stopped acting when the productions became, "too real."

      Lots of movies early on basically were set in the studio, in the sense that the entire world in the movie had a degree of artificiality. Movie sets and structure flowed like stage productions, where the sets and scenes lacked a certain definition. To see this, pull out a movie made from the mid-seventies onward, say s

  • People aren't going to the theater for the artistry. This industry is, and always has been, about popular entertainment. That studios are willing to put up with the artistic whims of directors doesn't mean the audience is particularly keen when they take their four kids and dog to their local dollarplex.

    • Entertainment is in fact a side effect of people learning/experiencing something new. While "industry" by definition involves sustained process. So you cannot treat entire supply chain as an industry. This will just not work. Even though right now people are entertained because it's new for them then tomorrow exactly the same thing will be boring. So "industry" in this case is simply not sustainable. Just like mineral deposit in a mine people's capability to be entertained by same skilfully repeated routine
  • Celebrities (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Kohath ( 38547 )

    Why do you care what celebrities say about anything?

  • by Quakeulf ( 2650167 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @09:22AM (#59382996)
    They all seem like one continuous blur to me where I can't tell where one ends and the other begins. I haven't even watched them all either, but I have watched almost all of them, sadly.
    • by geek ( 5680 )

      They all seem like one continuous blur to me where I can't tell where one ends and the other begins. I haven't even watched them all either, but I have watched almost all of them, sadly.

      Almost exactly like the comics then. The problem with Marvel and DC and Dark Horse etc is that to move the story forward with super natural characters you have to continuously up the ante. You saved the world int he last book so this time you have to save the galaxy, then the universe, then the multi-verse and on and on.Then you have to reboot the whole thing and do it again.

      At some point it all becomes the same story, just replace the characters and draw some pretty new pictures. The medium is dying.

  • target (Score:2, Interesting)

    It's great that some movies advance the art (and in the beginning, pretty much everything advanced the art by definition), but the purpose of many movies is to bring in money by pleasing a sufficiently large group of moviegoers.

    If they do that by tapping into some teen angst over powerlessness or whatever is apparently not Scorsese's thing then he is simply not the target audience.

    He should not blame the movie for knowing its audience and appeasing it. What he is really saying is that he doesn't respect the

    • No, his problem is that the mass market is actually constricting the production of "cinema":

      I fear that the financial dominance of one is being used to marginalize and even belittle the existence of the other. For anyone who dreams of making movies or who is just starting out, the situation at this moment is brutal and inhospitable to art.

      I don't know if he's just talking about attitudes, or his ability to afford talent like De Niro since he can make so much money on Meet the Fockers type movies, or what

      • The 1970's was the transition point between western movie mania and car chase movie mania.

        The end of the 60's was Peak Westerns.
        The end of the 70's was Peak Car Chasing.
        The end of the 80's was Peak Science Fiction Horror.
  • Yeah, well (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Austerity Empowers ( 669817 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @09:27AM (#59383020)

    Martin,

    I don't think we give a fuck. The Marvel movies reliably deliver what we're looking for. Definitely not high art, often predictable to the point where it is a built-in joke, and couldn't stand on its own without the special effects. But they deliver a quality product consistently. "Cinema" is pretty hit or miss, by which I mean more miss than hit honestly. Given the cost of a trip to the movies both in dollars and the more precious resource of time, that's not an acceptable trade. I usually give this stuff a try on Netflix where there isn't really a penalty for watching any given thing. I've seen so many shitty Netflix Original movies that even a failed art-house movie might be welcome sometimes, if the studios didn't have a hard on for bashing Netflix. That's probably your real enemy right now: people can't watch your movies because the people who own them don't like to share.

    Go on and make the shit you want to make, but I don't think you ought to count on getting rich for it. The phrase "starving artist" exists for a reason. It has a place in the world, but it's probably never going to be the first choice. A few people will watch it, they'll tell a few others if it was any good. Eventually, over years, people might realize a diamond had been in the rough the whole time. But it's not going to be the box office buster that The Avengers XXXIV will be.

    • Re:Yeah, well (Score:4, Insightful)

      by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @09:29AM (#59383034) Homepage Journal

      "The Marvel movies reliably deliver what we're looking for."
       
      But..what is that? What are you looking for? It is just safe meaningless drivel. Is that what you are looking for?

      • Re:Yeah, well (Score:5, Insightful)

        by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @09:58AM (#59383190)
        At the end of the day, some people just want to be entertained. They want a nice variation on the hero's journey that's appealing to most people even though they've seen or heard it ten hundred times before. Just because it's yet another rehashing of the same tropes or ideas doesn't make it meaningless drivel. It's maybe the one thing that humanity can collectively find the most meaning in because it doesn't seem to matter what culture you came from or what language you speak as it's something present in the mythologies and stories of all people.

        Is is cinema? Who cares! If it appeals to you go watch it. If it doesn't, go watch something else that does. I haven't been watching any of the Marvel releases for years now, but I don't feel as though there's been a dearth of good films that I actually enjoy. Maybe the studios or others aren't looking to beat me over the head with the knowledge of their existence, but a little effort on my own part has given me more movies I'd probably enjoy watching than I have time to watch all of them.
    • The Marvel movies reliably deliver what we're looking for.

      Speak for yourself. I think his piece is accurate.
    • Quality is in the eye of the beholder. I'd get more satisfaction wiping my ass with a ticket for a superhero movie than watching it.

    • Who's this "we?" The masses? The masses voted Taco Bell best Mexican restaurant. Maybe if the human lifespan doubles, and the onset of senility is pushed back accordingly, we'll live long enough for the masses to exhibit wisdom. But today? Crap wins out if it's sufficiently shiny. And it's clearly possible to polish a turd, if you keep it in the freezer long enough. Even most movies which aren't direct remakes are copies of one of a bare handful of plots.

      Marvel movies are making money, but in even a decade

    • Re:Yeah, well (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Chris Mattern ( 191822 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @10:40AM (#59383340)

      The Marvel movies reliably deliver what we're looking for.

      You've missed Martin's point. The very best movies deliver what you weren't looking for. What you didn't even realize you wanted--or needed.

    • by BenBoy ( 615230 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @11:49AM (#59383644)

      I don't think we give a fuck. The Marvel movies reliably deliver what we're looking for. Definitely not high art, often predictable to the point where it is a built-in joke, and couldn't stand on its own without the special effects. But they deliver a quality product consistently. "Cinema" is pretty hit or miss, by which I mean more miss than hit honestly. Given the cost of a trip to the movies both in dollars and the more precious resource of time, that's not an acceptable trade. I usually give this stuff a try on Netflix where there isn't really a penalty for watching any given thing. I've seen so many shitty Netflix Original movies that even a failed art-house movie ...

      Translation:
      I don't think we give a fuck. Masturbation reliably delivers what we're looking for. Definitely not love, often predictable to the point where it is a built-in joke, and couldn't stand on its own without the porn. But they deliver a quality product consistently. "Dating" is pretty hit or miss, by which I mean more miss than hit honestly. Given the cost of a date both in dollars and the more precious resource of time, that's not an acceptable trade. I usually give this stuff a try on Tinder where there isn't really a penalty for just seeing if somebody's dtf. I've had so many bad tinder dates that even a failed date ...
      Etc.

    • by imidan ( 559239 )

      Go on and make the shit you want to make, but I don't think you ought to count on getting rich for it. The phrase "starving artist" exists for a reason.

      Martin Scorsese already got rich for the "shit" he's made. He's widely considered to be one of the best directors of all time. He has the most Best Director nominations of any living director, also having won at least one Oscar, Golden Globe, Emmy, and BAFTA award for directing. His movies, taken together, have grossed more than $1.9 billion. Three of them are on the list of the AFI's hundred greatest movies ever made.

      I mean, it's fine if you prefer Marvel movies. And box office receipts for Marvel movies a

  • as much as I like my kids-fairy-tales, most marvel films are indeed pretty formulaic and blunt. some of them are still well made and entertaining, but for every endgame 1 or spiderman: far from home you get at least one captain america 2 or thor 2, which are probably only thrilling if you've never seen any movie before. and yes, he's right, they all tell more or less the same story over and over again. hopefully, DC has finally found some success with the joker and will bring us something better than the b
  • by sacremon ( 244448 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @09:28AM (#59383032)
    " That's the nature of modern film franchises: market-researched, audience-tested, vetted, modified, revetted and remodified until they're ready for consumption."

    If that were really the case then the latest Terminator movie wouldn't have been the box office bomb that it was.

    OTOH, he just finished a movie that none of the major studios wanted to do, so perhaps he is expressing how modern Hollywood is reacting to his movies.
  • by Kokuyo ( 549451 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @09:31AM (#59383046) Journal

    Marvel movies are made by artisans. People who are very skilled at making a product the customer wants.

    An artist is someone who makes what he or she wants. Are they technically skilled? Sometimes yes, sometimes no. However, they don't cater to the masses either.

    Art you can fall deeply in love with depending on how well it speaks to you. Artisanship has its own beauty but not the same depth, usually.

    I'd say Van Gogh was an artist but perhaps not a very good artisan. Michelangelo might have been a genius artisan but not that much of an artist, depending on which of his works you judge.

    The important fact to remember is that these things have completely different sets of clientele and purpose. While they sometimes may overlap, perhaps only to certain individuals even, usually they are just not comparable.

    • Artisan made consumer art is called kitsch. Scorsese is basically appalled by de facto law that everything that is made for big screen nowadays must be kitsch.
  • by kaizendojo ( 956951 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @09:33AM (#59383060)
    Oh look, it's about organized crime. Just like every other Scorsese movie.
    • by geek ( 5680 )

      Oh look, it's about organized crime. Just like every other Scorsese movie.

      Meh. You write what you know. Most directors do this, Spielberg, Cameron, Tarantino. That's fine if each iteration is different and feels new. I think Scorsese mostly accomplishes that. If you look at his IMDB: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm00... [imdb.com] you can see he branches out quite a lot but as a producer and not a director.

  • Scorsese's criticism of these movies is spot on.

    Halloween is on my mind so I will make a dessert analogy. They are extremely well-made corporate creations, kind of like Reese's Peanut Butter Cups. He's acknowledging that science and craft, while advocating for a proper soufflé.

    I quite like eating the peanut butter cups. But the soufflé has its place and he's lamenting that soufflés are hard to find now.

  • I'm confused... why does he need to explain?!

    • I'm confused... why does he need to explain?!

      He doesn't need to, he wants to. And his initial statements have garnered enough attention that he can do so, and have people discuss his explanation. I submit as evidence this slashdot story, and subsequent discussion.

  • He can't see the people, he sees the costumes, which is pretty common.

    • by DogDude ( 805747 )
      Is there anything beyond the costumes? There's certainly little to no character development, script, or plot. It's all just CGI and spandex.
    • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

      I am curious about that. I really enjoyed the X-Men trilogy but not so much the other Marvel movies. Moreover I really enjoyed the X-Men trilogy once, I found them to be not very watchable a second time.

      I suspect Its because I went into those movies with childhood memories of enjoying the comics and existing familiarity with the characters, the origin story elements of the films alone don't entirely provide. I can't say I thought much of any of the Avengers works. Interestingly I never read a lot of those c

      • Lets consider some repetitive Scorsese (as Director):

        Gang stories: Gangs of New York, Dueces Wild, The Departed.
        Mob stories: Mean Streets, Goodfellas, Casino, The Family.
        Hustler movies: The Wolf of Wall Street, The Color of Money, Clockers, The Grifters.
        These are just the ones I quickly came up with from looking at the movie names on IMDB - many of his movies I havent seen but I suspect there are a lot more criminal-focused movies.

        Seems like he is iterating over the same story themes also.
  • Foreign films are often different. And better as a result of it. If you want a good example of how the US studio system screws up movies, get the 3 DVD set of Brazil. Watch the director's cut. Then the studio cut. The third disc is a set of interviews outlining the fight between Terry Gilliam (director) and the studio about how they butchered the movie before releasing it.

  • by UnknownSoldier ( 67820 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @10:21AM (#59383286)

    1. Modern movies are extremely formulaic:

    X% of romance, Y% of action, Z% of humor. Predictable First, Second, and Third Acts. Formulaic to a T.

    e.g. Avatar was basically a retelling of Dances With Wolves.

    They generally have to formulaic be because most movies are extremely expensive to make and it is all about risk management. (Crazy hollywood accounting shenanigans none the less.) Look at Titantic -- you even KNEW the outcome beforehand but still people went to see it.

    2. Yes, they ARE cinema. "Low brow" cinema, where little thinking is involved because deep thinking movies are rarely as popular as dumb action flicks but they still are cinema. The same way "pop music" is still technically music, or "fast food" is still food.

    Yes, Quantity != Quality, but they are still the same CATEGORY.

    How many times has Robin Hood been remade [wikipedia.org] ???

    3. YOU don't get to decide if certain movies aren't cinema just because they are "shallow" or "pulpy".

    Who defines good cinema? You?

    Take Baraka. It has no plot, no characters, no dialog but yet it still has themes. It is one of the most beautiful movies ever made but it would be considered a snore fest in the modern world because kids don't know to just Live and Be in the moment.

    Who gives a fuck what other people think about ART?!

    4. Movies, like any other form of entertainment have multiple purposes:

    * To make money
    * To be a fun escape
    * To wrap thematic introspection and social narrative in a more digestible form
    * As a barometer of Spirituality and the developmental level of Mass Consciousness because humans are one of the species in the galaxy as First Contact in 2030 will show.

    To whine that "Not all art is great!!" misses the point of WHY art is made in the first place.

    The debate of Why the commercialization of Art is not "True Art" is as old as the hills. No one gives a fuck anymore.

    As said in Gladiator:

    "Were you not entertained!?"

  • by StormCrow ( 10254 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @10:24AM (#59383294) Homepage

    Old Man Yells At Cloud.gif

  • It's incredibly boring to watch invincible characters fight each other for two hours at a time. I'm done with it.
  • Marvel movies are great. I love them. They're like mass-produced beer. I love Bud Light. I love Sam Adams, Guinness and especially Shock Top.

    However, I also love that at my local Liquor store, I can buy rarer craft beers if I wanted to...I usually don't but hey, I like the option. Martin stated it well and respectful. I've seen every Marvel movie released I look forward to watching them and have a great time, but that's because a huge team focus-tested every little joke and interaction and special
  • by javabandit ( 464204 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @10:42AM (#59383346)

    Scorsese is 100% correct, but where he goes off the radar is thinking that people exclusively go to the movies to see a masterpiece in "Cinema". That couldn't be more false. Sometimes, people just want to be entertained. Entertainment is a much lower bar.

    But that's how it is with anything produced for mass-consumption. I love a good quality single malt scotch, but a lot of times, a plain old beer is just fine. F1 races are technically amazing and a wonderful experience. But NASCAR and Monster Truck jams are equally entertaining. Can't the same be said for pretty much everything?

    What I really want to understand is why the older people get... they seem to fall into this same tired pattern of thinking. And we all swear we'll never do it when we reach that age... but invariably... it seems to happen to all of us. We all end up saying the same crap. Over and over again. Generation after generation.

  • What he wrote is what I thought he meant when I first heard about this.
  • I don't think that this development is relatively new. There have always been the summer blockbusters that excite the fans and draw in the fistfuls of cash. You to the theater to see them on the vivid big screens with dynamic sound and fancy reclining chairs. Cinema, as Martin defines it, doesn't need this grandiose experience and is focused on character development and quieter scenes versus exploding buildings and giant aliens. These flicks are fine to view in homes on small screens and thus bring in a
  • by rockmuelle ( 575982 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @11:06AM (#59383442)

    What's missing in Scorsese's argument is a proper treatment of the source material for the Marvel movies. They are based on _comic books_. As a life long reader of comics and fan of film, I appreciate how the Marvel movies have been handled. They respect the storytelling and character development methods from comics.

    Mainstream comics are designed to be somewhat throwaway at the level of the individual issue. The real stories play out over entire series as complex worlds and characters are built. I'd argue that this is exactly what the Marvel movie franchises have done. Rather than cheapened cinema, they've introduced a new, expanded language for telling stories across multiple films. They've even borrowed that comic tradition of "re-boots" when story lines are exhausted in the current timeline yet the fan base would like more stories.

    Storytelling mediums evolve and borrow from other mediums. That's all that's happened here.

  • by JoeDuncan ( 874519 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @11:26AM (#59383526)
    ...old man has-been yells at cloud. News at 11.
  • I tend to fiddle with my phone or laptop during most of the Marvel universe films. (Note: We always watch the DVDs as there's no way we'd drop big bucks to watch one of these things in a theater. And lately, we wait for them to arrive at the public library so we don't even have to spend even $2-$3 for a rental.) Frankly, there's only so much "Oooh! Special effects! Things blow up! Endless mayhem!" one can muster before these films become repetitive and bo-r-r-ring!

    If Scorsese is making a distinction betwe

  • by Waccoon ( 1186667 ) on Tuesday November 05, 2019 @09:42PM (#59385470)

    Man says something isn't art because it's not "good" art... then needs to clarify his definition of "good."

    Film at 11.

"The following is not for the weak of heart or Fundamentalists." -- Dave Barry

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