First Man (2018)

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FYI, there's probably less than 5 minutes of IMAX in the entire movie. As spectacular as it is, I can't recommend folks inconvenience themselves to seek it out in that format.

On the movie itself, Chazelle is too talented not to make something extremely impressive but I'm mixed. Domestic scenes are shot like Super 8 home movies, a bouncing and chaotic camera with rapid cutting and a sense the drama is spontaneous and unorganized----as far from the tight and controlled Chazelle in Whiplash and La La Land. The "planning" scenes, few though they are, are coolly methodical and detached in tone and style from the domestic. And finally the set pieces are, forgive me, unambiguously low budget and lack the necessary scale. Quite frankly, similar scenes have already been executed with far more scale, beauty and terror in Interstellar. These disparate and unfocused aspects never cohere into a fully satisfying film.

It's still poignant and powerful and often very intense but never quite coheres in all it wants to do.


-Vader

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Vader182 wrote:
October 12th, 2018, 12:53 am
FYI, there's probably less than 5 minutes of IMAX in the entire movie. As spectacular as it is, I can't recommend folks inconvenience themselves to seek it out in that format.

On the movie itself, Chazelle is too talented not to make something extremely impressive but I'm mixed. Domestic scenes are shot like Super 8 home movies, a bouncing and chaotic camera with rapid cutting and a sense the drama is spontaneous and unorganized----as far from the tight and controlled Chazelle in Whiplash and La La Land. The "planning" scenes, few though they are, are coolly methodical and detached in tone and style from the domestic. And finally the set pieces are, forgive me, unambiguously low budget and lack the necessary scale. Quite frankly, similar scenes have already been executed with far more scale, beauty and terror in Interstellar. These disparate and unfocused aspects never cohere into a fully satisfying film.

It's still poignant and powerful and often very intense but never quite coheres in all it wants to do.


-Vader
Very surprising reaction from you.

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Some of this does seem familiar although I do think from a filmmaking standpoint it does often impress. The first half is where I think It could use some tuning up. The third act is some of his best work. I found myself in awe of quite a few shots. Perhaps what I enjoyed most was the flashbacks incorporated throughout the finale and most of all the last scene. This feels lesser than his previous two films overall though.

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Vader182 wrote:
October 12th, 2018, 12:53 am
FYI, there's probably less than 5 minutes of IMAX in the entire movie. As spectacular as it is, I can't recommend folks inconvenience themselves to seek it out in that format.

On the movie itself, Chazelle is too talented not to make something extremely impressive but I'm mixed. Domestic scenes are shot like Super 8 home movies, a bouncing and chaotic camera with rapid cutting and a sense the drama is spontaneous and unorganized----as far from the tight and controlled Chazelle in Whiplash and La La Land. The "planning" scenes, few though they are, are coolly methodical and detached in tone and style from the domestic. And finally the set pieces are, forgive me, unambiguously low budget and lack the necessary scale. Quite frankly, similar scenes have already been executed with far more scale, beauty and terror in Interstellar. These disparate and unfocused aspects never cohere into a fully satisfying film.

It's still poignant and powerful and often very intense but never quite coheres in all it wants to do.


-Vader
hm

i agree with most or all of this, but i think it worked a lot better for me

felt sorta like Chazelle tried to mash Tree of Life, 2001, and Whiplash all into one movie. it’s not perfect like you said, and Interstellar’s definitely a significantly better film (especially on the effects side), but i was engrossed all the same

ditto in regards to IMAX - the one sequence was great, but not worth the extra cash

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I agree with both of you on all points. The final 15-20 minutes (and third act overall) is the strongest section of the film and quite stunning.

I was shocked that this really feels like an arty mood piece wrangling with its duties as a biopic. IE: I went in thinking this would be a nice movie to bring my dad to see and left thinking fuck no, he would hate this.

(Jackie, for example, felt more fully committed to its avant garde leanings.)


-Vader

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Vader182 wrote:
October 12th, 2018, 1:54 am
I agree with both of you on all points. The final 15-20 minutes (and third act overall) is the strongest section of the film and quite stunning.

I was shocked that this really feels like an arty mood piece wrangling with its duties as a biopic. IE: I went in thinking this would be a nice movie to bring my dad to see and left thinking fuck no, he would hate this.

(Jackie, for example, felt more fully committed to its avant garde leanings.)


-Vader
Well fuck... I was going to bring my dad to see this, this weekend lol

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Sight unseen should this really be compared to Interstellar? One of Nolan’s messiest films that’s trying to do a million different things.

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Allstar wrote:
October 12th, 2018, 2:05 am
Sight unseen should this really be compared to Interstellar? One of Nolan’s messiest films that’s trying to do a million different things.
The space sequences are nearly identical not just in what physically occurs--ships docking, spinning, exploding--but in the style used.

Static camera lodged on wings and fins, handheld shots out of tiny cockpit windows, big models with black backdrops, cutting into close-up of docking machinery before cutting to medium or wide.

And going in for the kill: they both feature Nathan Crowley as P.D.


-Vader

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Vader182 wrote:
October 12th, 2018, 2:14 am
Allstar wrote:
October 12th, 2018, 2:05 am
Sight unseen should this really be compared to Interstellar? One of Nolan’s messiest films that’s trying to do a million different things.
The space sequences are nearly identical not just in what physically occurs--ships docking, spinning, exploding--but in the style used.

Static camera lodged on wings and fins, handheld shots out of tiny cockpit windows, big models with black backdrops, cutting into close-up of docking machinery before cutting to medium or wide.

And going in for the kill: they both feature Nathan Crowley as P.D.


-Vader
I see, fair enough. That said...technical elements aside they seem like radically different movies. Ad Astra might be an even more interesting comparison being fiction and shot by Hoyte.

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Not to lower one as to raise the other, but I felt like Chazelle succeeds in shooting his movie more like a documentary than Nolan did with Interstellar.

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