Whether you believe they work or not, you can not discredit
how beautiful the cinematography was.
It does look like in game content, and it's especially cool to see
how beautiful the cinematography plays out.
Not exact matches
Denis Lenoir's
cinematography is
beautiful, evoking the eternal nature of the dance - club scene and yet sensitive to its nuanced changes,
how it moved from DIY to corporate.
The use of music together with the outstandingly
beautiful cinematography and interesting things the movie has to say about the gap between rich and poor and
how mankind apparently fucked up its gene pool is very fascinating and interesting.
There are joys to be found in the
beautiful cinematography, though it is this film's misfortune to have been released in the same year as Life of Pi, a film which showed us just
how stunning a film about a drifting boat can be.
Overall, the film has
beautiful cinematography (as is expected) and the story of the two chimps works well, but the rest of the tale seems forced, as if they needed to fill Tim Allen's narration with something else exciting and they didn't know quite
how to do it.
Using a combination of a great score, sleek but
beautiful cinematography, and a story that plays with the discovery of something that could change everything, writer & director J.C. Chandor crafts a dramatic thriller that does put you on the edge of your seat while waiting to see
how everything plays out on the eve of a financial meltdown that we're all very familiar with.
The
cinematography by Yves Bélanger (Brooklyn, Wild) is oddly
beautiful and whimsical despite the rough exterior of
how Davis takes out his aggression.
Also, the location where they shot the film was
beautiful while the
cinematography helped convey the idea of
how far away from civilization the group was, adding to the idea they were completely on their own.