Sentences with phrase «of a given scene»

If you're like me and think 1D makes ears bleed, then the obviously - scripted terrible humor movie this claims to be (heh, calling it a movie as if its good... trust me its not) will throw constant amateur footage of concerts at you instead of giving any scenes with the group in and if so, it
If you're like me and think 1D makes ears bleed, then the obviously - scripted terrible humor movie this claims to be (heh, calling it a movie as if its good... trust me its not) will throw constant amateur footage of concerts at you instead of giving any scenes with the group in and if so, it will just be dumb little skits.
From one point of view, the «hot» camera pulls us into the thick of the action while the «cool» editing distances us, skipping across consecutive events like a pebble skipping across the still surface of a pond, never giving us enough time to invest ourselves fully in the elements of a given scene; thus the very rhythm of the film becomes a kind of existential stammer.
It all comes off slightly soapy, and because of the director's perfectionism (he and virtuoso cinematographer Gregg Toland would often do 20 takes or more of any given scene), the film feels fussed - over in a way that other Wyler productions such as the devastating drama The Heiress do not.
The trio approach injects some life: Burnett proves an adept analyst of a given scene and Pizzolatto is more excitable this time through.
Indeed, Patriots Day finds Berg working in his preferred aesthetic mode of handheld commotion — in which the twitchy camera itself often seems to be in search of the focal point of any given scene (an approach enabled here by cinematographer Tobias A. Schliessler, a frequent Berg collaborator).
Sometimes Hardwick falls into the trap of simply summarizing the action of a given scene, but more often than not he rebounds with some comments about the deeper meanings of the scenes in terms of the characters and the larger picture.
I tried to just trust my instincts about what tone to use to get closest to the emotional truth of any given scene.
Through repetition and reenactment, multiple takes of given scenes build shades of interpretation as a story is told, retold, and mythologized.
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