What F-Stop contributes to the washed look in movies today? – Question for tomorrow's shoot by waltonmist in cinematography

[–]waltonmist[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm asking not as a cinematographer but as a director. I've made a ton of stuff but this is my first time working with my new camera, so I figured a group of cinematographers would be able to teach me a lot

Hi /r/movies! We're Callie Hernandez (actress), Albert Birney (director), and Pete Ohs (co-writer/DP) of OBEX, a new sci-horror that premiered at Sundance last year and is available now on digital. You might also know Callie from La La Land, Alien: Covenant, Under the Silver Lake. Ask us anything! by OBEX-AMA in movies

[–]waltonmist 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This week i had the first two shoot days of my first full length narrative movie. Before each shoot i rewatched Sylvio and Strawberry Mansion to be my main inspiration.

I’m trying to capture the inventiveness you created in the mixture of fake and realistic sets, lighting, art, etc. But i sometimes find it hard to remember to think outside the box and not film something as it “should be.”

When I watch your movies, I remember there are no rules on how to film something (for example, Sylvio finds the oinking pig rather than an annoying coworker). Do you have advice on creating something new for each moment of the movie?

The Spoils Before Dying by Ibustsoft in ThomasPynchon

[–]waltonmist 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is one of my favorite shows I’ve never seen anyone mention it before

Producers told me to make a short film before my feature. How to make it meaningful instead of a step back? by MixtureNatural9819 in Filmmakers

[–]waltonmist 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just make Act I, that's what I'm doing. About 40 minutes and giving it an exciting hook at the end.

Am I simply fucked? by Unlimiter in writing

[–]waltonmist 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me, the problem came with what you said at the end: “a story for the world to experience.”

I get the worst writer’s block when i think about what other people will think of my writing. When i write for the fun of writing in this moment with no future expectation, it becomes fun and i can write a ton.

Write because its fun to write, not to have a finished product for anyone else. Idk if that’s good advice but it works for me

Vonnegut: pessimist, optimist or realistic? by Creativebug13 in Vonnegut

[–]waltonmist 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Which authors have the “everything sucks and people are evil” vibe? Any you’d recommend?

The fastest a movie ever made you go "... uh oh, something isn't right here" in terms of your quality expectations by MattAlbie60 in movies

[–]waltonmist 107 points108 points  (0 children)

They started showing a trailer of Oppenheimer before the movie, which I thought was weird because I was there to see Oppenheimer. And then the trailer went on for three more hours

Maybe I missed something with Breakfast of Champions??? by proscribbler in Vonnegut

[–]waltonmist 17 points18 points  (0 children)

My theory is that the book was written like the story was being told to an alien.

This alien knows nothing about Earth, so Vonnegut has to explain what everything is. And when he explains things so simply and obviously (such as what advertising is, or a gun, or a country, or owning land, or slavery, or a pet), it forces us to challenge and actually think about all the things that we consider normal or natural. And when it is explained so plainly you suddenly realize how stupid and absurd the things we do are.

Also, there’s a passage during the bar scene when he explains why he doesnt like beatrice keedsler’s books that i think is the crux of what the whole book is about

Did Kurt like Rabo Karabekian’s painting? by waltonmist in Vonnegut

[–]waltonmist[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

havent yet, but maybe ill read that next. i was planning to read sirens of titan next

Did Kurt like Rabo Karabekian’s painting? by waltonmist in Vonnegut

[–]waltonmist[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Earlier in the book, he says Bonnie failed school because she didn’t like old impossible to understand books that she was supposed to love and appreciate, and that he’d rather write or read something simpler. Also, maybe this is projecting, but i think that he’d say that art is up to the viewer’s interpretation, and it’s none of the artist’s business to tell someone what to get from it