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Most overrated films
Comments
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PaddyP17 said:hoof_it_up_to_benty said:PaddyP17 said:JiMMy 85 said:PaddyP17 said:Karim_myBagheri said:La la land
Even worse, and I'd forgotten to mention it - Whiplash. It's a sports film dressed up as a music film. It's a great film but it's absolutely not representative of jazz and it really, really gets to me. (Where are the jam sessions? Why is JK Simmons allowed to drive Miles Teller to this sort of thing? No drummer would punch their snare which likely cost them a few hundred quid! So on, so forth) Adam Neely sums it up for me:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SFYBVGdB7MUThe only people who get pissed off at Whiplash are musicians, which to me says a lot!To be fair I think you get that reaction when any expert watches a movie on the subject matter they love.
I know I'm being a bit of a gatekeeper here. I am aware. And on their cinematic merits, both are great films. I'd be lying if I said I didn't enjoy them.
But when they are the only representations we have of the modern jazz world that most people are conscious of, it does rankle.
As a comparison (and maybe not fair here, as we might be conflating a whole nation's culture with something getting ever more niche) - Lost In Translation is a great film and explores its themes wonderfully. But it does caricature Japanese culture somewhat, and if that is one's main exposure to what Japan might be like, I can see why the film got the critical backlash it did in Japan.
But yeah. I likely have an unavoidable lens through which I watched those films.
... No, I'm joking. As a jazz musician I'll take £50 per band member for two hours of bland renditions of The Girl From Ipanema et al that nobody's listening to at some mid-range restaurant, and we can film that on an iPhone or something.
Now that's jazz.0 -
Chunes said:PaddyP17 said:Chunes said:As a professional astronaut I was really offended by the depiction of my trade in Armageddon.
Not what I'm saying at all.
Following you across threads? Have you got the right bloke
If so, then fair enough, I apologise.
As for doing well with jokes - different strokes for different folks I suppose.0 -
hoof_it_up_to_benty said:PaddyP17 said:hoof_it_up_to_benty said:PaddyP17 said:JiMMy 85 said:PaddyP17 said:Karim_myBagheri said:La la land
Even worse, and I'd forgotten to mention it - Whiplash. It's a sports film dressed up as a music film. It's a great film but it's absolutely not representative of jazz and it really, really gets to me. (Where are the jam sessions? Why is JK Simmons allowed to drive Miles Teller to this sort of thing? No drummer would punch their snare which likely cost them a few hundred quid! So on, so forth) Adam Neely sums it up for me:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SFYBVGdB7MUThe only people who get pissed off at Whiplash are musicians, which to me says a lot!To be fair I think you get that reaction when any expert watches a movie on the subject matter they love.
I know I'm being a bit of a gatekeeper here. I am aware. And on their cinematic merits, both are great films. I'd be lying if I said I didn't enjoy them.
But when they are the only representations we have of the modern jazz world that most people are conscious of, it does rankle.
As a comparison (and maybe not fair here, as we might be conflating a whole nation's culture with something getting ever more niche) - Lost In Translation is a great film and explores its themes wonderfully. But it does caricature Japanese culture somewhat, and if that is one's main exposure to what Japan might be like, I can see why the film got the critical backlash it did in Japan.
But yeah. I likely have an unavoidable lens through which I watched those films.
... No, I'm joking. As a jazz musician I'll take £50 per band member for two hours of bland renditions of The Girl From Ipanema et al that nobody's listening to at some mid-range restaurant, and we can film that on an iPhone or something.
Now that's jazz.4 -
Avatar
Dances with wolves had Kevin Costner
Avatar has... Sam Worthington0 -
JiMMy 85 said:hoof_it_up_to_benty said:PaddyP17 said:hoof_it_up_to_benty said:PaddyP17 said:JiMMy 85 said:PaddyP17 said:Karim_myBagheri said:La la land
Even worse, and I'd forgotten to mention it - Whiplash. It's a sports film dressed up as a music film. It's a great film but it's absolutely not representative of jazz and it really, really gets to me. (Where are the jam sessions? Why is JK Simmons allowed to drive Miles Teller to this sort of thing? No drummer would punch their snare which likely cost them a few hundred quid! So on, so forth) Adam Neely sums it up for me:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SFYBVGdB7MUThe only people who get pissed off at Whiplash are musicians, which to me says a lot!To be fair I think you get that reaction when any expert watches a movie on the subject matter they love.
I know I'm being a bit of a gatekeeper here. I am aware. And on their cinematic merits, both are great films. I'd be lying if I said I didn't enjoy them.
But when they are the only representations we have of the modern jazz world that most people are conscious of, it does rankle.
As a comparison (and maybe not fair here, as we might be conflating a whole nation's culture with something getting ever more niche) - Lost In Translation is a great film and explores its themes wonderfully. But it does caricature Japanese culture somewhat, and if that is one's main exposure to what Japan might be like, I can see why the film got the critical backlash it did in Japan.
But yeah. I likely have an unavoidable lens through which I watched those films.
... No, I'm joking. As a jazz musician I'll take £50 per band member for two hours of bland renditions of The Girl From Ipanema et al that nobody's listening to at some mid-range restaurant, and we can film that on an iPhone or something.
Now that's jazz.
I said overanalyzing 'things' not films. Films need to be looked at as films not as a history of music unless they're pretending to do this. They're not documentaries.
Anyway it's good to have you keeping an eye on me.0 -
Blair Witch Project. Bloody awful.0
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PaddyP17 said:Chunes said:PaddyP17 said:Chunes said:As a professional astronaut I was really offended by the depiction of my trade in Armageddon.
Not what I'm saying at all.
Following you across threads? Have you got the right bloke
If so, then fair enough, I apologise.
As for doing well with jokes - different strokes for different folks I suppose.0 -
hoof_it_up_to_benty said:JiMMy 85 said:hoof_it_up_to_benty said:PaddyP17 said:hoof_it_up_to_benty said:PaddyP17 said:JiMMy 85 said:PaddyP17 said:Karim_myBagheri said:La la land
Even worse, and I'd forgotten to mention it - Whiplash. It's a sports film dressed up as a music film. It's a great film but it's absolutely not representative of jazz and it really, really gets to me. (Where are the jam sessions? Why is JK Simmons allowed to drive Miles Teller to this sort of thing? No drummer would punch their snare which likely cost them a few hundred quid! So on, so forth) Adam Neely sums it up for me:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SFYBVGdB7MUThe only people who get pissed off at Whiplash are musicians, which to me says a lot!To be fair I think you get that reaction when any expert watches a movie on the subject matter they love.
I know I'm being a bit of a gatekeeper here. I am aware. And on their cinematic merits, both are great films. I'd be lying if I said I didn't enjoy them.
But when they are the only representations we have of the modern jazz world that most people are conscious of, it does rankle.
As a comparison (and maybe not fair here, as we might be conflating a whole nation's culture with something getting ever more niche) - Lost In Translation is a great film and explores its themes wonderfully. But it does caricature Japanese culture somewhat, and if that is one's main exposure to what Japan might be like, I can see why the film got the critical backlash it did in Japan.
But yeah. I likely have an unavoidable lens through which I watched those films.
... No, I'm joking. As a jazz musician I'll take £50 per band member for two hours of bland renditions of The Girl From Ipanema et al that nobody's listening to at some mid-range restaurant, and we can film that on an iPhone or something.
Now that's jazz.
I said overanalyzing 'things' not films. Films need to be looked at as films not as a history of music unless they're pretending to do this. They're not documentaries.
Anyway it's good to have you keeping an eye on me.
"I said overanalyzing 'things' not films."
You're talking absolute and utter shite, but it's abundantly clear you will never, ever admit that (cos then you'd have to stop posting so much), and even clearer you need the last word or you'll have an embolism, so I'll let you go ahead and do my absolute best to ignore your inanity in future!
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I don't think I'm alone in thinking Prometheus was complete cock. I was also pretty annoyed with the last Alien film
The Kill Bill films let me down, maybe because there was so much hype
The Godfather, again maybe it's because people are very excitable about it and I want to like it but I can't make myself
I'm going to stick up for 3 Billboards, Wind River and Hell or Highwater I loved those films as well as fight club and American history X
Dunkirk had some really good elements to it but I wasnt as impressed as I was with Interstellar. Shutter Island I didn't like and I thought the twist whilst a proper twist was a real cop out0 -
JiMMy 85 said:hoof_it_up_to_benty said:JiMMy 85 said:hoof_it_up_to_benty said:PaddyP17 said:hoof_it_up_to_benty said:PaddyP17 said:JiMMy 85 said:PaddyP17 said:Karim_myBagheri said:La la land
Even worse, and I'd forgotten to mention it - Whiplash. It's a sports film dressed up as a music film. It's a great film but it's absolutely not representative of jazz and it really, really gets to me. (Where are the jam sessions? Why is JK Simmons allowed to drive Miles Teller to this sort of thing? No drummer would punch their snare which likely cost them a few hundred quid! So on, so forth) Adam Neely sums it up for me:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SFYBVGdB7MUThe only people who get pissed off at Whiplash are musicians, which to me says a lot!To be fair I think you get that reaction when any expert watches a movie on the subject matter they love.
I know I'm being a bit of a gatekeeper here. I am aware. And on their cinematic merits, both are great films. I'd be lying if I said I didn't enjoy them.
But when they are the only representations we have of the modern jazz world that most people are conscious of, it does rankle.
As a comparison (and maybe not fair here, as we might be conflating a whole nation's culture with something getting ever more niche) - Lost In Translation is a great film and explores its themes wonderfully. But it does caricature Japanese culture somewhat, and if that is one's main exposure to what Japan might be like, I can see why the film got the critical backlash it did in Japan.
But yeah. I likely have an unavoidable lens through which I watched those films.
... No, I'm joking. As a jazz musician I'll take £50 per band member for two hours of bland renditions of The Girl From Ipanema et al that nobody's listening to at some mid-range restaurant, and we can film that on an iPhone or something.
Now that's jazz.
I said overanalyzing 'things' not films. Films need to be looked at as films not as a history of music unless they're pretending to do this. They're not documentaries.
Anyway it's good to have you keeping an eye on me.
"I said overanalyzing 'things' not films."
You're talking absolute and utter shite, but it's abundantly clear you will never, ever admit that (cos then you'd have to stop posting so much), and even clearer you need the last word or you'll have an embolism, so I'll let you go ahead and do my absolute best to ignore your inanity in future!0 - Sponsored links:
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Films/things are not like they use to be 🎵0
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Page 5 and cockwork orange hasn’t come up yet, sigh0
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Whatever happened to the argument thread. Some top quality shouting into the void above.0