blenderdumbass . org
Reviews
by Troler
Free Software fundamentally misses the point. It fails on a practical, ideological, economic, and political level. Let’s examine precisely how (in a slightly different order for the purposes of presentation).
5 Minute Read
Man of fire is a quite strange film in Tony Scott's career, since it was originally not his, but Michael Bay's film, due to Bay being utterly focused on making Bad Boy II.
c:0 ↩ Reply
To see the Bayhem! In Man of fire, it is a good idea to look at where Michael Bay directed his director’s vision. Having not watched Bay’s movie since I last saw them on the TV 4 or so years ago, I was surprised how hyperactive they are. Were half of my fingers cut off, I would still be able to count how many calm conversation scenes there were. They were as calm as they can be when a camera is zooming. The camera zoomed from one shot to another, seemingly never taking a break. There was a scene where the buddy cops, played by Martin Lawrence and Will Smith. Their bazaz was only amplified by the scenic shots of Miami and Cuba. It is strange to say it, Michael Bay made Cuba look actually pleasant. Even shots meant to look unappealing, be it attic, mortuary, sewers, they were filled to the brim of life. There was not much time to awe at the scenes, since almost two thirds, if not more, of the runtime are action, action, action scenes. The cars crashed, the tees fell, the houses were crashed into, fell, burned and exploded. It seems Bay threw in every possible action scene he could think, by the time a plot driving scene finished.
c:0 ↩ Reply
The editing was quick and on beat with action. Cuts occurred just after enough time to feel the impact of the action scene, not too late to be bored by the sight. In such a matter a breathless type of effect was sustained. There were moments when I drifted off to somewhere, they were short just from the amount of Bayhem! Even the comedy itself felt intense. Take for example the recurring scene with the destruction of cop’s, played by Martin Lawrence, pool.
↩ Reply
Man of fire was a filmed worked on by Michael Bay at first. It came out a year after Bad Boys II. According to BlenderDumbass, it is the most Bay movie to ever Be(y). Naturally, it comes it must have the DNA of Bayhem! Are there any scenic shots? Not exactly, some general scene shots are present. They seem to be there for the technical need of becoming familiar with the location. Most of the shots are done on ground. Literally, on the ground. Not to the extent Michael Bay does, where he does low-angle shots. Those were not present in Tony Scott’s film. Unlike the quite picturesque scenes in Bad Boys II, Man of fire looks like a stereotypical imagination of the Mexico. It is dirty, chaotic and very much unpleasant to be in. Even the luxurious mansion feels unwelcoming. Together with the long, static shots and cold and unemotional Denzel Washington acting as Creasy, a strong sensation of dread was drilled throughout the movie. With the dozens sporadic shot overlays, dialogue text, it seems as if the entire movie is being experienced through the protagonist. 1st person experience is present in Bad Boys II as well. Rather, it is subtle. Michael Bay is focused on the action, the thrill of ravaging and always moving forwards.
c:0 ↩ Reply
In Tony Scott’s case, he is interested in attachment. In attachment to people, this case to a child and the pain of losing a loved one. There could definitely be a psycho-sexual analysis be done. I am going to say, the choice for Lupita (Dakota Fanning) being cast as a child is to create a same effect as movies by Lars von Trier. The kidnapping of a child and, in Michael Bay’s case sexy lady (Gabrielle Union), is just a way for the viewers to be far more sentimental.
↩ Reply
This sentimentality is seen in the actor’s behavior. The main villain Sanchez (Roberto Sosa) is no less emotionally unstable than the protagonist.
↩ Reply
The emotional state is further fueled by the music, which, quite unorthodox, is folk Mexican music. Where Michael Bay chose to utilize pop and rap, Tony Scott’s decision was to lean into the Mexican aesthetic.
↩ Reply
The emotional weight differs substantially between both films. Michael Bay create an intense corn-flicker. Not to say it in poor taste, rather it is very easy to watch. Tony Scott, on the other hand, created a slow moving, depressing tale of revenge. Both movies have kidnapping, both have action scenes, intense moments. The execution differs to a point where I am starting to question myself whether Tony Scott rebelled against the entire doctrine of Bayhem!
↩ Reply
As can be seen in his short film Agent Orange, this PTSD style was a conscious choice. What made him convert? I cannot tell for sure, except that it has something to do with Michael Bay, Bad Boys II and depression.
↩ Reply
Fin.
↩ Reply
0
Find this post on Mastodon
Man of fire toasts Bad Boys 2
![[thumbnail]](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/e/e8/Man_on_fireposter.jpg)
Troler
👁 11 💬 5
Bad Boys 2 is Michael Bay's most Bayhem! film. Man of fire is a huge leap in Tony Scott's directorial career. It is depressive, slow, simple, yet affective. It is both flashy and gruesomely slow. It is both overly edited and undercut.
#BadBoys #BadBoys2 #MichaelBay #TonyScott #MartinLawrence #WillSmith #liamNeeson #film #review #movies #cinemastodon
Taken 2008 is Luc Besson's revenge for Man on Fire by Tony Scott
![[thumbnail]](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/e/ed/Taken_film_poster.jpg)
Blender Dumbass
👁 10 💬 1
On the surface, the 2008 movie Taken directed by Pierre Morel and written by Luc Besson ( he was busy directing Arthur cartoons ) is about how it is dangerous for little girls to be in the world. And about how awful the human trafficking is. And about how good, people who fuck up human traffickers are. But then, out of nowhere, it makes people cheer when a guy is buying an underage girl at a human trafficking auction. As if, it makes you think: Is Luc Besson just trying to show Quentin Tarantino that he is a master of corrupting the audience?
#taken #liamNeeson #LucBesson #film #review #movies #cinemastodon
My Neighbor Adolf 2022 expresses the longing for peace
![[thumbnail]](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/1/18/My_Neighbor_Adolf.png/250px-My_Neighbor_Adolf.png)
Blender Dumbass
👁 14 ❤ 4 🔄 1 💬 3
My Neighbor Adolf is an Israeli, English language film about an old Jew living in Argentina, who got a new neighbor, who has a striking resemblance to Adolf Hitler. And it is about the paranoid obsession of this man with his neighbor.
#myneighboradolf #leon #udokier #film #movies #review #cinemastodon
Ambulance 2022 is a fucking masterpiece
![[thumbnail]](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/d/d2/Ambulance_film_poster.jpg/220px-Ambulance_film_poster.jpg)
Blender Dumbass
👁 60
Critics often think Michael Bay doesn't give a damn about characters, but how can you believe that when everything in the film is shut deliberately to be from a perspective of a character? Michael Bay is Lars Von Trier of action. Lars uses strange chaotic camera work and weird editing choices to elevate the emotion on screen and Michael Bay uses chaotic camera work and weird editing choices to elevate the emotions too. If you take him seriously everything clicks into place. It's just Michael Bay likes it louder.
#Ambulance #Ambulance2022 #MichaelBay #film #review #movies #cinemastodon #EizaGonzales #JakeGyllenhaal
Powered with BDServer
Plugins
Themes
Analytics
Contact
Mastodon