|
Post by kolchak92 on Oct 7, 2020 15:52:12 GMT
Terry Gilliam comes to mind.
|
|
|
Post by Archelaus on Oct 7, 2020 17:42:17 GMT
If you ask me, only directors with skin in the game when it comes to visual effects should be considered. However, I could see a director like Paul Thomas Anderson making an animated movie like Anomalisa.
|
|
|
Post by James on Oct 7, 2020 17:45:33 GMT
Quentin Tarantino David Fincher Edgar Wright
|
|
|
Post by onethreetwo on Oct 7, 2020 17:47:00 GMT
I never WANT to watch an animated film, but sometimes an animated film is made that I think looks good enough to watch. So to answer your question, no one.
|
|
|
Post by Archelaus on Oct 7, 2020 17:49:36 GMT
Quentin Tarantino David Fincher Edgar Wright Edgar Wright is a brilliant choice. I can't believe I forgot about him. He was going to make an animated film about shadows with DreamWorks Animation, but it was cancelled when Universal Pictures bought DreamWorks Animation. I would also like to add James Gunn and Taika Wahiti to my list.
|
|
|
Post by politicidal on Oct 7, 2020 17:50:25 GMT
I'd like to see Peter Jackson get off his arse and make that Tintin sequel.
|
|
|
Post by James on Oct 7, 2020 17:54:19 GMT
Quentin Tarantino David Fincher Edgar Wright Edgar Wright is a brilliant choice. I can't believe I forgot about him. He was going to make an animated film about shadows with DreamWorks Animation, but it was cancelled when Universal Pictures bought DreamWorks Animation. I would also like to add James Gunn and Taika Wahiti to my list. I knew about that cancelled DreamWorks film but I didn't realize he was directing it! Damn it, I would've liked to have seen that even more now. Nice additional choices too.
|
|
|
Post by Fox in the Snow on Oct 7, 2020 20:13:57 GMT
Darren Aronofsky
|
|
Reynard
Sophomore
@reynard
Posts: 768
Likes: 421
|
Post by Reynard on Oct 8, 2020 1:38:05 GMT
I would have loved Jan Svankmajer to try hand-drawn animation, but he's retired now.
Shinya Tsukamoto could still make an anime sequel to Tetsuo or something like that.
|
|
|
Post by Fox in the Snow on Oct 8, 2020 1:51:27 GMT
Shinya Tsukamoto could still make an anime sequel to Tetsuo or something like that. That could be pretty cool. He seems pretty open to invention and experimentation. Did you like Killing?
|
|
|
Post by politicidal on Oct 8, 2020 2:02:26 GMT
Denis Villeneuve.
|
|
|
Post by shannondegroot on Oct 8, 2020 2:04:33 GMT
Sam Raimi
|
|
|
Post by kolchak92 on Oct 8, 2020 2:05:34 GMT
Didn't he make that animated penguin movie?
|
|
Reynard
Sophomore
@reynard
Posts: 768
Likes: 421
|
Post by Reynard on Oct 8, 2020 2:07:24 GMT
Shinya Tsukamoto could still make an anime sequel to Tetsuo or something like that. That could be pretty cool. He seems pretty open to invention and experimentation. Did you like Killing? Haven't seen it yet, though I have Haze / Killing Blu-ray set waiting. I loved Fires on the Plain. Tsukamoto indeed experiments a lot, some of his works I've found very difficult to get into, but it's always interesting.
|
|
|
Post by politicidal on Oct 8, 2020 2:14:40 GMT
Didn't he make that animated penguin movie? That was George Miller.
|
|
|
Post by Fox in the Snow on Oct 8, 2020 2:29:27 GMT
That could be pretty cool. He seems pretty open to invention and experimentation. Did you like Killing? Haven't seen it yet, though I have Haze / Killing Blu-ray set waiting. I loved Fires on the Plain. Tsukamoto indeed experiments a lot, some of his works I've found very difficult to get into, but it's always interesting. Personally think it's one of his best, quite restrained and minimal. A good companion piece to Fires on the Plain which I also really liked. True, usually get at least something out of everything I've seen from him. Tetsuo III: The Bullet Man being the only weak link so far.
|
|
Reynard
Sophomore
@reynard
Posts: 768
Likes: 421
|
Post by Reynard on Oct 8, 2020 2:48:09 GMT
Haven't seen it yet, though I have Haze / Killing Blu-ray set waiting. I loved Fires on the Plain. Tsukamoto indeed experiments a lot, some of his works I've found very difficult to get into, but it's always interesting. Personally think it's one of his best, quite restrained and minimal. A good companion piece to Fires on the Plain which I also really liked. True, usually get at least something out of everything I've seen from him. Tetsuo III: The Bullet Man being the only weak link so far. I haven't seen Tetsuo III either, it got really poor reviews when released and then I just never got around to it. A Snake of June and Vital were the most difficult ones from the ones I've seen, couldn't really get to them at all, though "Snake" had amazing cinematography. I need to re-watch his 90s works again, haven't seen most of them for 15-20 years, and catch up with some newer stuff after that. Tsukamoto seems to have lost a lot of his audience. No one seems to talking about his new films and they aren't that well distributed either. I wasn't expecting much from Fires on the Plain, in big part since it sort of came and went and no one seemed to care, but for me it is nearly a masterpiece.
|
|
|
Post by Fox in the Snow on Oct 8, 2020 3:02:35 GMT
Personally think it's one of his best, quite restrained and minimal. A good companion piece to Fires on the Plain which I also really liked. True, usually get at least something out of everything I've seen from him. Tetsuo III: The Bullet Man being the only weak link so far. I haven't seen Tetsuo III either, it got really poor reviews when released and then I just never got around to it. A Snake of June and Vital were the most difficult ones from the ones I've seen, couldn't really get to them at all, though "Snake" had amazing cinematography. I need to re-watch his 90s works again, haven't seen most of them for 15-20 years, and catch up with some newer stuff after that. Tsukamoto seems to have lost a lot of his audience. No one seems to talking about his new films and they aren't that well distributed either. I wasn't expecting much from Fires on the Plain, in big part since it sort of came and went and no one seemed to care, but for me it is nearly a masterpiece. A Snake in June and Vital are among my favorites. I love the strange voyeuristic tone of Snake and that lo-fi steel blue cinematography is stunning. I like the serene poetic nature of Vital. I recently rewatched a good chunk of his work. Only ones I've not seen are Hiroku and Nightmare Detective 2. Gemini, I haven't seen for longest time, but it's just got a Blu-ray release, so I'm looking forward to catching up on that as I remember liking it a lot, very theatrical with an interesting color palette. Fires on the Plain is amazing. Brutal, disorienting and surreal. Can stand alongside the original Ichikawa film IMO.
|
|
|
Post by twothousandonemark on Oct 9, 2020 3:54:05 GMT
All of them.
|
|