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Post by Fox in the Snow on Aug 16, 2021 8:52:21 GMT
Quentin Tarantino (I'm aware of his involvement in Sin City) Nicolas Winding Refn Tsai Ming-liang
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Post by Popeye Doyle on Aug 16, 2021 12:31:38 GMT
Paul Thomas Anderson
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Post by vegalyra on Aug 16, 2021 12:32:10 GMT
I second Tarantino, especially if shot in 70mm. Super fine B&w detail
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Post by kolchak92 on Aug 16, 2021 13:13:44 GMT
Joel and Ethan
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Post by Popeye Doyle on Aug 16, 2021 13:14:23 GMT
The Man Who Wasn’t There (2001)
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Post by kolchak92 on Aug 16, 2021 13:19:31 GMT
The Man Who Wasn’t There (2001) So they can't do more than one?
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Post by Popeye Doyle on Aug 16, 2021 13:22:59 GMT
I second Tarantino, especially if shot in 70mm. Super fine B&w detail B&W movies shot in widescreen can look especially beautiful, i.e. Manhattan (1979).
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Post by politicidal on Aug 16, 2021 13:48:19 GMT
Michael Bay.
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Post by Fox in the Snow on Aug 16, 2021 22:13:49 GMT
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Post by Fox in the Snow on Aug 16, 2021 22:15:14 GMT
The Man Who Wasn’t There (2001) So they can't do more than one? I'd be happy to see another from the Coens. I think Inside Llewyn Davis could have worked in B&W.
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Post by Fox in the Snow on Aug 16, 2021 22:16:03 GMT
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Post by jamesbamesy on Aug 16, 2021 23:00:25 GMT
Ari Aster
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Post by Cat on Aug 17, 2021 0:32:55 GMT
Stephen Soderbergh would put together something worthwhile.
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Post by Fox in the Snow on Aug 17, 2021 1:02:06 GMT
Stephen Soderbergh would put together something worthwhile. Yes, he's also very open to experimentation.
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Post by Mulder and Scully on Aug 17, 2021 1:46:06 GMT
Stephen Soderbergh would put together something worthwhile. Soderbergh has already directed a black and white movie The Good German.
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Post by NJtoTX on Aug 19, 2021 18:33:27 GMT
Jeunet et Caro
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Post by mstreepsucks on Aug 20, 2021 19:14:09 GMT
It'd be cool if tarantino did at least two b and white films.
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Post by novastar6 on Aug 20, 2021 19:15:57 GMT
William Malone.
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Post by petrolino on Aug 21, 2021 19:48:33 GMT
John Carpenter
He's focused more on music now and admits making movies is a young man's game. He's had health issues and making 'The Ward' (2010) as a hired hand really took it out of him. A lot of the chairs at the 'Masters Of Horror' dinners he used to attend now stand empty - Wes Craven, George Romero, Tobe Hooper, Larry Cohen, Stuart Gordon all left us between 2015 and 2020. A lot of the great international horror directors he knew are now gone. It's not all doom and gloom though, there are still plenty of guys left standing from his generation. I would just like to see him create an eerie audio-visual treat to go out on, something he's scripted himself. I can picture it now, tense and taut, spacious in widescreen, the screen awash with shadow, Kurt Russell and Keith David in leading roles. He could even co-direct to bring some young legs in for location work, there'd be no shortage of young horror directors keen to take on that job and learn from one of the best.
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