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Post by Popeye Doyle on Oct 31, 2017 2:28:50 GMT
Who would you cite as your influences?
Right now, probably Martin Scorsese for his editing and cinematography choices. Tarantino for similar reasons.
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Post by Fox in the Snow on Oct 31, 2017 2:56:05 GMT
Tarkovsky, Antonioni and Lynch for their poetic visuals and ambiguous narratives.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 31, 2017 3:00:07 GMT
Spielberg and Ridley Scott and I would immediately adapt The Forever War to the big screen.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 31, 2017 10:18:29 GMT
William Wyler, Andrei Tarkovsky, David Lean, David Lynch and Michelangelo Antonioni
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Post by Reynard on Oct 31, 2017 10:43:24 GMT
Murnau, Dreyer, Epstein, Christensen and other masters of surreal silent cinema. I'd rather not direct character-oriented films at all.
Terrence Malick, because to me he is the most inspiring director currently active and constantly finding new ways to express himself outside cinema's usual, far too widely/commonly accepted theatre-based traditions.
Jess Franco, because he proved that it's still possible to direct interesting films with lasting artistic value with practically no money.
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Post by lenlenlen1 on Oct 31, 2017 17:36:13 GMT
Who would you cite as your influences?
Right now, probably Martin Scorsese for his editing and cinematography choices. Tarantino for similar reasons. David Lean, Stanley Kubrick, David Lynch, Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorsese, Michael Mann, Ridley Scott, David Fincher, Christopher Nolan...
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Post by vegalyra on Oct 31, 2017 18:12:20 GMT
Definitely David Lean although Frank Capra, William Wellman, Anthony Mann, would be up there.
Not sure who would directly influence me on my epic 3 part series about the Fall of the Byzantine Empire. I would resurrect David Lean for my WW1 film about the little known Mesopotamian campaign.
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Post by kingkoopa on Nov 1, 2017 4:48:42 GMT
2 parts Brian De Palma, 1 part Ridley Scott. With a nod to Kubrick. For the pace and visuals.
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