Directors Who Made The Biggest Leap
Let's say their first movie sucked, but then their second movie was great...
Let's say their first movie sucked, but then their second movie was great...
David Fincher- Alien 3 to Se7en.
James Cameron - Piranha 2 to The Terminator.
I’m one of the few people who liked Alien3 but I do agree Se7en was on another level completely.
shareI have seen Alien3 but I don't remember anything about it. Se7en I do remember and it was garbage.
Garbage in terms of content or execution (no pun intended)?
shareYet another film about *yawn* a serial killer and Brad Pitt proving once again that most of the time he can't act his way out of a wet bowling ball bag.
Haha you salty bitch! I thought it was an imaginative take on the genre myself and I’m a fan of Pitt’s work (to me he is one of last great movie stars), so we’re on different pages here.
What about Fight Club? Was that a leap or are you just not a Fincher fan?
In Fincher's defense, Alien 3 was taken away from him by execs. I saw the assembly cut which was kind of Fincher's version, but which he wasn't able to finish, and you get a better idea of what he was trying to do watching that. It's not on the level of Se7en, but its an improvement over the version of Alien shown in theaters.
shareI might get flamed, and I don’t think it sucked, but except for very few scenes, Reservoir Dogs did nothing for me...but Pulp Fiction is definitely a favorite of mine....I appreciate Dogs because without it, we don’t the get great effort and results of his next film....
Nothing against the late Tony Scott, but sometimes I think it would’ve been interesting if Tarantino’s DIRECTING debut was True Romance....
I like the Fincher stuff....great thread!
EDIT: I realize that technically, My Best Friend's Birthday (1987) was QT’s debut, but for years I always thought it was Dogs...and for years that always informed my opinion before I really started learning about the back stories of prominent filmmakers....
Regardless of what-if scenarios, Tony Scott technically did make the biggest leap in the end.
shareOoow, a groaner
shareAnd I forgot the title of this thread.....well played, sir...hall of fame stuff from the Michael Jordan of the Stonekeeper Movie Guessing Game...
shareI thought Reservoir Dogs was great. I have never understood the popularity of Pulp Fiction. I would have rated them the opposite, biggest drop off from a great movie to a weak follow up.
Too each their own.....
20 years ago when I was a teenager I like those first few Tarantino movies but his last few have been so bad that I wonder if I would still like the movies I used to like today
shareI get that...over the years Tarantino has really become hit and miss for me and I find myself just watching the scenes I like and avoiding the rest of flick that isn’t that rewatchable to me...going through that now with Once Upon a Time now that it’s being replayed on the premium channels...some scenes, top notch; other scenes, meh...I keep hearing and reading that the passing of his trusted and long-time faithful editor may have had some effect on trying to rein in QT’s penchant for overindulgence...
shareDid the editor die before The Hateful 8? That was a tiresomely long-winded film.
shareJohn krasinski
sharethis is kinda fresh in my mind, because i just re-watched it on criterion, but gregg araki's mysterious skin is a genuinely great film in my books, while everything else i've seen from him has at minimum annoyed me, and i would probably rank doom generation as one of my least favourite films that i've watched to the end.
i haven't seen every araki film, so it's not for me to judge, but when i look at the gap from doom generation to mysterious skin, i think of that as the biggest gap in quality for any director.