Rodimus Prime wrote:Whether he is the most important or the best is a matter of opinion. I do think he has made a lot of contribution to the advancement of technology in filming, and has given newcomers a chance at succeeding through his production company. However, as a director in and of itself, he is kind of one-tracked. He sticks to the car chases and explosions, because it's in his comfort zone. It's what he knows how to do. He has never tested his boundaries with other genres of movies as a director. That puts him at a disadvantage when considered for "best."
SlyTF1 wrote:Rodimus Prime wrote:Whether he is the most important or the best is a matter of opinion. I do think he has made a lot of contribution to the advancement of technology in filming, and has given newcomers a chance at succeeding through his production company. However, as a director in and of itself, he is kind of one-tracked. He sticks to the car chases and explosions, because it's in his comfort zone. It's what he knows how to do. He has never tested his boundaries with other genres of movies as a director. That puts him at a disadvantage when considered for "best."
Watch Pain and Gain.
Then, come back and tell me that.
Burn wrote:When did Nolan start getting recognised as a big name director?
And more importantly, why?
Paramount is keeping cash cow Michael Bay around for the long haul.
The studio announced on Thursday that the “Transformers” director had extended for three more years its first-look deal with Bay's production company, Platinum Dune, and added another of his companies, Bay Films, to the deal as well.
“With an ever-growing, worldwide fan base, Michael is truly one of the most inspired and beloved filmmakers of our time,” said Brad Grey, Paramount chairman and CEO. “We take great pride in the fact that Michael is part of the Paramount family and we look forward to growing our productive and successful partnership.”
[...]
“Over the years I have become part of the Paramount family,” Bay enthused in a press release. “There is a synergy there that feels different than any other place in Hollywood. From Brad Grey and Rob Moore, where my relationship goes back more than a decade, to my very good friend Adam Goodman, and to Philippe Dauman, who has put so much trust in me, and with the powerful marketing of Josh Greenstein and Megan Colligan, Paramount makes for a very comfortable place to work.”
Silverwing wrote:Also, I feel compelled to give the obligatory:
One for each year of the Movieverse's decade strong tenure. Here's to a few more explosive years!
Rodimus Prime wrote:You can't make me disappear. I am not feet.
Autobot_Benz wrote:I can already see the Bay-Haters crying their eyes out. 3 more years to ruin their childhoods
ZeroWolf wrote:This wasn't much of a surprise, now it makes sense to get Bay to finish this trilogy, then maybe hitting some sort of reset button and tell new stories, maybe even go the route of beast wars
Nemesis Primal wrote:ZeroWolf wrote:This wasn't much of a surprise, now it makes sense to get Bay to finish this trilogy, then maybe hitting some sort of reset button and tell new stories, maybe even go the route of beast wars
Beast Wars had a small cast and strong characterization. I don't think Bay could manage that.
Autobot_Benz wrote:I can already see the Bay-Haters crying their eyes out. 3 more years to ruin their childhoods
Flashpoint_82 wrote:Oh hell, please no more bayformers and stupid storylines. I mean Galvatron made by humans-absolutely no way !!!
What about UNICRON ? He trashed the whole story
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