Written by John Shea   
Wednesday, 21 July 2010 02:08
A Wine GlassIt's just a wine glass.  Nothing more.
 
 
Written by John Shea   
Tuesday, 20 July 2010 14:19

Let me break from the photography stuff to do something radical for a site originally founded to talk about movies and talk about movies.

This weekend, Inception, the new film by writer/director Christopher Nolan, raked in a very healthy $60 million.  Now I don't generally like talking about the box office receipts of movies.  The movies themselves are always far more interesting to talk about.  But it's hard not to notice that lately Hollywood has not been much interested in original ideas.  Remakes, sequels and adaptations of TV shows and comics have heavily dominated the landscape for film goers of late.  And don't get me wrong, I'm not necessarily opposed to any of those things.  But with so many movies being one of those things, it's hard not to feel some despair for the loss of originality.

I wrote actively as a critic for years on this site and the one thing that became the most important for me from a movie was originality.  Show me something new, give me a new idea, twist my preconceived ideas, anything really as long as it's not the same old thing.  I tended to bash romantic comedies a lot because that genre is very attached to a certain story structure to the point of flagrant stupidity.  Dumb fun is one thing.  I can dig on that.  But being dumb because you're unwilling to break away from tired cliche is another.

A couple weeks ago, my kids were off visiting their grandparents and I wanted to take advantage of all that free time by seeing some movies.  When I checked out the movie listings I was struck by how little I wanted to see most of what was out there.  I had to drive a long way to an art house theater to check out something original like the French film Micmacs.  All the other theaters were over flowing with remakes, sequels and adaptations.

Listening to movie fans I've heard a distinct and growing irritation with the lack of originality.  This year it seems to be bordering on despair.  Hollywood marketing is so effective that they can make just about any dreadful movie appealing enough to attract an audience.  Transformers 2 raked in huge piles of cash despite being incoherent, brain dead and bordering on racist.  Fans of the cartoon Avatar: The Last Airbender flocked to M. Night Shyamalan's disastrous live action adaptation.  When movies like these make tons of money, what's to inspire Hollywood to try for something better?

That brings us to this weekend.  Inception made a lot of money.  And it is an original movie.  It is not a remake, adaptation or sequel.  Most importantly, it is intelligent and thoughtful and, oh yes, really good.  Hollywood follows the money.  If there is evidence that intelligent, well made, original movies will make lots of money, then there is every reason to believe that they will try to make more of them.  Particularly when Inception's main competition bombed.  Disney's live action adaptation of a segment of Fantasia, The Sorcerer's Apprentice, was badly reviewed by critics and largely ignored by audiences.  It will have a hard time covering its costs.

That's a strong message being sent by audiences.  It won't be enough to out weigh the evidence that the crappy movies can make tons of money.  It's a start though.  And if audiences continue to respond in this way, they won't be ignored.

There is hope.  Movies can be better.

 
 
Written by John Shea   
Tuesday, 20 July 2010 06:57
Uh oh...My mom had a look like this.  And when I got that look, I was in deep trouble.  This particular mom might be giving me this look for posting this picture of her but there was no way I could resist.  You don't capture something like that on camera all that often.
 
 
Written by John Shea   
Monday, 19 July 2010 03:11

Albany at NightSo I went to a late showing of Christopher Nolan's Inception and decided to stop on the way back to take this photo.  I've long enjoyed the view of Albany at night but had never actually tried to capture the image before.  And I will try again because frankly this one is pretty lacking.  But I needed a photo for the blog today, so here it is.

The problem was keeping the camera steady.  The shot was taken several miles from Albany, so I was using a long lens zoomed all the way in.  So any little vibration showed up in the picture.  Most likely the problem is my cheap ass tripod.  This is something I'll definitely have to go back to at some point.

As for Inception, I enjoyed it a lot but feel like I need to watch it again before I can really analyze it and/or comment.  And I am a bit concerned about dreaming of metal tops when I go to bed.

 
 
Written by John Shea   
Sunday, 18 July 2010 11:47

Rain Pouring on LincolnYes another rain photo.  Unless you didn't notice I've done something like this before.  In which case, ignore that statement.  I worry about repeating myself.  This isn't exactly like another photo I've posted but there is another one that features a driving rain frozen by the camera as it hits a car.

Yes, I over think these things.  I know.  I'm working on it.

 
 
Written by John Shea   
Saturday, 17 July 2010 09:53
Well DoneI nearly burned this burger because I had the sudden idea to hook up a remote trigger to the camera.  The idea was to snap a shot at the same time that I dropped a greasy burger onto the grill, causing an eruption of flames.  It was so entertaining that I did it over and over again, nearly forgetting that I did intend to eat this burger at some point.
 
 
Written by John Shea   
Friday, 16 July 2010 01:09

Action Hero FantasyIt would be easy to forget that I'm a wannabe filmmaker, since I haven't actually written about it here for quite some time now.  But this camera was purchased to make movies with.  And the point of the 365 day photo blog was to sharpen my shooting skills and improve my composition, all with an eye towards making movies. 

So today's picture is a nod in that direction.  Me as the action hero.  Or villain.  Whatever.

The photo came out pretty well but the taking of it was pretty comical.  The LCD on the camera is fixed, so if you want to take a self portrait, you can't see what you're doing.  Unless you plug the camera into a computer and send the camera feed to the monitor.  That's what I did.  What you can't see is me using my toe to tap a key on the laptop to hit the shutter.  So what you see in the photo is pretty cool.  What you can't see in that photo is anything but cool.

And for the record, the photo is in black and white to conceal the orange tip on my prop gun.  I haven't gotten around to painting that black yet, so this was a cheap work around.

 
 

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