I think, for me, anytime that the camera work becomes noticable it's failed to do its job of telling the story, because I'm thinking about how clever the director is and have therefore lost my connection to the story.
I have given this matter a lot of thought, to the extent that I have a rule to shooting that I apply, which is:
"The camera only moves when it absolutely has too."
I also tend to favour wider shots over close ups, shooting for cinema rather than for TV.
When I was teaching students I noticed that they found "pre-MTV" films boring and when I looked into this I realised that they were used to watching things that cut several times a second. Because the brain is stimulted to respond to movement, they had become conditioned to equating movement with excitement. So a film like the Exorcist, would with its slow pace and fluid camera work would literally send them to sleep.
I agree with Scott and Poke that the mark of a good director is in telling the story, not pandering to an obsessive need for visual stimulus. Which I think would put me in the Clint camp, if forced to chose. (I also think it's a mistake to right off Clint as a director "Midnight in Garden of Good and Evil" is a great piece of storytelling)
Given the choice I see myself more in the tradition of directors like Kurosawa or Tarkovsky, for whom framing was more important than movement.
I have given this matter a lot of thought, to the extent that I have a rule to shooting that I apply, which is:
"The camera only moves when it absolutely has too."
I also tend to favour wider shots over close ups, shooting for cinema rather than for TV.
When I was teaching students I noticed that they found "pre-MTV" films boring and when I looked into this I realised that they were used to watching things that cut several times a second. Because the brain is stimulted to respond to movement, they had become conditioned to equating movement with excitement. So a film like the Exorcist, would with its slow pace and fluid camera work would literally send them to sleep.
I agree with Scott and Poke that the mark of a good director is in telling the story, not pandering to an obsessive need for visual stimulus. Which I think would put me in the Clint camp, if forced to chose. (I also think it's a mistake to right off Clint as a director "Midnight in Garden of Good and Evil" is a great piece of storytelling)
Given the choice I see myself more in the tradition of directors like Kurosawa or Tarkovsky, for whom framing was more important than movement.