cinematography said:
I sent him a link to this thread. Hopefully he'll read it and see the error in his thinking. I'm pretty sure he will. We all make mistakes in judgment sometimes.
I'm the friend that cinematography is talking about...
Lol, I read it, and agree with most of it - my buddy either misunderstood or misrepresented my point of view, me thinks...
I have no issue with "eccentric or surrealistic" performances at all. But I do claim that the acting which is most true to the human condition is the best, within whatever context the movie gives it. And I also claimed, to my friend, that Stanley Kubrick had his actors act like real people would in those given situations. "Eyes Wide Shut" is a great example. The reason I liked the film so much is because the people acted like people really do, IMO. People really do think about sex often, really do piss in front of each other, etc., etc.
As for Lemonie Snickets - within the context of that movie, the acting was dead on for Jim Carrey. Take the Dwarf from LOTR - within the context that the film setup, his acting was dead on, as were the little folk (I forget what they were, exactly) in Time Bandits.
I have no issues at all with non-realism. I love Fantasy and Sci-fi most of all. What I dislike is when people are made to act as real people would NOT in a given context. That's where my use of the world "real" was confused with "eccentric and surrealistic". As someone above said, people
are strange and often behave that way - especially me, as my friend can vouch for
Take the, "lets all hug, make babies, and add each other to our holiday greeting card lists" BS in Independence Day, to give just a quick example. In the context given (the real world), warring nation states and their leaders would not act that way - I call this "non-realistic". "The Arrival" was another movie, equally fantastic, that I often compare ID4 too. A much better movie, IMO. Not nearly as grand as blowing up the white house, but no explosion can make up for the fake-emotion/acting in ID4...