I agree entirely. However, I believe most filmmakers here are not coming from a background of being say experienced professional cinematographers and having to learn the other filmmaking crafts. As far as I can tell, most here are coming from a background of knowing relatively little or nothing about any of the film making crafts and therefore I would expect them to be equally bad at everything to start with and to then to develop their skills broadly equally across all the film making crafts. But this isn't what I see, what I see is the level of skill in cinematography and various other filmmaking crafts greatly outstripping the level of skill with sound design. Few here wouldn't know at least the fundamental basics of cinematography but the vast majority do not appear to know the fundamental basics of sound design and very commonly don't employ any sound design at all in their filmmaking. I assumed this was because most filmmakers here were very visually oriented and therefore had various levels of incapacity to appreciate sound design but the lists posted seem to indicate this assumption is incorrect. So now I am looking for an alternative explanation.
Sorry for straying off subject.
G
Actually, I pretty much agree with your explanation. There are a handful of really experienced folks on here (experts, really), but most of us are beginners, no doubt about it. And in our beginning efforts, we tend to focus more on visuals, and I think that's just a simple matter of where our interests lie.
But I don't think it's really fair of you to turn it into a supposed audio-vs-visual dichotomy, as if those are the only two aspects in filmmaking. It's almost as if you're saying that there's cinematography and sound design, and nothing else!
Dude, have you seen the set designs on most indie films? They're all crap! Have you seen the acting in most indie films? Crap! The editing? Crap! Music? Crap! Coloring? Crap! Writing? Camera? Makeup? Crap! Crap! Crap!
I absolutely agree with you that too many indie directors focus too much on cinematography, at the cost of the rest of the film. But while you notice the crappy sound design, I notice the crappy acting, crappy editing, and crappy music. Oh, you feel like the thing you think most important is being neglected? Join the club. It's ALL important! And at the tiny-budget level, almost all of it is being neglected, not by choice but because of a lack of ability to do EVERYTHING.
By the way, I don't think you should apologize for straying off subject. We're in the lounge, so if we begin to discuss why the top 100 films are so great, I believe that's fair game.
Also, richy makes a really great point -- why isn't there a Sound Design sub-forum?!