I was reading this movie review of his:
ttp://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100203/REVIEWS/100209992/1023
He says that by today's standards that computers do the editing for action scenes, and that stuntmen are no longer necessary. But I don't see much how editing is changed. It's more of the directors style, rather than just doing stunts isn't it? It's the director who chose to quick cut everything. Weather he did it with a computer or not compared to actual film, it's still editing and I don't see how that has changed much. Unless there were a lot of mordern FX added to make the stunts and fights look a lot more real than they are.
He also compared the movie to The Chaser (200
, saying that the actors do their stunt jobs better in that movie, but again, that's just the directors editing style, and I don't think modern computer editing technology is too blame. I think today's FX is a good thing, making it easier. It's the style of editing, that's the problem, and therefore to blame. Thoughts?
ttp://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100203/REVIEWS/100209992/1023
He says that by today's standards that computers do the editing for action scenes, and that stuntmen are no longer necessary. But I don't see much how editing is changed. It's more of the directors style, rather than just doing stunts isn't it? It's the director who chose to quick cut everything. Weather he did it with a computer or not compared to actual film, it's still editing and I don't see how that has changed much. Unless there were a lot of mordern FX added to make the stunts and fights look a lot more real than they are.
He also compared the movie to The Chaser (200
