Martin Scorsese has had fairly an unbelievable profession as a filmmaker, however through the years, a lot has modified in the way in which movies are made and how we devour them. Hollywood is in an attention-grabbing section proper now as it’s in a “period of reinventing.” During a latest panel at Screen Talk on the BFI London Film Festival, Scorsese talks about urging younger filmmakers to reinvent cinema on this age of streaming and says, “I didn’t want to be the last line of defense.” He shared:
“I honestly think it’s thrown back now with all of you. And I really mean this: I don’t know where cinema is going to go. Why does it have to be the same as it was for the past 90-100 years? It doesn’t. Do we prefer films from the last 90-100 years? I do, but I’m old. Younger people are going to see the world around them in a different way, you’re going to see it fragmented … What does one shot mean now? I don’t know anymore. I don’t think it means anything … You all are in the process of a period of reinventing it. It’s quite an extraordinary time, and a lot of it has to do with the technology.”
The filmmaker went on to speak concerning the new know-how and the way it brings extra freedom, however he additionally mentioned it ought to trigger younger filmmakers to “rethink what you want to say and how you want to say it. Ideally, I hope — I hesitate to use the word — ‘serious’ film could still be made with this new technology and this new world we’re apart of.”
The director goes on to discuss being a child and his love of going to the flicks, and how he additionally hopes that extra “serious” movies do make a comeback on the cinema and the franchise films have taken over:
“I’m afraid the franchise films will be taking over the theaters. I always ask the theater owners to create a space where younger people would say they want to see this new film, which is not a franchise film, in a theater and share that with everybody around them. So that they want to go to the theater, that it’s something inviting that doesn’t get them to say they could see it at home. Because the experience of seeing a film with a lot of people is really still the key, I think. But I’m not sure that can be easily achieved at this point.”
Edgar Wright was moderating the panel and when he requested Scorsese concerning the rise of filmmakers being seen as “content providers,” Scorsese mentioned that “content is something you eat and you throw away. But, if you want to have an experience which can enrich your life, it’s different.”
I really agree with all the things that Scorsese is saying right here. The entire trade is altering, and it’s loopy to assume how issues are going to change and evolve over the following ten years.
Source: Variety
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