HIGHLANDER holds a special place because of Mulcahy's fearless visuals. Critics said he made "an everlasting music video"... So what? That's *precisely* why the film endures, it tore the veil between two art forms. Look at this scene. Never a dull moment:
For Mulcahy, HIGHLANDER was an opportunity to continue what he’d done on his videos on a bigger scale, with less oversight. Cinema is a rich medium, and juxtaposing moving pictures can be done to achieve various affects. Sometimes the musicality of images overrides visual logic.
Look at the relationship between these shots. It doesn't matter if they don't connect seamlessly, the point is to keep the momentum going. Mulcahy insisted on having the rain and the backflips even though no one on set understood why. They got it when they saw the film.
The above clip is two minutes long and it has more visual ideas than some two-hour long movies. I love the way they played with the lighting, making Lambert phase in and out of the spotlight through a purely cinematic device.
Here as well, it only lasts a second or two, but the use of shadows heightens the visual style and imprints frames in our mind on an almost subliminal level. It turns a world that initially looked like ours into *theirs*, something supernatural, nearly alien to us.
Everything onscreen makes the film more exciting. Let them chase each other on cars, why not. Look how many things happen in this 10-second GIF: they run on car bonnets, sword fight, hit a pipe, fall on a windshield, somersault off the car. An exercise in cinematic generosity.
I love this moment here, when MacLeod seems to become invisible to his opponent simply by leaving the frame. It's like the viewer's limited perception intersects with Fasil's. The "shit, where is he gone?" surprise becomes a common experience. And that come-back shot, holy shit.
In the director's own words: “There was a certain period when people didn’t want multiple meetings and I could get away with doing strange images and sequences. These days you’d have to have 20 meetings with the executives and you probably wouldn’t get away with it.”
I completely understand why some people rejected the film at the time. After witnessing Mulcahy's mindfucking directing choices, and then shots like these, it can be disorienting. You either fully embrace it or reject it I guess.
😍
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Action films with a female protagonist that came out this year. Titles/info in thread.
Music by @XENNONofficial
The list is in the same order as in the video. This is not a ranking. There are others too, I will mention them further down the thread. Some 2022 films that only became available this year are included.
BABY ASSASSINS: 2 BABIES
Dir.: Yugo Sakamoto
Plot: Professional assassins Chisato and Mahiro are expelled from their guild. Two wannabe killers decide to go after them...
Worth it?
Yes! Light-hearted comedy with blistering action finale!
Was there ever a better time than 80s/90s Hong Kong cinema for women action stars?
Featured:
Elaine Lui vs Mondi Yau - GHOST PUNTING
Michelle Yeoh - YES MADAM
Almost the whole cast - TOP SQUAD
Yue Hong vs Yan Chi - 21 RED LIST
Yukari Oshima - OUTLAW BROTHERS
Rothrock vs Shepard - RIGHTING WRONGS
Godenzi vs Aurelio - SHE SHOOTS STRAIGHT
Moon Lee -NOCTURNAL DEMON
I know, 21 RED LIST is actually from Taiwan. I apologize, but it's just too cool not to mention at every opportunity.
THE MILLIONAIRES' EXPRESS just came out on Blu-ray from @Eurekavideo, so why not break one of my favourite scenes down: Sammo Hung vs Yuen Biao, western kung fu pian-style!
Sammo wants to play with us and what we know populates both genres: face-offs. The shot/reverse-shot trope and its subversion therefore becomes the core component on which the director builds the scene. We start on a visually unusual low-angle vs low ground shot announcing...
...the filmmaker's wish to play with our expectations. The whole fight is about suprising the fighters and the viewer with sudden shifts in the power struggle. Yuen Biao loses the high ground advantage withing seconds through a pure HK action cinema move: Sammo's kick levels...
RIP Richard Donner, whose approach to filmmaking typified American mainstream action movies in the 80s and 90s. He was gifted in eliciting a sense of danger and excitement by leveraging cinematic language to circumvent limitations.
The climatic fight of LETHAL WEAPON is a good example of that: not always fluid or perfectly legible, but continuously stimulating. See the first few punches between Riggs and Joshua, they're rather confusing, blurry close-ups. But Donner quickly switches gears and alternates...
...between wide low-angle shots with elaborate lighting, blocking, and framing (the water pouring down and the light coming from the helicopter give the events an apocalyptic dimension) and...
14 inserts
7 close-ups
5 medium to close shots
3 cutaways
1 wide shot
Distilled action can work. No master shot, overlapping editing, stretched out timeline. And yet, still awesome because:
-Clear causality
-Sustained visual momentum
-John Woo
The only wide shot here is used because Woo needs to pass on new spatial information. One character has changed position relative to the others, which leads to an action that would be incomprehensible without a shot establishing that fact. Less than a second long is enough.
Visual momentum depends on a dialogue between images. That means creating visual sentences that give rhythm to the scene. This is one such sentence: 3 shots, 1 general direction. The *feeling* of kinetic unity combined with the clear *understanding* of their diegetical meaning.
You could take almost any 10-second segment from PROJECT A's action scenes and make it an example for how well it works. Here for instance, we have at least 5 lessons in dynamic directing/editing in a row that feel organic and enhance audience engagement/viewing pleasure. The...
...clip opens on a zoom out while the camera readjusts its position. It's actually something we see a lot of in HK action movies of the period, and not a trick that has travelled much abroad in spite of its benefits in terms of dynamism and syncing of movements with actors....
Then we have a fairly long shot capturing a series of beautiful moves by Yuen Biao. His way of fighting is very dance-like here, but the best trick comes after: the camera cuts to a close-up of the action without breaking its flow. The cut is near imperceptible because it...