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DJ007
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Sat Oct-05-13 06:00 AM

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133. "Emmanuel Lubezki - Gravity cinematographer interview "
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One of the Greatest Cinematographers Ever: Gravity‘s Emmanuel Lubezki
Sandra Bullock as Ryan Stone in 'Gravity.' Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures

OCTOBER 03, 2013 BY BRYAN ABRAMS
He is one the greatest cinematographers alive, the man directors call when what they want has never been attempted. He has shot films for a slew of legends (Mike Nichols, Tim Burton, Michael Mann, Terrence Malick, Martin Scorsese, the Coen Brothers), but it’s Emmanuel Lubezki‘s relationship with his childhood friend from Mexico, director Alfonso Cuarón, that’s truly one of the great partnerships in the history of the medium. If this sounds overblown, then you probably haven’t seen their work together, which can now be acclaimed, 22 years after their first feature film together, as one marked by a commitment to making films that are marvels of innovation, technique, and most importantly, visceral emotion.

Lubezki’s (known as ‘Chivo’) last two collaborations with Cuarón required new technology to achieve their goals. Children of Men, which premiered in 2006, stunned the film community (and the too-small number of people who saw the film) with shots that put the viewer into an intense emotional proximity with Clive Owen (Theo). Set in 2027 in a dystopian, sterile world (we mean that literally—a baby hasn’t been born in 18 years), Children of Men delivered one immensely harrowing moment after another. Lubezki’s camera sunk right down into the disorienting terror of an apocalyptic England as it relentlessly followed Theo from café to pub to train and finally into a reconnection with his ex-wife Julian (Julianne Moore), the leader to a revolutionary force known as the Fishes, which bears major secret—they’ve found a young, pregnant African woman, Kee (Clare-Hope Ashitey). Kee is a potential savior.



In a film filled with standout scenes, two have become legends. The first is the uninterrupted one-shot “ambush” of Theo, Julian and Kee’s getaway car, in which Lubezki’s camera moves in, around, and out of the moving car in a spectacularly prolonged and tense five-minute sequence. This scene required trick car seats, a windshield, and a host of brand new technology to achieve. The second is an equally terrifying but even more explosive scene in a war-torn city during which Theo moves from alleyways to bullet-pocked walls as gunfire and ordinance explode all around him as he desperately searches for Kee. At one point, blood splatters on the camera, and by the time Theo has made it into a building (he can hear Kee’s newborn wailing) the scene has at some point been cut (no more blood on the camera), but it’s impossible to tell precisely when.

Reverse Shot, an independent film journal, said this of Lubezki’s role in Children of Men, and his chops overall—and this was in 2006: “Yet Children of Men is as much Lubezki’s accomplishment as it is Cuarón’s; years from now when critics look back on his work here and with Terrence Malick in The New World, Lubezki will be regarded as one of the era’s great film artists.”



This statement was valid in 2006 and with the release of Warner Bros. Pictures Gravity today, Lubezki’s place among the pantheon of greatest cinematographers is secure. An astonishing achievement technically, visually, and emotionally, Gravity is the reason you go to the movies. When an accidental explosion and a cloud of debris maroons two astronauts (Sandra Bullock and George Clooney) in space, you begin a cinematic journey that stands as testament to the daring and passion of every filmmaker involved, from Cuarón and Lubezki to their FX wizard Tim Weber to every last member of the cast and crew. Gravity also works as an invigorating argument for the use of 3D. It’s one of the very great theater experiences you will have, this year or any other.

We spoke to Lubezki about what it took to create this masterpiece, the many scary moments on set, and his long, fruitful, and warm relationship with Alfonso Cuarón.

This is the first film you shot entirely digitally—how did this change your process?

I’ve been working with digital cameras for a while, but I’ve never done a fully digital film. When we started doing prep for Gravity and began figuring out how to shoot it, we quickly realized that film was not an option.

Lost in space. Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures.
Lost in space. Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures.

Why not?

That had to do with what happens with the film grain in 3D, because the film grain lives in a very specific place in the depth of 3D that just looks weird. It almost looks like a curtain, so we couldn’t use film. And then the other thing we realized is that because of how long the shots are, and how complicated it was going to be for me and Alfonso to be near the actors, we liked that digital cameras and their monitors allowed us to have a very good idea of how the film was going to look and what the actors were doing. We could really watch, with very high detail, their expressions. Also talking to Tim Weber about the fact that we were going to do all the digital compositing, we realized we had to do the movie digitally.

This is not the first time you’ve worked with Alfonso in which the degree of difficulty was, to put it mildly, severe.

Well it’s because when the director has this vision, my job as cinematographer is to try to translate that vision into images, to capture or create these images. There was no equipment around that I could rent and there was nothing already built for me, so you put together a team of people you trust, that have the same drive as you, and you start to do tests and create your own gear. Obviously it makes it much harder in the sense that you create this equipment that is custom built and there are no doubles or spare parts, so if something goes wrong it’s just very scary. You also need the support from the studio. They need to know that it’s a very delicate proposition and things could go wrong. So there’s a whole team of people who give you the support you need to have and also the insanity and stubbornness (laughs) and appetite of the director that you work with.

Can you touch upon some of the pieces of technology and equipment that were created to make Gravity possible?

To make this movie we used many different methodologies. For one of them, we invented this LED box that you’ve probably read about, which is basically this very large LED monitor that is folded into a cube. So all the information and images that you input into this monitor lights the actors, and you can input all of the scenes that were pre-visualized to create the movie—all the environments that we had created—and you can input them into this large cube so space itself is moving around the actors.

Sandra Bullock, George Clooney and director Alfonso Cuarón. Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures
Sandra Bullock, George Clooney and director Alfonso Cuarón. Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures

So it’s not Sandra Bullock spinning around like crazy, it’s your cameras.

Yes, instead of having Sandra turning in 360s and hanging from cables, what’s happening is she’s standing in the middle of this cube and the environment and the lighting is moving around her. The lighting on the movie is very complex—it’s changing all the time from day to night, all the color temperatures are changing and the contrast is changing. There were a lot of subtleties that you can capture with the box, subtleties that make the integration of the virtual cinematography and the live-action much better than ever before.



Can you give us an example?

If you zoom in on Sandra’s eyes, sometimes you can see the earth moving around—things like that would have been almost impossible to do without the box. So we built the box, but that wasn’t it. To be able to shoot inside the box, we had to build a special rig that holds the camera and moves with motion control. So we had people build a very narrow, lightweight but sturdy rig to control the camera. If you imagine the big box of LEDs, it has a gap that is almost a foot and a half or two feet wide, and the camera has to go into the box and make all these moves to make the audience believe that Sandra is turning and turning, but it’s really the camera and the environment in the box that is moving. So we built the box, the rig, and then used a company called Bot & Dolly. These guys are from San Francisco, and they use robots from the automotive industry. They redid all the software for us, so we were able to use these robots to move the cameras and the lights around the actors.It was just a big ballet of gadgets and new technology for the film.

What kind of snafus did you have to deal with?

When we built the box, we had our idea of the box, we did our tests, and we started working on it to see how accurate it was. Then we realized that you could not go into the box because there were so many electromagnetic fields that if you touched it, you would get a shock. So there were a lot of things that were unpredictable happening as we were rushing to shoot the film. A week before Sandra arrived, we were still trying to figure out how we were going to keep her safe in the box so she didn’t get shocks every time she gets in it. There’s a lot of little stories like that that now are funny, but at the time were really, really scary.

That’s a lot of pressure, and it’s not like film sets are notorious for being relaxed environments to begin with.

Once we brought Sandra in, she would start acting in the scene and everything is working, the motion control is working, it’s perfectly in sync, and she would say, ‘You know guys, it’s not feeling right because it’s too short. I need two seconds more here and three seconds more there.’ So we would have to reprogram everything for Sandra to be able to perform the way she wanted and to be able to improvise. It’s very hard to be able to improvise with this kind of equipment, and we had to, little by little, make it that way so the actors could have their space and perform, so Sandra’s emotions could be what they are in the movie.

George Clooney as Matt Kowalski. Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures
George Clooney as Matt Kowalski. Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures

There was another very interesting problem the first rig we built for George. We started building it a couple of months before we started the shoot, and I suggested to Alfonso he talk to George and ask him if he was going to be comfortable performing at a certain degree—he was not going to be standing up, he was going to be, let’s say, at almost ninety degrees. George said okay, but I didn’t think he knew how complicated and long the shoot was going to be. So when we brought him in we realized in a few seconds that the scene could not be shot like that, because it was so strenuous. We could feel the tension on his body, so we stopped it and had to reprogram it and go back and rethink how to shoot that moment with him. It was a bumpy, a very bumpy, road, but I’m glad we did it.

There are very few director/cinematographer teams working today as well known for a certain aspect of filmmaking as you and Alfonso are, which is that long extended take, or the seamlessly edited take. What it is like actually shooting those scenes?

I’m going to tell you something, the reality is that the movie was so new that when we finished a shot we would get so excited people would scream on set—probably me before anybody else. There were moments when we were shooting and Alfonso said ‘cut’ we would all just jump and scream out of happiness because we’d achieved something that we knew was very special.

In Children of Men, we also had moments like that. When we finished the first shot inside that car , the focus puller started crying. There was so much pressure that, when he realized he had done a great job, he just started crying.

As the cinematographer, you must feel an insane amount of pressure yourself.

You know for me it’s an incredible pressure, but for Alfonso it must be fifty times more because he has to deliver something, and he’s getting notes, people saying you shouldn’t do it in one take, it’s not going to work, why don’t you do it the way everybody else does it? And one thing I want to say is that Alfonso is not doing these shots because he wants to show off, or because they are tour de forces shots of an auteur, or because they are gimmicks. I think he does it from a very honest perspective. It’s that he’s doing them because he wants to capture a certain emotion, and he believes—I hate to talk for him because he might not agree with me—but my feeling is he does these shots because it is the only way to capture certain emotions, and it’s the only way to get the audience immersed as deeply as you get immersed in moments like in that scene, or in Gravity. When you feel things are happening in real time and there’s that immediacy with the actors, and the camera is doing all of these elastic shots that are very objective shots that then become subjective shots, and you see what Sandra’s going through, you see it through her eyes, and then you also see objectively from the audience’s point of view, I think all that creates an energy, a tension, and a feeling of being immersed that otherwise you cannot achieve.

And that experience is only heightened now with the use of 3D in Gravity.

was a decision truly made from an honest filmmaker who is trying to capture emotion in a different way. One thing that I love about working with Alfonso is he’s a true artist. I like that he uses all the tools of filmmaking really well. He could do the movie by himself—he’s a great cinematographer, he’s a great sound man, he’s a great actor, so he really uses all the tools. And he uses the tool that I love the most, cinematography, in a way that he’s not using to illustrate text. He uses it to capture emotion and to deliver emotion. I’m very lucky to work with him.

You guys have known each other for so long, is it the trust you guys have from growing up together in Mexico that makes you such a formidable filmmaking partnership?

I’m inside this equation so I truly don’t know, but I met Alfonso many, many years ago. We went as teenagers to the same parties, talked about the same girls, we danced together, and we went to film theaters together. We spent many hours watching what you guys call foreign films in the late 70s and early 80s, and he was always a little bit of a teacher for me. We’re almost on the same frequency–sometimes he doesn’t call me for a year, but when he calls and says, ‘Oh I have this idea for this movie,’ it just happens to be exactly what I would like to be doing. It’s very strange, even though we don’t see each other every day, there is something very close in what we like about film, and art in general.



http://www.thecredits.org/2013/10/one-of-the-greatest-cinematographers-ever-gravity-cinematographer-emmanuel-lubezki/



  

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[View all] , bwood, Wed May-08-13 05:59 AM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
dudes been on semi-goat status since CoM, honestly
May 08th 2013
1
Nigga...he is one of the GOAT
May 08th 2013
2
LOOK AT THAT FUCKING POSTER!!!!
May 08th 2013
3
Come on, dude, lol.
May 08th 2013
4
You say that. But you have yet to witness the 17 minute opening shot
May 08th 2013
5
      Highly doubtful for two reasons, lol.
May 08th 2013
7
           My nigga, do you forget. This is OKP
May 08th 2013
8
                I suppose.
May 08th 2013
9
                     One thing I've learned from this place is to expect the unexpected
May 08th 2013
10
                          I've been there. Fair enough.
May 08th 2013
11
                               nah you are right
May 11th 2013
36
                                    Stay the fuck out this post then.
Aug 27th 2013
66
IS THAT A STUNT DOUBLE?
May 08th 2013
6
What's so special about it?
Sep 12th 2013
82
I can't think of a movie in recent memory I've been more excited for...
May 08th 2013
12
Ladies and gentlemen I present the trailer
May 09th 2013
13
Also, the official site
May 09th 2013
14
Piano is the new BWOOOOONG
May 09th 2013
16
I don't need or want to see anything else.
May 09th 2013
17
awesome.
May 09th 2013
18
wow, that looks brutal
May 09th 2013
19
Nah, that 2001 font isn't intentional at all, lol
May 09th 2013
20
ur hyperbole was already making me hate it, BUT
May 10th 2013
21
LMAO @ People Spinning: The Movie
May 10th 2013
22
And here's my proof Longo
May 10th 2013
24
      Proof of what?
May 10th 2013
25
      Proof of CLOONEY
May 10th 2013
27
           SEE LRANK!!!! I TOLD YOU!!!!!
May 10th 2013
28
      Please don't, lol.
May 10th 2013
29
           I DO WHAT I WANT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
May 10th 2013
32
Holy shit.
May 12th 2013
39
RE: Ladies and gentlemen I present the trailer
May 25th 2013
42
I'm in.
May 09th 2013
15
I CANT FUCKING WAIT FOR THIS
May 10th 2013
23
Not buying those leads as astronauts but I'll still give it a shot
May 10th 2013
26
I have the same issue, especially with Bullock
May 10th 2013
33
i'm not sure either
May 11th 2013
37
i am all the way the fuck in
May 10th 2013
30
Damn. Now that's what you call a trailer.
May 10th 2013
31
So this movie is basically Open Water meets space
May 10th 2013
34
God, I hope they find space sharks.
May 10th 2013
35
      w/ friggin laser beams attached to their heads
May 13th 2013
40
Looks tight.
May 12th 2013
38
If there is a God, he'll let this screening happen on Monday night
May 25th 2013
41
man ya'll getting me too hype for some shit i gotta wait 5 months for
May 25th 2013
43
This shits gonna open the 2013 Venice Film Festival *swipe*
Jul 03rd 2013
44
2 for 2 so far w/ the audience laughin @ this trailer in the theater
Jul 03rd 2013
45
Every audience I've seen the trailer with so far, it plays like gangbust...
Jul 03rd 2013
46
same here.
Jul 04th 2013
47
      haha
Jul 25th 2013
55
New trailer/clip
Jul 23rd 2013
48
that would be the scariest death ever. can't wait.
Jul 24th 2013
49
WOW
Jul 25th 2013
52
Another trailer/clip continuing from where the previous left off.
Jul 24th 2013
50
man, im gonna have a panic attack in the theater.
Jul 24th 2013
51
      My hands got sweaty
Jul 25th 2013
54
They save the best trailer/clip for last.
Jul 25th 2013
53
Are they going to save any footage for the actual movie?
Jul 25th 2013
56
Me too dawg. Me too.
Jul 25th 2013
57
damn it got pushed back to October? Question
Jul 25th 2013
58
I think this looks great. Cuaron has my trust.
Jul 25th 2013
59
Saw it this morning on tha 8 story IMAX. Shit is truly an experience.
Aug 26th 2013
60
RE: Saw it this morning on tha 8 story IMAX. Shit is truly an experience...
Aug 27th 2013
61
My nigga, I don't give no fucks. The fact that I'm kickin it wit a model
Aug 27th 2013
62
i need to see this shit RIGHT NOW!!!!
Aug 27th 2013
63
#1 she's incredibly fly, even a lunch amongst friends is a come up
Aug 27th 2013
64
Daps my nigga.
Aug 27th 2013
65
Fo?!
Aug 28th 2013
68
      Don't hate me nigga
Aug 28th 2013
69
           Ha
Aug 28th 2013
70
                NNNNNNIIIIIIGGGGGGAAAAAAA!!!!!! You need to see it ASAP!
Aug 28th 2013
71
Early prasie from Venice...*links and swipes*
Aug 28th 2013
67
Sep 05th 2013
72
I'm beginning to think this won't be appropriate for a pregnant wife
Sep 05th 2013
73
gonna need a barf bag at the 3D Imax for sure..
Sep 05th 2013
74
I had a hard time keeping my breath with that one
Sep 12th 2013
79
tickets at the arclight copped.
Sep 07th 2013
75
im taking a day off from work.. cant wait
Sep 07th 2013
76
so if all the praise for this movie is right...
Sep 08th 2013
77
I don't say this often, but I'm not sure I can do this one.
Sep 11th 2013
78
yall need to calm the fuck down
Sep 12th 2013
80
LOL no movie has been or will be as amazing as bwood thinks this is
Sep 12th 2013
81
Believe the Hype. It's phenomenal
Sep 17th 2013
83
how and when did you see it
Sep 17th 2013
84
I was a guest at a screening tonight
Sep 17th 2013
85
Did you see in IMAX?
Sep 17th 2013
86
      Nope
Sep 17th 2013
87
Lot of great things about this.
Sep 18th 2013
88
Not a near lock, fam. Stone cold lock.
Oct 04th 2013
100
Still liked Sunshine better but this is a must see in IMAX3D
Oct 01st 2013
89
Copped my IMAX 3D ticket for this Friday
Oct 01st 2013
90
This movie is going to cause people to have panic attacks
Oct 02nd 2013
91
doubt it...people are overreacting WAY too much
Oct 02nd 2013
92
basically. Trailer looks like the most horrifying thing to me, personall...
Oct 03rd 2013
97
Nothing about this is exciting or desirable to me ...
Oct 02nd 2013
93
So stay the fuck outta the post then.
Oct 03rd 2013
94
      LMAO! GO IN
Oct 03rd 2013
96
      BOOM
Oct 04th 2013
104
      let this be said for all tyler perry film threads
Oct 07th 2013
201
Saw this for 3rd time last night. And yes it's as good as I say it is.
Oct 03rd 2013
95
the way they used silence in this film made it so tense ...
Oct 04th 2013
117
just got back... WHAT A FUCKING RIDE!!!!!!!!
Oct 03rd 2013
98
i know right, i'm going back sunday !!!
Oct 04th 2013
118
Wildly conventional story, but the visuals are astonishing.
Oct 04th 2013
99
RE: Wildly conventional story, but the visuals are astonishing.
Oct 04th 2013
102
It's definitely not a waste of time. It's very worth your time.
Oct 04th 2013
103
      RE: It's definitely not a waste of time. It's very worth your time.
Oct 04th 2013
105
I definitely agree with this part:
Oct 04th 2013
106
RE: Wildly conventional story, but the visuals are astonishing.
Oct 05th 2013
141
There was a story?
Oct 07th 2013
209
      RE: ^^^^^waiting on MIB4^^^^^^^
Feb 05th 2014
252
I agree with nearly everything David Edelstein writes here: (swipe)
Oct 04th 2013
101
I'm assuming this is worth spending the extra $$$ for IMAX 3D...
Oct 04th 2013
107
saw it once for free & not in 2d but yes
Oct 04th 2013
110
Damn, none of the (actual) IMAX's are showing it around here
Oct 04th 2013
108
It'll be an awe-inspiring experience on whatever size screen.
Oct 04th 2013
109
      Thanks for that, I'll probably go for the regular screen
Oct 04th 2013
113
save for the visuals
Oct 04th 2013
111
That's like saying...
Oct 04th 2013
112
      not the same thing
Oct 04th 2013
114
Visually, that was a lovely experience
Oct 04th 2013
115
Saw it again today. Worked better for me on a story level.
Oct 04th 2013
116
the silence,the tension,the acting...the VISUALS ..just wow!
Oct 04th 2013
119
prob the most satisfying movie experience i've had this year...
Oct 04th 2013
120
hated it.
Oct 04th 2013
121
RE: hated it.
Oct 05th 2013
122
LOLOLOL!!!!
Oct 05th 2013
123
He mentioned seeing it with a friend.
Oct 05th 2013
124
I didn't mind the comments, either. Just thought it was funny
Oct 05th 2013
126
      Comversation? LOCK it to win.
Oct 05th 2013
128
No aliens.
Oct 05th 2013
139
i pretty much agree
Oct 05th 2013
134
^^obviously trolling & didnt see it
Oct 06th 2013
147
*pats head*
Oct 07th 2013
179
Why'd I just picture this?
Oct 15th 2013
246
RE: ^^^^^^^waiting on MIB5^^^^^^^^^^^
Feb 05th 2014
253
left theater 40min ago. holy shit. I still have anxiety. it was INCREDIB...
Oct 05th 2013
125
Same here
Oct 05th 2013
127
      indeed...
Oct 05th 2013
132
           Same here. Plus I was nauseous.
Oct 05th 2013
140
Absolutely stunning cinematography... echoing the "must watch in IMAX 3D...
Oct 05th 2013
129
yo
Oct 05th 2013
130
2nd time in 3D
Oct 05th 2013
131
Thanks for posting. Awesome interview.
Oct 05th 2013
135
thanks. great interview.
Oct 05th 2013
137
this movie was very damn good
Oct 05th 2013
136
Hella phenomenal.
Oct 05th 2013
138
Mr.Cuaron does a little shopping..lol
Oct 05th 2013
142
RE: Mr.Cuaron does a little shopping..lol
Oct 06th 2013
143
estimated 55 Million dollar haul for this first weekend?
Oct 06th 2013
144
this was AWESOME!
Oct 06th 2013
145
Fucking hyperbole out the ass with this one. SPOILER
Oct 06th 2013
146
If you didn't like it, then you didn't like it.
Oct 06th 2013
149
You should try reading before you hit reply' next time.
Oct 06th 2013
151
      Why do you feel the need to be a condescending asshole all the time?
Oct 06th 2013
153
           Nobody came in looking for a fight but you champ.
Oct 06th 2013
155
                Look at your first post. You're clearly throwing shots to start a fight.
Oct 06th 2013
157
                     Yes, I knew some people would come at me.
Oct 06th 2013
158
                          The problem is you are intentionally negative from the get go.
Oct 07th 2013
174
                               what "shots"? you can twist this shit. a million ways
Oct 07th 2013
180
agreed
Oct 06th 2013
150
I really really liked it, but I understand your reaction.
Oct 06th 2013
161
for those of who have seen the film...
Oct 06th 2013
148
nah. We didn't get that.
Oct 06th 2013
152
i thought the same thing
Oct 07th 2013
202
10 Things To Know About Gravity (swipe)
Oct 06th 2013
154
Great read.
Oct 06th 2013
156
clooney really needs to turn down the clooney
Oct 06th 2013
159
Clooney, or the writer? Because I'm certain Clooney didn't write his rol...
Oct 06th 2013
160
clooney. definitely clooney.
Oct 07th 2013
169
If I recall, I think it was originally a Robert Downey Jr. role.
Oct 06th 2013
162
RE: If I recall, I think it was originally a Robert Downey Jr. role.
Oct 06th 2013
163
matters quite a bit who's in the clooney role
Oct 07th 2013
171
      RE: matters quite a bit who's in the clooney role
Oct 07th 2013
173
RDJ is overthinking it. just give it to tom hanks.
Oct 07th 2013
170
RE: RDJ is overthinking it. just give it to tom hanks.
Oct 07th 2013
175
RE: If I recall, I think it was originally a Robert Downey Jr. role.
Oct 07th 2013
185
his character was absurd.
Oct 06th 2013
165
he was still trying to get the draws AFTER he detached the line
Oct 07th 2013
172
If there's a chance for reincarnated rectum...cloon gon get it
Oct 07th 2013
182
That was the second worst Clooney moment if we're going there.
Oct 07th 2013
196
yeah, Clooney was too much & i wish i'd seen it in 2D.
Oct 07th 2013
176
**SPOILER**
Oct 07th 2013
177
All this Clooney hate.. LOL Dude did hid cool Astronaut thing!
Oct 07th 2013
192
Is this worth it in 3D?
Oct 06th 2013
164
not if you don't like 3D.
Oct 07th 2013
178
Yes.
Oct 07th 2013
188
an exhilarating tech demo.
Oct 07th 2013
166
RE: an exhilarating tech demo.
Oct 07th 2013
186
My Review and I never review (spoilers)
Oct 07th 2013
167
RE: My Review and I never review (spoilers)
Oct 07th 2013
168
You're right
Oct 07th 2013
181
      Will_5198 summed it up perfectly.......
Oct 07th 2013
183
           RE: Will_5198 summed it up perfectly.......
Oct 07th 2013
184
           take Dramamine before seeing the movie in 3D.
Oct 07th 2013
190
                or just know that your eyes don't work
Oct 07th 2013
198
                     sure.
Oct 07th 2013
206
RE: ^^^^^^^^waiting on MIB6^^^^^^^^
Feb 05th 2014
254
this is going to make a TON on repeat viewings... 2001 of our era, IMO
Oct 07th 2013
187
Saw the Movie twice (Real 3D and IMAX 3D)! Shit was dope.
Oct 07th 2013
189
The CLOONEY hate is kinda weird and extra.
Oct 07th 2013
191
Damn! You just gave a post #192 detailed explanation. Dope!
Oct 07th 2013
193
RE: The CLOONEY hate is kinda weird and extra.
Oct 07th 2013
194
But see, I don't even have a problem with his personality here.
Oct 07th 2013
195
      Plus, it was his character's coolness that got Ryan to focus.
Oct 07th 2013
197
      I don't disagree with this.
Oct 07th 2013
200
           Yes
Oct 07th 2013
203
this reply is weird and extra.
Oct 07th 2013
207
Sure.
Oct 07th 2013
211
nah, his performance was indefensible and you know it
Oct 07th 2013
208
      Nah, no self-arguments, I think I nailed the silly shit fairly well
Oct 07th 2013
210
           you're bad at reading
Oct 07th 2013
213
           Key part here:
Oct 08th 2013
219
                lolROTFlmao etc
Oct 08th 2013
221
                     . . .
Oct 08th 2013
223
                          RE: . . .
Oct 08th 2013
224
                               . . .
Oct 08th 2013
225
pretty good.
Oct 07th 2013
199
good movie. Beautifully shot, but not the best plot
Oct 07th 2013
204
It had a plot?
Oct 07th 2013
214
Wish I coulda enjoyed the latter Clooney scene.
Oct 07th 2013
205
Open Water >>>> Gravity
Oct 07th 2013
212
so what did y'all think about the evolutionary theme? (i.e. Darwin)
Oct 07th 2013
215
I tend to dislike reading into movies in that way. (SPOILER)
Oct 08th 2013
216
I would definitely agree it's ambiguous, but I'd insist it's intentional
Oct 08th 2013
217
      I dunno if he intended those darwinian elements, but you and I illustrat...
Oct 08th 2013
218
           I do think the question of afterlife is an interesting motivator, too...
Oct 08th 2013
227
                Agreed, and to me, that was the biggest strength of the film
Oct 09th 2013
230
Sounds plausible to me
Oct 08th 2013
222
good take. would read again.
Oct 09th 2013
229
      yeah, "I wanna hear you say you're gonna make it"...
Oct 10th 2013
238
Oct 08th 2013
220
I thought it was like high-powered ham radio, right?
Oct 08th 2013
226
      RE: I thought it was like high-powered ham radio, right?
Oct 08th 2013
228
      yeah that's what it was
Oct 10th 2013
240
           RE: yeah that's what it was
Oct 12th 2013
243
Indescribable technical achievement but lacks a heart
Oct 09th 2013
231
RE: Indescribable technical achievement but lacks a heart
Oct 09th 2013
232
RE: Indescribable technical achievement but lacks a heart
Oct 09th 2013
234
RE: Indescribable technical achievement but lacks a heart
Oct 09th 2013
235
      RE: Indescribable technical achievement but lacks a heart
Oct 09th 2013
237
           Agreed
Feb 05th 2014
255
agree completely, btw -- if contemplating mortality is trite...
Oct 10th 2013
239
close thread
Oct 09th 2013
236
My wife saw it and loved it.
Oct 09th 2013
233
falls short of being a classic but great nonetheless
Oct 10th 2013
241
The entire earth sequence was tremendous
Oct 10th 2013
242
imax 3d last night. i thought it was absolutely marvelous.
Oct 12th 2013
244
I took 3 pre-teen girls
Oct 15th 2013
245
Just saw this, it's great. Probably #2 so far this year...
Oct 15th 2013
247
great
Oct 29th 2013
248
someone above said it was like open water in space
Feb 08th 2014
258
Released in London tonight
Nov 08th 2013
249
Gravity spinoff: "Aningaaq," Written and Directed by Jonas Cuaron (link)
Nov 20th 2013
250
this is awesome...it's nice to see the other side of that story
Nov 21st 2013
251
Liked it
Feb 05th 2014
256
RE: this, this, this film..................................
Feb 05th 2014
257

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