Learn film analysis in 20 films

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  • Опубликовано: 28 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 181

  • @eduardok8159
    @eduardok8159 Год назад +101

    I've always been a movie lover and have always been very good at picking what is good from what is not, but I always lacked the words to describe my choices. I think your 20-minute lesson provided me with the analytical terminology necessary to explain the Why behind my choices. I totally agree, some of these are not in my top 20 list, but they all illustrate really well the points you were trying to make. Well done.

    • @TheMediaInsider
      @TheMediaInsider  Год назад +2

      Really glad you found it insightful! Can I ask what your top three films on such a list would be? I’m bound to make a follow up

    • @eduardok8159
      @eduardok8159 Год назад +3

      @@TheMediaInsider12 Angry Men, The Matrix, Seven. 12 Angry Men because of how tension is built over time. The Matrix because of the revolutionary camera work and kick starting an existential discussion (changing public discourse and triggering a series of movies on the same topic). Seven because of how perfect every scene ties with everything else. Even the fact that the initial credits do not mention Kevin Spacey's name. There are many other movies, but I would be here all night. By the way, I am really happy that you asked.

    • @TheMediaInsider
      @TheMediaInsider  Год назад +2

      Excellent choices! I’m planning the next one and the matrix also appeared on my list!

    • @lukepedersen2899
      @lukepedersen2899 9 месяцев назад +3

      This is silly. Saying you've "always been very good at picking what is good from what is not" is hilariously hoity-toity. Everyone is good at picking out what is good from what is bad... that's what makes movies good or bad: when lots of people agree that they are good or bad. Frankly, being proficient at film analysis has little to do with realizing some objective greatness of a film, and much more to do with appreciating its composition. Because, guess what, films do not have an objective greatness-only a subjective one. This is the beauty of art, and to say otherwise reveals only your naïveté.

    • @tubsy.
      @tubsy. 6 месяцев назад

      There's no such thing as bad and good movies. There's ones that you don't like and the ones you do like, and obviously you'll be good at that lmao.

  • @abandonallhope
    @abandonallhope Год назад +16

    Glad to see Children of Men on here. It’s one of my top five movies of all time. I love how it tells a story of a world without the need for exposition. Couple that with beautiful cinematography and it’s some of the main reasons I give it high praise.

  • @nathanielfishburn9676
    @nathanielfishburn9676 Год назад +29

    Amadeus is also a fantastic example of adaptation. The stage play the film is based on is quite different in places, so as a screenwriter and editor it's valuable to understand why certain scenes were kept or changed or cut

    • @classic_movie_trailers
      @classic_movie_trailers Год назад

      Each platform requires very different technical and creative applications. You could just film a stage play and it is a filmed stage play. If you adapt it for cinema then it becomes very different.

  • @sam-ky9sj
    @sam-ky9sj Год назад +32

    This is so useful. I've always been interested in film, just as a hobby of course, and I'm so grateful to find so much good information for free. I am interested in film analysis because a lot of it could be applied to my other passions (and because it's fun) but I cannot justify formally studying it, so you putting this out there for anyone to enjoy and learn is so useful. Thank you so much.

    • @TheMediaInsider
      @TheMediaInsider  Год назад +1

      So glad you are finding it useful, I have literally just posted a new video about film analysis in the last 24 hours and would love to hear what you think

  • @ninja.android
    @ninja.android Год назад +5

    Analyzing films is becoming such a great experience for me. Thank you for the framework for being more intentional! :)

  • @JunePerkins-o1k
    @JunePerkins-o1k 10 месяцев назад +1

    Great essay. I love that you touched on a few obscure films, and of course several classics. 'Mise En Scene' is my favorite term, as a filmmaker myself.... not that that means much these days. LOL.

  • @Boncomics
    @Boncomics Год назад +8

    21:45 Toshiro Mifune was priceless. Glad he walked into the wrong room, when he applied for that non-acting job.

  • @caravanlifenz
    @caravanlifenz Год назад +116

    It's great to watch this and learn about film studies. I didn't want to spend thousands of dollars at university on film studies classes. I get just as much value (if not more) from your film analysis for free.

    • @charles-andrerichard491
      @charles-andrerichard491 Год назад +43

      It's great to see how much respect you have for people who literally studied films for 10 years at the highest level and designed an entire syllabus of around 15 weeks of class. If you think you got more value out of a 20mins video you are delusional.

    • @CodPatrol
      @CodPatrol Год назад

      @@charles-andrerichard491 the highest level 😂 does he know

    • @enzl4493
      @enzl4493 Год назад +3

      Yea dude this is a terrible take. Still a great video tho

    • @CodPatrol
      @CodPatrol Год назад

      @@enzl4493 University is pay to win, they don’t know any better than a good old fashioned blog

    • @CS-ox9hn
      @CS-ox9hn Год назад

      Ridiculous

  • @satyb
    @satyb Год назад +9

    It's the obvious choice so it's good to give other movies a chance but Citizen Kane hits most of the points in one

  • @misterfuzz2681
    @misterfuzz2681 Год назад +1

    Watching 2001 was what got me interested in thinking ab what ppl were saying through film. I think that the monolith and the theme that goes with it inspire a sense of horror and I think it’s about the change of humanity. Each time the monolith appears, there is a massive time skip and a massive change in what Humans “are”. I think the fear is supposed to be the fear of change.

  • @gummybear2700
    @gummybear2700 Год назад +5

    Looking back at the Mozart movie. Your video made me notice that it's from the perspective of Salieri (Don't know how to spell the name sorry). Maybe to his eyes, he's just a child, which is why he acts the way he does in the movie.

    • @TheMediaInsider
      @TheMediaInsider  Год назад +1

      It’s definitely worth a rewatch

    • @classic_movie_trailers
      @classic_movie_trailers Год назад

      The original release was in 70mm 6 track magnetic sound - truly spectacular. A few aspects of the film were criticized but overall it is very solid.@@TheMediaInsider

  • @przemeksuchan2946
    @przemeksuchan2946 Год назад +1

    Thank you for including Locke on the list. I find this movie so good I threat it as my personal gem :) In general your list is amazing!

  • @rouseAvila
    @rouseAvila Год назад

    I love Locke!!! When the film finished I had to take a moment to think about it, I've never watched a movie like that before; I think it's genius!!!

    • @TheMediaInsider
      @TheMediaInsider  Год назад

      Likewise - I thought about it loads in the days that followed - always a sign of a good film if you ask me

  • @peanutgallery3493
    @peanutgallery3493 Год назад +15

    This was very nice analysis, some great points for students and anyone wanting to learn more.
    Just a note that Biopic is short for Biographical Picture, and is pronounced
    Bio Pic, not Bi Opic. Not sure why people keep saying it incorrectly but I hear it from time to time. Thanks for the video!

  • @jamesjoelholmes4541
    @jamesjoelholmes4541 Год назад +5

    Great essay. I love that you touched on a few obscure films, and of course several classics. 'Mise En Scene' is my favorite term, as a filmmaker myself.... not that that means much these days. LOL.

  • @Laocoon283
    @Laocoon283 Год назад +10

    You ever regret learning to analyze films? You ever wish you could go back to a time where you were just mesmerized by a good movie without knowing why? Once you learn to break a film down into its component parts to analyze it's almost like you lose the ability to be immersed in the movie as a whole. Afterall the choices made behind the scenes are "behind the scenes" for a reason. Once you unmask the man behind the curtain you can no longer buy into the illusion. A bittersweet achievement.

    • @deejinlondon7285
      @deejinlondon7285 3 месяца назад

      That's an interesting point that I have been wondering myself recently as I am doing a course in Film Studies. I think you have might have a valid point there.

    • @cflatminor594
      @cflatminor594 2 месяца назад

      no not really. There is a period where one can be over analytical, or the analysis can either come between the movie and ones experience, or distort ones experience. However over time the analysis can sink below the surface allowing one to be an audience-person again... at least I feel that way

    • @cflatminor594
      @cflatminor594 2 месяца назад

      wow I have been in the industy for over 30 years, but this helping rekindle a love and curiosity

  • @marcl2213
    @marcl2213 Год назад +15

    Thank you for this video and selection. Some films I never heard of (sound of metal) or other I want to re-watch (Amadeus). I have to say i’m not a lot into film analysis, I take some but more often I would leave a lot. For me if the director is not giving his real intentions on a scene every analysis is subjective. For example if someone says to me that «The Searchers» is a masterpiece I will respect that but at the same time I could give many points why I found the film over rated. But your video is not making too much, you give hints on how to see these elements that can create a film. Nowadays I found that moviegoers are analyzing every frame, every sequence, etc. it’s too much.

    • @TheMediaInsider
      @TheMediaInsider  Год назад +4

      Absolutely agree! I think the key is to find the thing you enjoy analysing, be it cinematography, the narrative, the characters, the art direction, or a bit of all of it!

  • @mapasore11
    @mapasore11 Год назад +4

    I love that you included Horse Girl, it is so underrated. And most of the ones I've recommended it to, didn't like it 😅

  • @md.akhtarsalam8304
    @md.akhtarsalam8304 Год назад +1

    What about "Vertigo". Isn't it great to study, for it's usage colour, camera work, psycho analysis of the characters?

  • @geraldstiling3735
    @geraldstiling3735 Год назад +4

    A great movie is one🎞️ where if you've only seen it once🤷 ,you haven't seen it all. 🎥

  • @Boncomics
    @Boncomics Год назад +1

    20:27 Greatest 4 hour movie ever made! I have the t-shirt with them on it.

  • @djd620
    @djd620 Год назад +4

    Nice list, but I would've put Touch of Evil on this list for its creative use of long takes and blocking

    • @classic_movie_trailers
      @classic_movie_trailers Год назад

      A truly great work indeed, especially to watch as intended via 35mm film in a movie theatre. I screened a 35mm re-issue print many times. There's obviously thousands of films you could list in an analysis but for only 22 minutes we get a good cross section I think.

    • @powerinmisery
      @powerinmisery 11 месяцев назад

      The list is fine, but putting the artist on there and not a single actual silent movie is ridiculously stupid

  • @jeanracine
    @jeanracine Год назад +2

    Wonderful video! Perhaps a little slip-up: at 15:59, I think you may have meant "allegories" instead of "analogies."

  • @blackbird8837
    @blackbird8837 Год назад +165

    so inappropriate to show a sequence from the Lord of the Rings to reference some "movies just being a visual experience [...] and less about narrative".

    • @TheAvizanski
      @TheAvizanski Год назад +9

      The bigger sin here is showint the end of Sound of Metal

    • @MrDeanWeen
      @MrDeanWeen 3 месяца назад

      Thank you for saving me 20 mins.

    • @Josh6m
      @Josh6m 2 месяца назад +5

      How is that inappropriate? That's the main complaint of Peter Jackson's films, relying too much on flashy cgi instead of narrative. Tolkiens family disown the Jackson films for that very reason.

    • @blackbird8837
      @blackbird8837 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@Josh6m if you really think lotr original trilogy is about flashy cgi I pity you.

    • @Josh6m
      @Josh6m 2 месяца назад +1

      @@blackbird8837 It's not just me. The stories lost a lot of their magic and creativity

  • @benjaminramirez2845
    @benjaminramirez2845 Год назад

    Thank you. You’ve inspired continued enjoyment of film and appreciation of the art.

  • @ILLRICARDO
    @ILLRICARDO 11 месяцев назад

    I think batman Vs superman the ultimate cut has a lot of good visual storytelling elements that also ties into the prequel and sequel of the movie

  • @callingformaria6684
    @callingformaria6684 Год назад

    portrait of a lady on fire!!!! so good!

  • @Boncomics
    @Boncomics Год назад +6

    2:39 INTERSTELLAR is one of my favorite films by him. But, DUNKIRK really made you feel like you were IN the movie.

  • @Johnny_B_Goodfornothing
    @Johnny_B_Goodfornothing Год назад +2

    That ending of Dancer in the Dark broke me

    • @dayceem
      @dayceem Год назад

      DitD is the most disturbing film I have ever seen

  • @9thmaggot
    @9thmaggot Год назад +1

    "i don't think Dunkirk is a masterpiece, that belongs to Interstellar"
    **closes video**

  • @quepaper
    @quepaper Год назад +6

    This is a great list. I appreciate the inclusion of a few non-american films, but also a bit dissapointed at how american this list looks, but also I understand that we would need a much bigger list to talk about all the amazing films out there.

  • @Cacuofa
    @Cacuofa Год назад +1

    Have you ever seen Fight Club with te idea Marla is also an imaginary alter ego of the narrator? His previous alter ego ?
    Good list!

  • @samuelcox4244
    @samuelcox4244 Год назад +1

    Great vid as always!

  • @jonjenkins
    @jonjenkins Год назад

    Congratulations MI a really excellent piece in the exploration of cinema

  • @caseestarr
    @caseestarr Год назад +1

    I remember going over a film like Locke during covid.

    • @TheMediaInsider
      @TheMediaInsider  Год назад +1

      Ahhh lockdown - good times for binge-watchinnng

  • @JimsMaher
    @JimsMaher Год назад

    20:23 Seven Samurai (1954)*

  • @Boncomics
    @Boncomics Год назад +2

    7:03 PERFECT BLUE?

  • @syedmukhlesurrahman2489
    @syedmukhlesurrahman2489 Год назад

    Thanks, this video is so excellent that I give like sign at first sight.

  • @Necrophadez
    @Necrophadez Год назад

    I think i'd add Annie Hall to the list.

  • @stormfangbro
    @stormfangbro Год назад +5

    Jaws 1 is the best of all of them, the other ones , Jaws 2 and 3 and 4, aren’t really as good, rip Quint

  • @canerutku1054
    @canerutku1054 Год назад +1

    1917 is also a great watch to learn film making process.

  • @hulleeseeya
    @hulleeseeya 2 месяца назад

    Have you watched/read "Ocar and Lucinda?" I mean read as a film...

  • @Hu6uinho
    @Hu6uinho Год назад

    butch cassidy and the Sundance kid, the girl that acts in "the graduate" to, so I think you missed that movie to. // Children of the men is something that some cultures nowadays have started to deal with like korea.

  • @jacobojuarez-nj8vr
    @jacobojuarez-nj8vr Год назад

    Great films with unique visualisations bout psichology and art photography. Thanks for this !!!

  • @azizjabi
    @azizjabi Год назад

    thank you for making his, really inspiring list.

  • @GypsumGeneration
    @GypsumGeneration Год назад

    Thanks for making this!

  • @martinrheaume5393
    @martinrheaume5393 Год назад

    When do we get a show on interstellar? Since you name dropped it as a masterpiece.

  • @TheDreamerdude
    @TheDreamerdude Год назад +3

    Hello sir,
    my name is Mahdi and i want to apply for M.A in cinema and media related courses in UK
    but i have some questions about it, including the A.I impacts on these fields in future. would you please tell me how can I talk to you about it? I'm sure it would be helpful for others as well.

    • @fdxfgg1243
      @fdxfgg1243 Год назад +1

      AI IS IMPOSSIBLE... JUST GOR GRAPHICS NOTHING MORE

    • @sebastianmontano9979
      @sebastianmontano9979 Год назад +1

      If you're still curious, these are the new guidelines that resulted from the writers strike:
      "The new agreement states that AI shall not write or be credited for literary material. Additionally, material created by artificial intelligence shall not take credit or copyright from screenwriters. According to the agreement, screenwriters can use artificial intelligence when providing writing services, but only with the consent of production partners, and they cannot be compelled to use AI. Studios must disclose to writers if AI-generated material is used, and using scripts by writers to train AI is prohibited".
      This only affects hollywood right now but will likely become industry standard. If you're intimidated by AI I would say there is nothing to really worry about. Art is about human expression and the experience of life which is impossible for AI to create since it has not lived. People will always have a greater appreciation for storytelling that is authentic and genuine. Unless they're brainwashed or something.

    • @classic_movie_trailers
      @classic_movie_trailers Год назад

      There was a 1992 movie called The Player where a studio gets bought out by a Japanese conglomerate, and as part of cost cutting someone comes up with the idea to remove writers from the creative process and base movies on newspaper stories.@@sebastianmontano9979

  • @Boncomics
    @Boncomics Год назад

    10:39 With a beautiful soundtrack by BJORK!!!

  • @Т1000-м1и
    @Т1000-м1и Год назад +4

    Video essay pyramid scheme when

  • @Noctivagante
    @Noctivagante Год назад

    Weird to see Horse girl among these other movies... But made me think about rewatching it. I didn't like it at all when I saw it.
    (Me sorprendió mucho ver Horse girl en esta lista de buenas películas... No me gustó nada la vez que la vi pero este video me hace pensar en volver a verla, pero con otros ojos esta vez.)

    • @TheMediaInsider
      @TheMediaInsider  Год назад

      I do know what you mean! But remember, these aren’t necessarily the greatest films of all time, or even ones which I loved, but they do illustrate something, and the discombobulation in this film was very effective!

  • @vinicius11ariel
    @vinicius11ariel 11 месяцев назад

    Snowpiercer is amazing

  • @peterkalyabe7553
    @peterkalyabe7553 Год назад +1

    Thank you.

  • @arieelloo
    @arieelloo Год назад

    qw got no idea how masterpiece children of man, i mean dude...so perfect

  • @vvbhat
    @vvbhat Год назад

    nice analysis

  • @lonewriter5080
    @lonewriter5080 Год назад

    Review films of Satyjeet Ray......❤

  • @haggagnasser1805
    @haggagnasser1805 Год назад

    Ur website link doesn't work 😢 in my country

  • @Sl20
    @Sl20 Год назад

    Awesome!!!🫢🔴🤫

  • @BreezeTalk
    @BreezeTalk Год назад

    Thank you

  • @CynsCorner
    @CynsCorner 11 месяцев назад

    It wasn't a "joy" to me to work out Dunkirk. It was pretty annoying. I felt similarly about Oppenheimer.

  • @ragarimedia8561
    @ragarimedia8561 Год назад +2

    Akira

  • @vinodraj1984
    @vinodraj1984 11 месяцев назад

    These are great examples of movies and how subsets of movie depiction can be broken down in to analysis. However, in all honesty i did not learn film analysis here.

  • @ronsw6948
    @ronsw6948 Год назад

    great video

  • @williamcampbell4035
    @williamcampbell4035 Год назад

    Seven Samurai was 1954, not 1969

  • @johnalden948
    @johnalden948 Год назад

    More. MORE!

  • @Not_So_Slim_Shady
    @Not_So_Slim_Shady Год назад +10

    Maybe don't spoil movies as you recommend them

    • @nl3064
      @nl3064 Год назад

      Dude, you've had years to watch these, and most of these are extremely well known. It's safe to assume most people watching here would've seen most of these movies, otherwise, why the hell are you here? If you're too lazy to know even the most basic shit, that's on you. And how the hell did he give anything away on any of them, and what the fuck did you expect? You somehow expect him not to analyze movies in a video on movie analysis?

  • @nitr0smash
    @nitr0smash Год назад

    Spoo Bag - 11:04

  • @Bogart4ever
    @Bogart4ever Год назад +2

    Not mentioning a david lean picture is not good. it's not like lawrence of arabia inspired most of the filmmakers like spielberg etc.. also haven't seen any scorsese film aswell. How can Christopher Nolan be there but not David lean looool or even tarantino. Just the intro alone of inglorious bastard is a copy paste of the intro from the good the bad and the ugly

    • @TheMediaInsider
      @TheMediaInsider  Год назад +2

      Excellent point! My primary focus was picking films that illustrate aspects of film analysis, rather than most culturally significant films, but I’m very aware I’ll have to make another video asap

    • @Bogart4ever
      @Bogart4ever Год назад

      @TheMediaInsider well again spielberg said that after watching lawrence of arabia he started to analyze and tried to comprehend how that film was made with the magnificent 70mm shots etc... most of the well known directors based they're work on the classics. Lean, Hitchcock, John huston, Corman etc...ruclips.net/video/kSMk4d-cJqY/видео.htmlsi=rVaBouBWGUPjz8cR

  • @dabalma
    @dabalma Год назад

    how can you forget Scorsese and his masterpieces?

  • @colleenurban7673
    @colleenurban7673 Год назад +1

    Found most of your choices depressing - except for some at the end.

    • @TheMediaInsider
      @TheMediaInsider  Год назад +1

      What would your top 3 have been? I’ll likely make a follow up

  • @1kvkk
    @1kvkk Год назад

    Great

  • @abraxasjinx5207
    @abraxasjinx5207 Год назад

    "How to have thoughts about art in 20 easy steps"

  • @blmn564
    @blmn564 11 месяцев назад +1

    1969? Bruh your analysis should've discovered that Seven Samurai came out 1954 💀

  • @nl3064
    @nl3064 Год назад +1

    Dude, typo. Seven Samurai was 1954.

  • @dopedrip3491
    @dopedrip3491 Год назад

    fireeee

  • @villain7140
    @villain7140 Год назад +4

    How ironic for a video titled “film analysis” having the thumbnail of a Tarantino film

  • @1badjesus
    @1badjesus Год назад +1

    2:32 "(NOLAN'S) MASTERPIECE WAS INTERSTELLAR" ... bummer.. up till that unfortunate opinion I was sold on the channel.

  • @pipper4747
    @pipper4747 11 месяцев назад

    Ive never understood why people like Interstellar so much

  • @ZSG92
    @ZSG92 Год назад

    This video had me till he said Nolan’s masterpiece is interstellar

  • @pablosanchez7217
    @pablosanchez7217 Год назад

    si le pides que intente no mencionar un film estadounidense explota

  • @stormfangbro
    @stormfangbro Год назад +1

    I just wanted to say
    Hi

    • @TheMediaInsider
      @TheMediaInsider  Год назад +2

      Into the unknoooooown

    • @stormfangbro
      @stormfangbro Год назад +1

      How wude

    • @stormfangbro
      @stormfangbro Год назад +1

      Into the known section of media studies with your friendly neighbourhood insider

  • @jaysonp9426
    @jaysonp9426 Год назад +4

    You literally took "the male gaze" from Rear Window 🙄 also Snow Piercer was trash.

    • @denniszenanywhere
      @denniszenanywhere Год назад +2

      I agree that Snowpiercer is not as good, perhaps Bong's worst film. It's in Parasite that Bong finally figured out how to fully convey his message about social classes more effectively.

  • @burieddreamer
    @burieddreamer Год назад +1

    Seriously though... 2001: A Space Odyssey is a massive waste of time! Most overrated junk ever! It has the slowest scenes ever, it's slow and boring and dull and the story goes nowhere and ends up in an absurd gargantuan baby floating in space with zero context to explain it. As a narrative, it's not good. It will never be good. Everyone knows it's not good, but they have an emperor's clothes attitude towards it. Anyone saying it's good is either high on drugs or is trying to prove something.

  • @MrGadfly772
    @MrGadfly772 11 месяцев назад

    I'm happy that I have seen many of these films, but saddened that Tarantino is in here. I understand that you like him but I can't stand the way he markets cynicism to an already cynical audience.

  • @ayushpratapsingh50
    @ayushpratapsingh50 Год назад +1

    Tarintino

  • @gonzogil123
    @gonzogil123 2 месяца назад

    Some input. Dont want this on my feed. It all denotes their places of inscription. All of them their proper nouns. Their proper nouns. There is nothing nor other things being said. "Of all time" is something that does hold in their proper noun sense.

  • @monb.2017
    @monb.2017 Год назад +1

    in 20 minutes

  • @busterstutts9849
    @busterstutts9849 6 месяцев назад

    Hollywoods done

  • @Zeropadd
    @Zeropadd Год назад

    💓

  • @gavinritchie649
    @gavinritchie649 Год назад +1

    Little bit patronising and sounds like a regurgitation of some university Film Media course. Get a copy of Bordwell and Thomson instead.

  • @StudioAlternatif
    @StudioAlternatif 9 месяцев назад

    grave of the fire flies is not an anti war film at all

  • @toddboothbee1361
    @toddboothbee1361 Год назад

    I've known more than a few women how possessed the male gaze. And men who have the female gaze.

  • @metalhead3568
    @metalhead3568 Год назад +1

    if you over analyse sum youi will destry it

  • @Shourya_Pathak_
    @Shourya_Pathak_ Год назад +10

    Interstellar is not a masterpiece in any sense of the world. Love can travel through time and space bullshit, to bad exposition scenes to explain basic stuffs to non-science background people to a poem being repeated a dozen times, in certain timestamps, it becomes unwatchable. I am not being harsh but for me Dunkirk, The Prestige, Dark Knight, Inception, and especially Memento are way superior pieces of cinema.

    • @TheMediaInsider
      @TheMediaInsider  Год назад +10

      Not harsh at all - everyone is entitled to their opinion! I love everything Nolan has ever made, but for me, Interstellar communicated some huge ideas and used every aspect of the medium - music, cinematography, performance - to convey the relationship between him and his daughter so well. II think it really spoke to me as a Dad as well as a film fan.

    • @classic_movie_trailers
      @classic_movie_trailers Год назад +2

      Film appreciation is as subjective as there are personality types. We all see things a bit differently. What is a masterpiece to someone is not liked at all by someone else.@@TheMediaInsider

  • @ColeSmithey
    @ColeSmithey Год назад +1

    Say "literally" one more time.

  • @Adssso101
    @Adssso101 Год назад +1

    Bro be like: "I'll show you how to learn film analysis.
    But I'll just name a 20 films and vaguely describe what tropes are they most known for, with zero to little analysis of my own."
    Most of the people already know those movies and probably why they are special, with better knowledge about it than described. What a bore.

  • @bobbyjames5327
    @bobbyjames5327 Год назад +1

    Of course, how irresponsible can this Originalist be. I apologize. ..dob1945usaDOC..

  • @pabloco3257
    @pabloco3257 Год назад +1

    clickbait

  • @paulbrady5259
    @paulbrady5259 Год назад +2

    Mate if you’re going to put up film analysis reduce it to a few and expand. Your content on each of these movies is very sparse. Very disappointing. I only comment constructively hoping you’ll listen and try do more dense content. For instance a whole episode dedicated to Psycho would be better than the sparse 20.

    • @TheMediaInsider
      @TheMediaInsider  Год назад +4

      Thanks for the feedback: I suppose my argument would be that this is very light touch as it’s intended as a jumping on point for new film analysts. I totally agree that each of these films deserves a 15 minute analysis, but those are different videos. Check out my video analysis of Burch Cassidy and the sundance kid - I think that’s more what you were looking for. Thanks for watching and leaving feedback.

    • @classic_movie_trailers
      @classic_movie_trailers Год назад

      Agree - this is not intended to be an in depth analysis - it is an introduction to analysis using a non-definitive selection of films - we can all list hundreds of favourite films. And each one of those can take hours of analysis. Can't see how there are complaints about this video.@@TheMediaInsider

  • @lipan2757
    @lipan2757 11 месяцев назад +1

    Disagree and dislike your content. Disliked and unrecommended your channel.