matrixschmatrix wrote:knives wrote:
Arrested Development was in development long before Tenenbaums was made and it seems only coincidence to me.
Wikipedia links an interview that says the initial discussions for the show didn't start until the summer 2002, which seems like exactly the right time for
Tenenbaums to be particularly influential.
Mitchell Hurwitz had definitely seen
The Royal Tenenbaums when he created the final form of Arrested Development. He had come up with a similar idea around the same time, but tweaked it because of its similarity to
Tenenbaums.
Jason Bateman later described the show as "
The Royal Tenenbaums shot like COPS." There is a
piece here detailing the various connections.
oldsheperd wrote:Tarantino has really pigeon holed himself by the aesthetics everyone comes to expect in his movies. In my opinion that prevents him from moving up to a PT Anderson or David Fincher. I think those two, along with Wes Anderson could be considered *shudders* "auteurs" because they have themes running through their output. Tarantino is not quite there yet. Another thing that I think holds Tarantino back from being in the forefront of directing talents is that he's not a risk taker. He basically puts all the same elements into his films that one comes to expect Tarantino to deliver in all of his films.
The term "auteur" does not carry implications of "good" or "bad," it simply implies that the director is the primary author of the work -- that his style and sensibilities are evident from one film to the next. That's more true of Tarantino than it is just about anyone. Almost all of his films are about retribution on some level (overtly on the last five). His dialog, music use, pop-culture references, and mise en scéne are all pretty identifiable too. If you had never heard of
Django Unchained before, and I showed it too you without the director credit, I think you would know exactly who made it -- probably within the first five minutes. That's an auteur.
EDIT: While I was composing that, Knives and Matrix said pretty much the exact same thing.