I see where he's coming from and understand what he means. Digital certainly has a place and some films undoubtedly benefit from it, but film has a unique look to it. I watched the Hobbit in digital, IMAX, 3D, HFR and didn't like the look of it, at all.
Until I recently left my job at a secondary school, in which one of my responsibilities was working with students taking the Media Studies course, one of the lessons I led discussed this issue. One student years ago asked what it was that made a film look like a film in the cinema and why we couldn't replicate it easily. The answer of course, was that there are many reasons for the look, including costume, make up, set design, lighting and so on, but the format...35mm film @ 24 fps does have a certain look and feel that is *quintessential* cinematic. Consider the spaghetti westerns, even Star Wars (original vs. prequel trilogies) and the "analogue" is much more engaging and thrilling than the digital.
I don't think it's the death of cinema, but it is certainly a downturn. We get very little great films now, instead we're treated to visual spectacles, reboots, retreads and everything made for 12A/PG13 or lower. The number of adult films is tiny and, what I think Tarantino is getting at, is that there's an awful lot more style over substance now.
Tanis said:
It's like the music 'purists' who claim record, with their pin and needle, had the best quality for sound.
Not only is it wrong, it's usually 'justified' by ignorant statements on how music is recorded and mastered in the first place.
Firstly, in matters of opinion, there is no right or wrong. Also, tho my ears cannot tell the difference, I appreciate the opinion of those with ears that can. Records do have a different sound than CD and with music being "analogue", being stored in an analogue format without lossy digital conversions, mastering and what not changing the sound, I can see where they are coming from. The reason live music is so popular, apart from the atmosphere of being in an appreciative audience, is the pure, undiluted sound. You get every nuance of organic music-making and hear it just the way it is. There is something to be said for that compared with the digitally mastered studio tracks and records offer a similar, truer sound compared with their digital cousins.
Labelling people "ignorant" when they, hobbyists of the truest sort, have actually spent time and money on every available option to hear for themselves what sounds best and decided based on their own experiences, is laughable and itself displays great ignorance. These folks are passionate and committed to enjoying music and if *they* say something sounds better, I'm more inclined to believe them than you.