I'm not denying there aren't bad movies. I'm just saying that we don't remember the bad ones from decades ago.CoCage said:I gotta agree with Agema to some extent. In my case, actions films peeked in 80s and 90s. The early 2000s is where the genre starts to falter. First, you had everyone and their grandmother copying or doing a "parody" of the Matrix. Even the franchise itself was chasing its own tail with the crappy sequels. Bullet time became old hat by the time 2006 rolled around, unless you're playing video games (that came with its own problems too later). Second, the biggest issue was The Bourne Supremacy, anything Michael Bay did, and Saving Private Ryan to a lesser extent. Everyone was copying Bourne and doing the whole shaky cam to an even worse degree. With more quick cutting and hap hazard editing than Bay admitted himself that we wouldn't fucking do. I was never a hardcore Bourne fan, but I think the trilogy as a whole is just okay; with the Identity being the best one. Legacy should have been its own movie, and the newest entry just flat out sucked. I don't know how a friend of mine or my family enjoyed that piece of trash.trunkage said:Strongly disagree. I remember things like Commando and Missing in Action. Die Hard and Robocop have aged but are still okay. As bad as action movies are now, they were nowhere near as bad as the former.Agema said:Personally, I think action movies peaked in the 1980s: none of that ultra fast-cutting and CGI bullshit to save the directors the effort of creating proper thrills the hard way.Samtemdo8 said:I generally prefer War Battles over Action Hero fights. But combine them both and you get 300, and I still watch 300 for the action from time to time
I think this comes with distance from that time too. We forget about all those awful movies and just remember the good ones. It seems like it was a good decade if you don't remember the crap
Not only standard action films suffered from this, but spy thrillers or action thrillers as a whole: Salt, Bond'a Quantum of Solace, Taken (the shaky cam gets worse in each installment), Crank 2, and Transporter 3. Oh my God, American action movies suffered so much from this after Bourne originally finished up. It took until like 2013/2014 for non-superhero action films to stop doing this, but even some recent superhero films suffer from quick cut editing too. See some scenes in Civil War if you don't know what I am talking about. Movies like Skyfall, John Wick, The Kingsman, and Ninja 2: Shadow of Tear Showed you don't need any of that stupid bullshit for "realism" or to hide to fact you don't know how to do an action scene. With this, and stuff like Atomic Blonde and the recent Mission Impossible, Hollywood will hire more competent action directors and stunt coordinators. And if you are going to di shaky cam do it fucking right like the Raid movies.
See my points:
Watch this guys stuff, if you're into action films.
Also, I felt Skyfall and John Wick were pretty uninteresting. So I probably have no taste or whatever. I stopped watching James Bond after that movie. But then the Cainso Royale from last decade is the only James Bond worth watching. QoS was pretty lacklustre and Skyfall being legit bad. I don't know why John Widk is held up as good. Watching it once for me. That was enough. I prefer to see Bright again. (Another lacklustre movie that had far more intersesting things going on the John Wick. But that's a low bar, tbh.)