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Casting Dead Actors Via CGI is Unethical and Disrespectful

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            In November 2019, it was announced that the late James Dean had been “cast” in the Vietnam War drama Finding Jack . The reactions were negative, but this isn’t the first time Hollywood has resurrected a dead actor for their own purposes such as Audrey Hepburn in an advertisement or Peter Cushing in Rogue One: A Star Wars Story . What’s so laughable about the “casting” of James Dean is that it is for a role in a film about a war that he didn’t even live through; the Vietnam War began in November of 1955, just two months after Dean’s tragic and untimely death. This recent controversy opens up a conversation about the ethics of subsequently resurrecting the dead. James Dean as Jim Stark in Rebel Without a Cause (1955)             Many actors spoke up against this casting choice, namely Elijah Wood who very succinctly tweeted, “NOPE. This should not be a thing.” The visceral reactio...

Why So Blue; Or, How Color Helps Film Tell Its Emotional Story

            In order to make a film, many different creative minds must come together. One of the most underrated and important jobs done on any film set comes from the mind of the cinematographer—head of the camera and lighting crews that is responsible for the overall visual aesthetic. One job of the cinematographer is to decide a film or television show’s color grading, or color palette, which is enhanced in post-production. The colors that are chosen at this moment are not only important to the overall visual aesthetic, but also to the emotions they might add to enrich the narrative. Based on color theory, color psychology, and film theory, the specific color that is used in a film conveys a particular emotion that serves the story; furthermore, to fully explore the usage of colors, one must look at a select number of films with distinct color palettes to understand what they add to the emotional and thematic atmosphere.     ...

How Seriously Should We Continue to Take the Oscars?

            The Academy Awards, otherwise known as the Oscars, are some of the highest honors for technical and artistic merit in the film industry. They are an opportunity for international recognition of distinction in cinematic achievements. Despite its 90 years of existence, however, their merits have often come into question. One begins to wonder just how seriously we should continue to take the Oscars.             Recently, actress Carey Mulligan said, “Maybe you shouldn’t be allowed to vote unless you can prove you’ve seen every single one. There should be a test.” She makes this argument because she, like most viewers, believes all of these movies deserve an equal chance to prove why they were nominated in the first place and why they deserve to win. They all have their own merits that make them unique and commendable. One can't fairly decide which film is the most deserving if they chose to...