When Directors Go To The Absolute Extreme

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  • Опубліковано 29 тра 2024
  • When a director gets a bit too much creative freedom or budget. Sometimes, things can get a little out of hand. In this video we're gonna to take a look at the times when directors went to the absolute extreme in order to create groundbreaking cinema. I made a tier list of the most extreme directors of all time. From Stanley Kubrick's insane perfectionism to Coppola’s disastrous production of Apocalypse Now. And Christopher Nolan capturing a nuclear explosion for Oppenheimer. Sit back and relax, because what you’re about to witness is the literal peak of cinema.
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    0:00 Most Extreme Directors of All Time
    0:50 James Cameron
    1:47 Christopher Nolan
    5:04 Alfred Hitchcock
    5:52 Francis Ford Coppola
    7:32 Wes Anderson
    8:32 Alejandro Jodorowsky
    9:32 Quentin Tarantino
    10:19 Lars von Trier
    11:01 Elem Klimov (Come and See)
    12:22 Stanley Kubrick
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    Maya Belsitzman - The Day After Tomorrow
    Oran Loyfer - Leaving Home
    Charlie Ryan - Tiki Panjandrum's Worse Nightmare
    Mozart - Piano Sonata no. 11, K. 331 - III. Alla Turca
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    #oppenheimer #christophernolan #stanleykubrick
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  • @DuCinema1
    @DuCinema1  Рік тому +379

    Who would you add to the list? Write them down below!

    • @ryennfilms6429
      @ryennfilms6429 Рік тому

      Gualtiero jacopetti and Franco prosperi are definitely the craziest, most extreme directors. In goodbye uncle tom they went to Haiti made a deal with the dictator, to basically own slaves for the shoot, it’s really fucked up and inspired movies like cannibal holocaust.

    • @desmond9945
      @desmond9945 11 місяців тому +14

      You

    • @SuperBarytone
      @SuperBarytone 11 місяців тому +14

      David Lynch

    • @VunderGuy
      @VunderGuy 11 місяців тому +1

      I'd add you using the decimal comma and thousands point in English as one of the biggest cases of a creative going to far.

    • @F4Insight-uq6nt
      @F4Insight-uq6nt 11 місяців тому

      New Clear Weapons Do Not Exist.

  • @n1kolodian
    @n1kolodian Рік тому +7189

    Nolan didn't use an actual nuke for Oppenheimer. It was TNT equivalent explosives, and on a much smaller scale than the actual Trinity test. He did get permission to light off some pretty big explosions out there in the Nevada desert, but nothing as big as the real thing, and especially not radioactive.

    • @conducter6381
      @conducter6381 Рік тому +8

      Legalize nuclear bombs

    • @lordfrz9339
      @lordfrz9339 Рік тому +365

      He right though by using actual explosions you can enhance that with cgi and keep it looking real.

    • @n1kolodian
      @n1kolodian Рік тому +257

      @@lordfrz9339 Agreed. The practical effects are far more genuine.

    • @MrSarcasm101
      @MrSarcasm101 Рік тому +52

      I'm going to tell you something about "the real thing".
      Explosions come from a chemical reaction. A matter turns into another that occupies a bigger volume and it explodes.
      A nuclear reaction releases energy in the form of heat, light and radiation. Atoms are splitting. No volume expansion, no chock wave.

    • @ContentCreature
      @ContentCreature Рік тому +185

      @@ravanjock Dude is kinda right tho, Nukes definitely do not have a "chock wave"

  • @bernie_san7964
    @bernie_san7964 Рік тому +2373

    Legend has it, Chistopher Nolan built a literal time machine and recorded the bomb testings himself!

    • @CasualNerdReactions
      @CasualNerdReactions Рік тому +18

      That checks out.

    • @manannaik1341
      @manannaik1341 Рік тому +38

      Don’t give him ideas man

    • @casualdude9995
      @casualdude9995 11 місяців тому +25

      and destroyed the time machine so that no one could do that again!

    • @blackdynamite_5470
      @blackdynamite_5470 11 місяців тому +18

      Honestly if someone told me Christopher Nolan did this, it wouldn't surprise me.
      The guy is obsessed with time

    • @fulconandroadcone9488
      @fulconandroadcone9488 10 місяців тому +5

      What do you think how Tenet was made, and more importantly, why?

  • @joaquimqueiroz9714
    @joaquimqueiroz9714 Рік тому +2900

    Loved the video, but I would include Tarkovsky in the list. He utilized 2 helicopters for a scene where wind blows in a field, he burned a wooden house twice because the first time it didn't burn for 8 minutes and 10 seconds, and his filming of Stalker caused him, his actor and his wife to contract lung cancer (of which he died 7 years later). The man is my favorite director, and he went real far to turn his visions a reality.

    • @pdzombie1906
      @pdzombie1906 Рік тому +129

      I agree, both as my favorite director and extreme methods. But, just to be clear, he had to burn down the house a second time at the end of The Sacrifice because the camera run out of film. And he shot Stalker twice because the original film was ruined in the laboratory while developing (Of course, he didn't know that would make him or the people around him sick, I'm pretty sure he would have found different locations, with less contamination). Tarkovski truly gave his life and soul to the art of cinema, but these stories are about his resiliance, not his perfectionism. Thanx!

    • @joaquimqueiroz9714
      @joaquimqueiroz9714 Рік тому +13

      @@pdzombie1906 My bad, thanks for the info tho! Yeah, his films always hit a very personal spot in me that I don't find anywhere else

    • @flightographist
      @flightographist Рік тому +4

      He did, at the end and specifically stalker.

    • @RinostarGames
      @RinostarGames Рік тому +7

      Came to the comment section specifically to mention Stalker and Tarkovsky!

    • @pdzombie1906
      @pdzombie1906 Рік тому +6

      @@joaquimqueiroz9714 Me too. I feel Stalker is like Tarkovski's 81/2; the stalker is his alter ego taking our reason (scientist) and our heart (writer) in a spiritual journey to discover ourseleves... What the russian director did his entire career!!!

  • @justahuman6825
    @justahuman6825 Рік тому +965

    Nolan took ' Camera man never dies ' to next level

  • @thesunflowerdreamer9928
    @thesunflowerdreamer9928 Рік тому +993

    You forgot one great director: Werner Herzog, and his masterpiece Fitzcarraldo.

    • @DuCinema1
      @DuCinema1  Рік тому +166

      Had to stick to 10 otherwise I would have definitely added him

    • @glowingman
      @glowingman Рік тому +46

      Totally! I came here to write the same, I don’t really see anything about Tarantino in the theme of the video compared to Herzog, there’s even Burden of Dreams documentary to see explicitly what happen during the tortuous shooting of Fitzcarraldo

    • @karthikbaskar556
      @karthikbaskar556 Рік тому +8

      wasnt aguirre the wrath of god way better and way more troubled? i watched the first half of fitz and it just felt like aguirre but worse

    • @JeanMarcAbela
      @JeanMarcAbela Рік тому +16

      I was coming to write the same. Easily replace Tarantino with Herzog, who easily be top 3. Sure there is Fitzcarralso, but many more. He learned to hypnotized himself the entire cast except for the actor playing the hero in Heart of glass. His documentaries are similarly code breaking approaches.

    • @pdzombie1906
      @pdzombie1906 Рік тому +25

      Just for working and "controlling" madman Klaus Kinski, he deserves to be on the list...

  • @robbiedubbelman3024
    @robbiedubbelman3024 Рік тому +979

    These feats are incredible, but we shouldn't forget that there are a lot of horrible filmsets, stuck in production hell with awful directors that DON'T become masterpieces.
    So we shouldn't look at Kubrick and go "He was good because he was an impossible perfectionist." We should say: "He's good because he's Kubrick. Because he has that eye, that mind, that dedication. The desire to be perfectionistic was an extension of that. Not the origin of his greatness."

    • @reptongeek
      @reptongeek Рік тому +23

      Let's also not forget his final film took longer to shoot than The Dark Knight trilogy

    • @pdzombie1906
      @pdzombie1906 Рік тому +70

      Totally!!! Kubrick was a genius despite his madness, not because of it. Critics and public should stop romanticizing this!!

    • @Raage.
      @Raage. 10 місяців тому +2

      well put, sir.

    • @petercameron2137
      @petercameron2137 10 місяців тому +2

      Well said

    • @imnotakingimnotagodiam..ab9455
      @imnotakingimnotagodiam..ab9455 2 місяці тому +2

      EXACTLY. You don't need to give your crew literal Hell to create masterpieces

  • @catgirlmutant
    @catgirlmutant Рік тому +615

    my nomination: Wong Kar Wai.
    - Doesn't write scripts for his films
    - Everyone on set discovers the possibilities of staging, acting, lighting, camera placement etc etc
    - Could take his films in lots direction he wanted with the huge amounts of extra footage he shot, creates and fine-tunes the story he wants by cutting everything down in the editing room
    - Finished editing his magnum opus, In the Mood for Love, right before Cannes
    - Wins Palm d'Or from that film and Tony Leung wins best actor for his performance in that film

    • @DuCinema1
      @DuCinema1  Рік тому +58

      + Christopher Doyle as a peak cinematographer. Great addition 🙏

    • @catgirlmutant
      @catgirlmutant Рік тому +16

      @@DuCinema1 yessssss imo his style is somehow so chaotic yet so poetic at the same time

    • @DuCinema1
      @DuCinema1  Рік тому +9

      @@catgirlmutant 100%%

    • @YaBoiDoi
      @YaBoiDoi Рік тому +6

      Feels like a green text

    • @justs_
      @justs_ 10 місяців тому +3

      @@catgirlmutantdude’s films are also praised by Tarantino, takes a great to know another

  • @Baker_king12
    @Baker_king12 10 місяців тому +109

    It’s like the joke that Stanley Kubrick was selected to film the moon landings but was such a perfectionist that he insisted it be shot on location.

  • @Gearparadummies
    @Gearparadummies Рік тому +1011

    "Come and See" is the ultimate war movie. It's so horrifying most people don't finish it and those who do watch it only once. A lot of the cast and crew had combat experience, from WW2 to Afghanistan. They used live ammunition, real artillery shells and placed the actors as close to the action as possible. Some of them got PTSD from the experience.

    • @davidlevy4291
      @davidlevy4291 Рік тому +64

      Masterpiece. I don't think i have the strength to watch it again.

    • @lawrence-yx1ew
      @lawrence-yx1ew Рік тому +1

      Shut up. " Most people never finish it" the movie is good but goddamn it's so overhyped online you guys are so lame for cockriding this movie so hard

    • @OzymandiasFact
      @OzymandiasFact 10 місяців тому

      Literally staged a war 💀

    • @Flahtort
      @Flahtort 10 місяців тому +32

      It's so horrifying that i didnt want to watch it only after reading descriprion and story.

    • @eskillmo3187
      @eskillmo3187 10 місяців тому +1

      Threads any one?

  • @katlegomonyane3013
    @katlegomonyane3013 Рік тому +223

    She wasn't acting, she was reacting 💀

  • @RedN3ctar
    @RedN3ctar 10 місяців тому +319

    Sometimes the end doesnt justify the means. And how Stanley treated Shelley was despicable!

    • @breacarlson2075
      @breacarlson2075 5 місяців тому +39

      Exactly, I agree. He treated her horribly. What an ass.

    • @Sharktoplasm
      @Sharktoplasm 4 місяці тому +13

      Duvall said she likes him both as a director and person, learned a lot as well. Stanley Kubrick is the BEST DIRECTOR OF ALL TIME, maybe not necessarily the best person, but the best director!

    • @rks5457
      @rks5457 3 місяці тому +12

      I did PA work a few times mostly to see how it would be and to help some friends out. Worked with a few of the biggest directors and I gotta say the younger generation has mostly thrown away all that BS passionate madman asshole artist archetype which I believe is a good thing. I've worked with an old gen commercial director who was at the top of the game and he tried to talk shit to me and get all in my face and I turned and walked a bit out of earshot in the middle of his bitching and told him to come over. I calmly looked him dead in the eyes and told him that, unlike the other crew, I have zero skin in this game, this is NOT my career and people like me should be the LAST people you talk shit to. I thought he was goin to yell at security to kick me out but he didn't say a word. he just turned around and started talking to 1st AD about the next shot. He left me alone after that and it was just the 1st and 2nd AD who resumed giving production orders (that's how it usually goes). He turned the shit talking onto the actors and set design for some fuckin reason the next day.
      Like I understand that time is money, it's difficult to direct all this entire production and all these people, but to me, the whole film/tv/commercial production culture gets toxic when it absolutely doesnt have to be. That shitty behavior trickles down to where everybody becomes an asshole and people end up hating their jobs. but it's worth it bc you worked on this or that. Theres a never ending supply of production crew members in LA but I believe the ones that get called back the most are the ones that can handle the BS that goes with it. Bc believe me, I don't care if this is your career, the work done on most sets is pretty fuckin basic unless you have a uniquely creative role. I rigged, ran grip, put up sets, crafty, did sound and all kindsa shit with ZERO experience and got told I did a great job each time. I feel like it's 99% being able to handle the BS. other PAs and managers I worked with for two weeks would call me back because I'd try to make the shit fun while everybody else seemed like they had to be a depressed butthole to focus and work. Even got accused of being high because I was having a good time 😂.
      Anyways, I doubt anybody read that but if you worked a bit in production you might know what I'm talking about.

    • @breacarlson2075
      @breacarlson2075 3 місяці тому

      @rks5457 I read it, but I have no idea what it's like to work in production movies, tv all that. Sounds super stressful.

  • @JohnDlugosz
    @JohnDlugosz Рік тому +285

    I would nominate _Apollo 13_ for your list. Ron Howard wanted to show the zero-g environment with actual zero-g, not wires or lame tricks. Not being practical to film it in orbit, he built the set in an airplane that flies parabolic arcs to give 30 seconds of weightlessness at a time. The original plane that did this (for training) was nicknamed the "Vomit Comet", and that's stuck as a generic name for such flights.

  • @PedroBarbosa-hu8qw
    @PedroBarbosa-hu8qw Рік тому +43

    Werner Herzog would look at most of these directors ambitions and say "pathetic" with that sweet german accent

  • @gblatt8472
    @gblatt8472 Рік тому +31

    Kurosawa - Shoots dozens of real arrows inches from the lead actor. They keep making movies together.
    Herzog - think of every crazy story you've ever heard from his films. The time he ate his shoe. The time he jumped into a cactus patch. The time he hauled a real boat over a mountain and several people died. The time he got shot during an interview and continued the interview. He's an open book for all of it, but know there's an unreleased Herzog film where something so extreme happened that he refuses to talk about it and burned the footage.

    • @opentls
      @opentls 4 місяці тому +2

      The time Herzog had to speak french to communicate with some child soldiers that held him captive - and he regrets it (the speaking french part).

  • @kickass1179
    @kickass1179 10 місяців тому +54

    I believe Alfonso Cuarón did an amazing job in Children Of Men. One of the last scenes was INSANE, with the tanks and all...

    • @eduardosturla
      @eduardosturla 10 місяців тому +3

      Yes. Honorable mentions should go to Cuaron, Alejandro González Iñarritu and Terry Gilliam. Lots of great directors, the terrible, madmen-cruel dictators of contemporary vistual arts.

  • @thegrandaviator8308
    @thegrandaviator8308 Рік тому +63

    Sergei Bondarchuk needs a mention. He directed Waterloo (1970) which used no CGI at all and gives you an authentic look of the real battle. You also have to remember it was made in 1970. The Soviet Army also provided 17000 soldiers as extras dressed in historical uniforms for the movies. They used real horses and gunpowder+blanks to shoot.

  • @grimsyx6225
    @grimsyx6225 Рік тому +146

    Apocalypse Now is by far my favorite movie. Everything about it just feels so right. They might've gone through hell to film it, but they truly represented the hell of the Vietnam war very accurately.

  • @YaBoiDoi
    @YaBoiDoi Рік тому +866

    That bit with Nolan made me laugh out loud. I deadass cannot believe he did not Cgi the explosions at all.
    Sure he might have used a smaller scale explosive but still.

    • @glmstudiogh
      @glmstudiogh Рік тому +38

      well, let's all wait till the film comes out and bang!!! nomination for best VFX

    • @johnxina5126
      @johnxina5126 Рік тому +25

      @Jurgen van Gestel obviously it's not a nuke but still choosing to film a real explosion(as small as it may be) rather then just using cgi is pretty crazy.

    • @zombiebiker5581
      @zombiebiker5581 Рік тому

      Won’t be nuclear, as there is ground/air burst treaty ban.
      I think it’s a replica casing with TNT/NITRO ,overlaid real original test film.

    • @estidi
      @estidi Рік тому +16

      Please. Michael Bay uses large scale explosives all the time and noone bats an eye. Nolan use a small grenade and suddenly people go all crazy.

    • @YaBoiDoi
      @YaBoiDoi Рік тому +38

      @@estidi he dropped a plane from the sky and crashed a plane into a building.
      And then he said "there were big logistical challenges"
      What the FUCK are we expecting, a small grenade?

  • @KatsuraKotonohaKuroki
    @KatsuraKotonohaKuroki 11 місяців тому +40

    Imagine Nolan directing a world disaster movie 💀

  • @jebbroham1776
    @jebbroham1776 Рік тому +55

    Come and See really is actually the most hardcore, realistic war movie of the Eastern Front ever made. Like he said, all of the war scenes used live ammunition and it beats even Stalingrad (1993) for most accurate depiction of real world events in Russia.

  • @igxniisan6996
    @igxniisan6996 10 місяців тому +9

    I can already hear him say, “CUTTT!! YOU CALL THIS A NUKE!? DO IT AGAIN PROPERLY!!”

  • @trongtin7754
    @trongtin7754 Рік тому +13

    But where is Werner Herzog
    The guy who dragged a boat through Amazon forest in Fitzcarraldo

  • @CineMiamParis
    @CineMiamParis 6 місяців тому +12

    David Lean used firefighter planes to drop literal tons of paint on dunes in the Sahara desert. They were reflecting the sun too much. He had a whole historical monastery painted pink. And that’s just for one film, Lawrence of Arabia. More of the same on the sets of Zhivago, Ryan’s Daughter, etc.
    Of course I’ll second nominating Herzog, Tarkowski and Keaton. But Lean is, I feel, slowly fading out of memory and I think that’s a pity.

  • @hefeydd_
    @hefeydd_ 10 місяців тому +14

    I already know about what Jim Cameron did in filming Titanic by not telling his cast what he was going to do in a scene. In Titanic, he told them the water would be lukewarm and not to worry and just act shocked when the water hits them. But it wasn't lukewarm water it was freezing cold water to catch that realistic look of shock on Kate Winslet’s face and it paid off in that scene.

  • @Mightydoggo
    @Mightydoggo 10 місяців тому +32

    Nolan is that kind of guy that disregards VFX for being fake but still falls for TV commercials.
    Still massively impressive what he did though.

  • @NotDyllian
    @NotDyllian Рік тому +15

    hahahaha his face at 2:00 when Christopher Nolan is showing him the plane crashing model

  • @paulmichaelfreedman8334
    @paulmichaelfreedman8334 10 місяців тому +13

    Nolan: "Let's drop a real nuke to make it as realistic as possible"
    Kubrick:"Let's go to the Moon and shoot the hoax shots there to make it as realistic as possible. "

  • @tymewiz806
    @tymewiz806 10 місяців тому +19

    my god you didn't mention the 1981 film Roar by Noah Marshall? pitting real lions against the actors is definitely insane enough to deserve a spot on this list

    • @A_Ducky
      @A_Ducky 5 місяців тому +3

      10 years it took for that madness to be filmed + disfiguring Melanie Griffith's face by her own mother who put her in that film as a child. Insane!

  • @pranavhb1716
    @pranavhb1716 Рік тому +9

    Okay the nuke had been detonated lets go home
    Nolan : i missed the shot retake
    Explosion expert : 💀💀💀

  • @Sharpe1502
    @Sharpe1502 10 місяців тому +84

    A director was literally using real bullets to make his movie more authentic and you put Kubrick over him? I’m gonna go on a limb and say that even Kubrick would’ve been like, “That’s too far man.”

    • @Brainbaskit
      @Brainbaskit 5 місяців тому +7

      Real bullets is just bullshit, it is unethical as a director to endanger the lives of your crew and talent: negligence doesn't equal madman production values, it equals go to prison when someone gets shot. 126 takes however, for just one scene, that is some extreme shit.

    • @rexibhazoboa7097
      @rexibhazoboa7097 5 місяців тому +1

      @@Brainbaskit 'if' someone gets shot. No one got shot so idk why you used 'when'

    • @Riken
      @Riken 4 місяці тому

      Yeah but the director literally fought against the Germans and witnessed the atrocities that both warring factions committed as a kid. You think he's going to hold back on a film to express his point to an audience. If youve seen come and see you'll understand, this isn't a Hollywood WW2 film. It's a Eastern European (Belarusian) psych horror film based in reality

  • @EdMorbius46
    @EdMorbius46 Рік тому +27

    Thanks for this, and your examples were well-chosen.
    Of the omissions, WERNER HERTZOG certainly has my vote and seems to be the one most frequently offered in the comments.
    Another big omission is from the silent era. What about BUSTER KEATON? Most of his excesses were inflicted on himself. But the standout would be The General. Yes, David Lean also crashed a real locomotive. but that was under quite controlled conditions in the desert, with multiple cameras. Keaton did it first, off a bridge into a ravine with river below. He used one camera and there was no chance of a reshoot! In terms of OCD, he was up there with the best, but got there first. 🙂

    • @bikjers
      @bikjers Рік тому +1

      Yes, I second to this. The whole story if Fitzgerald was crazy.

  • @mariost772
    @mariost772 10 місяців тому +19

    Aki Kaurismaki for his raw realism in people. For making them extremely poor, both emotionally and most of the times financially but somehow still make them happy. It's wonderful how he works with people nad that is why he works with the same cast over and over.

  • @tapanjoshi7710
    @tapanjoshi7710 Рік тому +28

    You should definitly make a sequel to this.

  • @Bigmtj10678
    @Bigmtj10678 11 місяців тому +8

    A 13 year old boy who got traumatized through a movie

  • @VunderGuy
    @VunderGuy 11 місяців тому +30

    Your use of the thousands point and decimal comma in English in this video killed me more than Nolan's explosion would. Good job. Almost makes me forget that if I tried decimal points and thousands comma in French and German the governments of both countries would literally kill me even more. 👍

  • @wncryz
    @wncryz Рік тому +18

    I'd also say about Howard Hughes with his Hells angels then. Like this guy was waiting for months just for the right clouds on the sky. He also created tricks on a plane to do and after the pilots said its impossible he went in the sky by himself proofing it's actually imposs. He spent more than 2 million, which made it the most expensive movie at that time, and also he was making that movie 3 years in total just because he also decided when the movie was done that it musnt be silent, so spent a year more to add sound and change the main actress because she was talking terribly

    • @JohnDlugosz
      @JohnDlugosz Рік тому +1

      "proofing it's actually imposs" what happened, he couldn't do it either?

    • @wncryz
      @wncryz Рік тому

      @@JohnDlugosz yeah

  • @JoJoBeast
    @JoJoBeast Рік тому +15

    Akira Kurosawa may have been the greatest and most ballsy director ever

  • @tehstarwars1361
    @tehstarwars1361 Рік тому +21

    Where is Steven Spielberg, his creation of Jurassic park and Schindlers list at the same time is a a massive feat

  • @Cle_M3
    @Cle_M3 10 місяців тому +4

    14 hour dune is crazy, imagine going back to the theater every night of the week to finish the movie. 😂😂😂 should of shot it on 15/70mm too for extra effect holy shit

  • @edale2
    @edale2 11 місяців тому +32

    ....I'd watch a 14-hour adaptation of Dune in a heartbeat.

    • @veronicas19
      @veronicas19 11 місяців тому +2

      You have 14 hour long heartbeats?
      Lmao this is a joke lol

    • @edale2
      @edale2 11 місяців тому +1

      @@veronicas19 I go into some _very_ deep meditation. lol.

    • @caronstout354
      @caronstout354 10 місяців тому +1

      Nolan's Dune: shoots the desert scenes in Namibia and builds life-sized animatronic sandworms for correct line-of-sight reactions from the actors...

  • @sentinelsamurai
    @sentinelsamurai 10 місяців тому +7

    nolan isnt nuts, he's just ahead of the curve

  • @reagindoerindo4311
    @reagindoerindo4311 Рік тому +3

    3:10 The camera man!! HAHAHAHAHAHAHAH that got me laughing in tears. xDD

  • @AskingToAsk
    @AskingToAsk Рік тому +3

    11:57 bro went through the war and put his actors in the same position. That's some realism

  • @tommycoolatta6533
    @tommycoolatta6533 11 місяців тому +31

    Vince Gilligan seriously needs a place on this list. He got a DEA chemist to teach Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul how to make methamphetamine just for the show

    • @DuCinema1
      @DuCinema1  11 місяців тому +5

      damn that's a good one

  • @blitzgeography
    @blitzgeography Рік тому +6

    "Oops, I forgot to record!" 💀

  • @SlurpyPie
    @SlurpyPie 5 місяців тому +3

    Christopher Nolan knew the camera man couldn't die so he decided to go all out for the authenticity. Mad Respect.

  • @CreepersNeedHugs
    @CreepersNeedHugs 9 місяців тому +4

    8:47 imagine if this man's 14-hour Dune movie was made though

  • @Sirius_Jocking
    @Sirius_Jocking Рік тому +52

    My favourite spot to finding interesting films i've never heard of.
    Always so enjoyable to listen to
    Also, loving the change of pace on this one, keep up the great work

    • @DuCinema1
      @DuCinema1  Рік тому +5

      Thank you so much awesome to hear that🙏🙏

  • @captainbear6188
    @captainbear6188 Рік тому +9

    Cristopher Nolan probably used a Fuel Air Bomb. I have a feeling that the Air Force was more than happy to take part of the project, as they got to use one of their "special toys"
    This is a weapon that has a similar visual explosive signature as a Nuke, just without the radioactive fallout.

    • @paulmichaelfreedman8334
      @paulmichaelfreedman8334 10 місяців тому +1

      In other words, a MOAB, a device that disperses it's fuel charge first with a small burst without flames, and then a second charge ignites the fuel when it has formed a cloud mixed with air. Mother Of All (conventional) Bombs is the colloquial term.

  • @playwithvee9628
    @playwithvee9628 5 місяців тому +5

    It’s really amazing to see how talented these directors are at bringing their vision to life no matter the obstacle.

  • @JPkerVideo
    @JPkerVideo Рік тому +2

    Actor: "My body is literally breaking down under pressure..."
    Kubrick: "k"

  • @Eminentharp
    @Eminentharp Рік тому +2

    we have to remember Christopher Nolan sunk an entire destroyer to make Dunkirk, there he also, made a giant RC replica of a He-111, and crashed a spitfire model too

  • @skip1383
    @skip1383 Рік тому +3

    It’s crazy that movie studios are just allowed to aquire and blow off enough explosives to level a city

  • @spidscorp4523
    @spidscorp4523 Рік тому +28

    Damn, top notch as always. Every time I click on a video of yours, I never realise its from you, but then after I've watched a few minutes I realise I'm in for a treat. Keep up the great work!

    • @DuCinema1
      @DuCinema1  Рік тому +4

      Haha that's awesome, thank you 🙏🙏

  • @Kaotix_music
    @Kaotix_music 10 місяців тому +2

    "And for Interstaller...he ACTUALLY visited a Black Hole!" lmfaooo im done

  • @vladalexeev8529
    @vladalexeev8529 Рік тому +2

    "Come and see" is a masterpiece that you'll never watch for the 2nd time, as the first viewing is very traumatizing

  • @mattbellgottaring2it961
    @mattbellgottaring2it961 Рік тому +4

    Bro Nolan doesn't work with Warner bros anymore. He left after they messed up the release of tenet. He's with universal now. That's why openhemier is being released alongside barbie. It's a studio showdown. I enjoyed ur video though. I can understand the confusion though Nolan has been a household name for Warner bros. It's a shame they let him slip away.

  • @bluerdoll3460
    @bluerdoll3460 Рік тому +3

    "This is either madness or brilliance"-W.T.
    "It’s remarkable how often those two traits coincide."-Capt.J.S.

  • @eloahdali
    @eloahdali Місяць тому

    This literally made me cry, thank you. To give ourselves that much for art, what a weird little species we are. Weird, mad and beautiful.

  • @mr.0inker398
    @mr.0inker398 9 місяців тому +3

    *You already James Cameron going back to the Titanic to find the Titan 💀💀🤣🤣*

  • @JeffUseekay
    @JeffUseekay Рік тому +7

    Your videos are so amazing that they always make me crave for your analysis of one of my favourite directors, Takeshi Kitano. Fingers crossed!

  • @CuriousRobinKnows
    @CuriousRobinKnows Рік тому +8

    This video is excellent! Loved the ranking and humor.

  • @orange8420
    @orange8420 11 місяців тому +3

    Imagine visiting a black hole, crash a plane, drop a nuke because a CGI team is way more expensive

  • @325pm
    @325pm 10 місяців тому +3

    @3:04 Correction: Universal Studios let him use a nuke. Nolan left Warner Bros. a while back. Barbie is distributed by WB which makes me wonder if Barbie's release date was possibly WB's attempt to sabotage Oppenheimer's sales

  • @nerd26373
    @nerd26373 Рік тому +17

    Directors have a tendency to really go out of their ways to test their maximum capacities as they are. You can overcome limits if you're willing to put up with the obstacles that come along with it.

  • @sofiegoldie4861
    @sofiegoldie4861 8 місяців тому +6

    I love the little bits of comedy threw out your videos and the editing is amazing too.

    • @DuCinema1
      @DuCinema1  8 місяців тому

      I appreciate that!

  • @RedSuitGuy
    @RedSuitGuy 10 місяців тому +2

    Christopher Nolan’s gonna have to pull a “Legalize Nuclear Bombs” to make Oppenheimer.

  • @benwetzel8449
    @benwetzel8449 Рік тому +4

    How did you not bring up Buster Keaton, the man who broke his own neck in a movie he was not only directing, but starring in, completed the movie, and then never found out he broke his neck till 20 years later.

    • @caronstout354
      @caronstout354 10 місяців тому

      Or Harold Lloyd , who did all his own stunts while missing 3 fingers of his right hand...

  • @CallousCoder
    @CallousCoder Рік тому +8

    I adore Russian films. They are so gritty and grounded. And what they do with 20 million dollars looks like a 150 million dollar American movie but then with soul and emotion.

  • @325pm
    @325pm 10 місяців тому +5

    This was a good video! I very much enjoyed the humor in this as well!

  • @patduss174
    @patduss174 4 місяці тому +1

    Not putting WERNER HERZOG on this list is criminal. Not only for his whole work, but specifically for Burden of Dreams, which makes Heart of Darkness look like a walk in the park.

  • @gedalyahreback2133
    @gedalyahreback2133 Рік тому +2

    Holy shit, Nolan didn't drop a nuke 😂. That meme video really got people.

  • @sikliztailbunch
    @sikliztailbunch Рік тому +4

    I could imagine Gaspar Noe to be an honorable mention here as well

    • @DuCinema1
      @DuCinema1  Рік тому +3

      1000% I actually met him in Amsterdam. Great guy

  • @tor-keeby4401
    @tor-keeby4401 10 місяців тому +5

    James Cameron's 12 times trip to the Titanic did NOT age well

  • @CBright7831
    @CBright7831 10 місяців тому +2

    I guess it’s good that Nolan never directed a Superman movie because he would’ve actually figured out a way to make a human being fly through the air without any CGI, green screen, or wire tricks.

  • @franco7351
    @franco7351 Рік тому +2

    *Drops nuke*
    Camera man: Oh shoot my lens cap was on

  • @miou118google
    @miou118google 11 місяців тому +3

    Great video, very respectful of the work of those incredible Directors

  • @johnwatson3948
    @johnwatson3948 Рік тому +4

    Nolan wants to get everything historically correct - except for showing scientists assembling the bomb with explosive blocks that don’t weigh very much and without the chain hoist and suction cups they actually had to use. Note the Trinity test was not at Los Alamos but 200 miles south.

  • @Ezraaaaaaaaaaaa
    @Ezraaaaaaaaaaaa 10 місяців тому +2

    3:50 GOT ME ROLLING

  • @iv1223
    @iv1223 Рік тому +1

    love the editing on this, great work

  • @RedIvation
    @RedIvation 10 місяців тому +3

    I cant wait whenChristopher Nolan makes a Zombie apocalypse movie.

  • @funtimedavi
    @funtimedavi 10 місяців тому +3

    He wasn’t crazy of going on the Titan Submarine that time.

  • @BL00DYME55
    @BL00DYME55 9 місяців тому +1

    When I saw "more feet" on the tier list, I instantly knew Tarantino is gonna be on there lol

  • @DrDeuteron
    @DrDeuteron Рік тому +2

    Nolan's blackhole visualization was 100% Kip Thorne's... but give the man credit for hiring him.

  • @viiking01
    @viiking01 Рік тому +3

    One should look no further than the appendices in Lord of the Rings Extended Edition to see that Peter Jackson would be sitting nicely among many of these people.

  • @charliesieben5695
    @charliesieben5695 Рік тому +4

    Having Tarantino on a list about pushing the limit and not mentioning Werner Herzhog?! If anything thats the most intense director that really takes it to the extreme. Tarantino merely brought the violence from asian cinema to the US. Hertzhog made Fittzgeraldo. And what about Kurrosawa? Not only did he shoot actual arrows at a wooden board attached to his main actors chest in Ran. Kurosawa also built all of mideval Edo and had his actors live in the built city for two years before filming Red Beard.

  • @user-qb5wg5zy7j
    @user-qb5wg5zy7j Рік тому +2

    Mad respect for adding "Come and see" so many people don't appreciate it enough!

  • @1_queen_fan313
    @1_queen_fan313 Рік тому +2

    Nolan also planted 500 acres of corn for Interstellar because, well he's Christopher Nolan.

  • @benjaminlivingston9706
    @benjaminlivingston9706 Рік тому +6

    I believe John Landis had a perfectionist view of his work for a while until the helicopter accident on the set of Twilight Zone: The Movie (or he kept that view despite his films getting worse over time).

  • @Me-fl2xt
    @Me-fl2xt 10 місяців тому +4

    This video at exactly 3:13 earned you a new subscriber, well done.🤣

  • @d.b.levitt
    @d.b.levitt 4 місяці тому +1

    No Tarkovsky?
    - died of cancer most likely because of filming Stalker
    - had to reshoot half of Stalker because the footage got spoiled
    - burned an entire house for a scene and the camera got jammed, had to rebuild the house

  • @radioaktiv2531
    @radioaktiv2531 11 місяців тому +3

    3:56 The Trinity test wasn't 25 Million tonnes of TNT. It was only 25,000 tonnes

    • @DuCinema1
      @DuCinema1  10 місяців тому

      No it was 25 Kilotons. Aka 25 millions Kilograms of TNT

    • @radioaktiv2531
      @radioaktiv2531 10 місяців тому +1

      Yes, that's what I said. The yield was 25 kilotons. Which is 25000 tonnes of TNT or 25 million kilograms. I originally misheard the video. I thought I heard kilotons. Oops

  • @notsoaveragejoe7275
    @notsoaveragejoe7275 6 місяців тому +3

    I feel like putting Kubrick over everyone else (even though Kubrick's actions with Duvall aren't justified) I think he's a bit of a predictable pick. Hitchock did very similar things to his actors and Elem Klimov literally used real bullets around his actors. Not to mention directors like Ruggero Deodato or Pier Passolini. The Shelly thing is mentioned all the time and blown kind of out of proportion to the point where people claim with no actual evidence that she has ptsd from the experience, when she has gone on record to say that she hasn't. That only gets exasserbated when you see thousands of comments all saying the same thing about it too and it's just like beating a dead horse at this point.
    Also, the only other reason he's the most extreme is because some people think he faked the moon landing and "knew too much" about secret societies. Please give me a break! He was certainly eccentric and perhaps a little crazy, but by far not the most extreme director, compared to others that are even on your list.

  • @jekw23
    @jekw23 2 місяці тому +1

    First think I thought was “you could fill this with Werner Herzog films alone”

  • @harryom3497
    @harryom3497 7 місяців тому +2

    (My rankings)
    1. Francis Ford Coppola for the Vietnam hell of a gigantic masterpiece. Martin sheen getting heart attack & typhoon struck the sets while the movie going over budget and Francis getting neumonia and getting stuck for few days due to flood getting inside the room.
    2. Elem klimov experienced personal trauma when he was a child. He and his friend were playing out when a German plane starts shooting at them casually killing his friend. He wanted to show the truest depiction as it is.
    3. Kubrik for having excessive knowledge of film while having obsession for perfection. His every film is a timeless classic. Made Jack Nicholson bashing the door several times until Kubrick gets what is right for him.

  • @stopka5848
    @stopka5848 Рік тому +3

    In my honest opinion as honorable mention should be andrei tarkovsky because he wanted stalker to be amazing that he was shooting the film in chemical sludge and died of cancer about 8 years later.

  • @trstmeimadctr
    @trstmeimadctr Рік тому +3

    Most people made fun of the hiding in a fridge scene from Indiana Jones, but no one seemed to realize that it actually happened and someone in Hiroshima survived that wat

  • @AluminumTiki
    @AluminumTiki Рік тому +2

    Did You Know
    In the movie Interstellar, They actually went to a country that had massive waves.
    Some actors nearly died.

  • @kami_OwO
    @kami_OwO 5 місяців тому +1

    Miyazaki should be up there too, Ghibli's production diary gives us a very vivid picture of what it's like to work on one of his films