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25 Reviews
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Movie Stills Are A Let Down,
By
This review is from: 300: The Art of the Film (Hardcover)
The book is great at documenting the film progress but it LACKS completely in regards to the film still resolution. All of the great shots from the movie are blurry and pixelatd which really take away from the overall effect. They come off looking like bad scans. I would pass this book over in hopes of another release after the film and the movie studio invests in providing better photos.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Concepts galore,
This review is from: 300: The Art of the Film (Hardcover)
Translating a graphic novel into the world of cinema can be a tricky business.
And the first step is concept art -- creating basic images of the characters, costumes, and important, visually-striking scenes. "300: The Art Of The Film" is crammed with such images, detailing virtually every part of the movie... but it's very skimpy on explanations and information. It starts off with a couple of prefaces -- one by an expert on military history, and the other explaining the purpose of revealing the concept art. Then concept art itself: it basically outlines the story, beginning with the "inspection" of newborn Spartan boys and ending with another battle brewing between the Spartans and Persians. These include pages and pages of rough sketches and detailed drawings for the cinematogrpahers, some representing only a few seconds (a fist hitting a slave's face). Then there are plenty of costume sketches, depictions of unreal-looking monsters, tents, and the gorgeous sets for things like Xerxes' opulant golden litter. Actually, it's more of a portable house. But it has more than just concept art -- there are clay models, special effects shots, elaborate makeup and costume for things like the hunchbacked traitor, Xerxes' chain-porn costume, and things like knives stuck in a eye, and even green-screen shots before the CGI gloss was put on. And there are shots showing how they managed certain effects, like the people who controlled the animatronic "wolf." And with every sketch and behind-the-scene shot, they show the finished result as it appears in the movie. A lot of them have the original art by Frank Miller as well, to show us how close the movie actually is to its source material. Visually speaking, it's a feast of behind-the-scenes information. Buuuuut.... "300: The Art Of The Film" suffers from a lack of background information -- they show us loads of information, but don't tell WHY they were done, or even the intricacies of HOW. Come on, they must have had some trial-and-error in this film. While we can see the art for ourselves, we're rarely told much about why they chose this costume, or that monster, and how they created some of the weirder visuals. So while the book is visually rich, it feels incomplete, like they left a lot of the text out to keep the guide from getting too long. Sometimes pages and pages will go by with only a few sparely-written paragraphs describing the intricacies of the movie. "300" is a visual movie, but come on, there's more to it than that. "300: The Art Of The Film" has loads of art, but not much explanation in how it got from art to movie. It stumbles badly as a behind-the-scenes guide, but it's still an intriguing visual read.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good, But Light in Content,
By
This review is from: 300: The Art of the Film (Hardcover)
This book doesn't explain much on the process of making the movie. Most of the art in the book lack captions. This book feels light in content simply for the fact that you don't get much information. There are plenty of conceptual art, 3D renders and storyboards. But there seem to a lot of movie stills as well, to the effect that it felt that half the book contained movie stills. There are also a lot of 3 penciled storyboards that take one page to themselves. Certainly they don't deserve those sizes. For a movie based on a graphic novel, I was expecting much more paintings to be included in the book. The movie was shot too stylistically that it's hard to imagine that there are not much more storyboard paintings. (More pictures are available on my blog. Just visit my Amazon profile for the link.)
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Misinterpretations Aside,
By Kory (OR) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 300: The Art of the Film (Hardcover)
It seems that some people are having a hard time realizing that the title of this book includes "The Art of the Film" and are searching for filming procedures, or sociopolitical explanations on behalf of the film when, in fact, this IS an art book. And for what it is, it does a great job revealing the artistic vision behind the film 300. From makeup effects to storyboarding to the comic conversion of the film, "300: The Art of the Film" makes a stylistic presentation that is worthy of the aesthetic care of the movie itself. Anyone who is interested in the artistic background in the movie 300 will appreciate the clean layout and complete presentation of this book.
5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good But Not Perfect,
This review is from: 300: The Art of the Film (Hardcover)
This book is a fascinating look at how the movie 300 was put together. It will be very pleasing to both Frank Miller and SFX fans. It goes into some detail about how the look of the film was achieved, but is a cursory look at the FX and serious computer FX enthusiasts may feel a bit short changed as the book doesn't really go into the nitty gritty of computer graphics, but it does show the general process from book to storyboard to film, and Zack Snyder's attention to detail. If you are a Gerry Butler fan, be warned that the book does not feature him prominently, but there are plenty of pictures where he is part of the shot. There is a serious mistake on the page that features Butler and his costuming. The text refers to him as "Gerald Butler" not Gerard, and that is an editing error that should have been caught. Maybe a second printing will correct the problem. I did like that the cover of the book is designed to look almost exactly like my copy of Miller's 300. They sit nicely side by side, and it was fascinating to take the orginal text and look at the movie's recreation of the shot. Overall, a fun book to own.
4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent Addition,
By Burt Reynolds "Burt" (California) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 300: The Art of the Film (Hardcover)
Film, as we've all come to now accept, is a very difficult media with which to work (and even moreso) fall in love with. Hollywood seldom puts out movies that make you FEEL the story. Yes, there are perhaps one or two per year that really do stand out, but that would most definately be the limit. Think of "Saving Private Ryan" or "You've Got Mail" or even "Lord of the Rings"--what do all of these pictures have in common? (1) Good acting, (2) good screenplays, (3) visually compelling cinematography, and (4) gripping soundtracks. All four of these elements make these three movies wonderful. These same characteristics can be found in far older pictures like "Citizen Kane" or "Patton."
The unique aspect of "300" is its cinematography. Set in front of green screens, the actors did their very best to act emotionally and physically to elements not present until post-production editing. That's what makes "300" so compelling and wonderful a movie. Yes, it incorporates the four elements mentioned above, but the reason people are flocking to watch this movie is because IT IS DIFFERENT. Sure, we've had movies based on comic books for quite some time...the original "Superman" TV shows and movie, "Spiderman", and the more recent additions. But NONE of these actually bring the comic world to the screen. The screenwriters tried to reform the comic book image to fit real life. In some cases it worked. In most it did not. "300" was a comic book from the very first shot. No one wanted to make it "realistic" or "convincing." It was just made to look and feel like a comic book. And it works. Having said that, "300: The Art of the Film" is a great addition to the movie. Though not essential, it certainly gives interesting background information about perhaps the most visually compelling and moving film made in decades (and, yes, even more compelling than "Lord of the Rings"). It's a nice book to show you where movies can go, how much further our imaginations can stretch, and how Hollywood sometimes sends us a movie we can all be proud of.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
WOW,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: 300: The Art of the Film (Hardcover)
If You really Like this movie and besides you LOVE VFX, this book is just made for you, is the perfect combination of Art and CG Effects.
A "Must Have" For Movie Lovers.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
300: The Art Of The Film,
By fallyn (Lodi, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 300: The Art of the Film (Hardcover)
Excellent Book! Truly shows the process involved with creating an awesome film. From story boards to the finished product. Special effects, make-up, costumes, sets, CGI are all included with art from Frank Miller's graphic novel. Beautiful photography and artist renderings of many of the fascinating characters.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Super Impressed,
By M.M.M. (Seattle, WA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 300: The Art of the Film (Hardcover)
Way to go, KM! This book rocks. I saw it early, before it was on the shelves, and I know how much effort went into it. The ENTIRE book was assembled and edited in a short (and made even shorter by production elements) time and I think it is FANTASTIC. I especially admire the Foreword by V.D. Hanson - He is a supremely intelligent man and eminently readable writer... I love his work and it lends an interestingly academic air to the impressive rendition of the legend by F. Miller.
2.0 out of 5 stars
Small photos, lack detail...,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: 300: The Art of the Film (Hardcover)
The photo stills and behind the scenes pictures and drawings would be great if they were not so small. They lack detail and don't do it, the movie or the art justice. It's a shame, but if you can pick one of these books up cheap, then it's may be acceptable...barely.
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300: The Art of the Film by Tara Bennett (Hardcover - January 9, 2007)
$24.95 $18.21
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