Last week's post
took a lot out of me. I've said it before, but it takes a tremendous amount
of brain power to focus all my extra energy and attention on one particular
type of film or filmmaker these days, especially with the stresses of work (two
jobs!) and family (four kids!) taking precedence so much of the time, and
picking apart the films of M. Night Shyamalan was no exception. What it did,
however, was get me thinking of other directors' most recognizable trademarks -
those nuances or specific camera techniques repeated again and again throughout
their cinematic oeuvres. Whether big (Spielberg's Looking Wide-Eyed With Wonder At Some Off-Screen Presence shots) or small (Hitchcock's cameos), directors do love
sticking their personal stamp on things. If they didn't, how else would we know
who directed what?
Once a staple of
late-'80s/early-'90s action cinema, John McTiernan has long since disappeared
from the spotlight, mostly due to his nasty run-in with the federal government
(well, that and Rollerball [2002]).
For a while, though, he was widely considered king, with Predator (1987), Die Hard
(1988) and The Hunt For Red October (1990) entrenching themselves forever into the public consciousness. To this
day, critics and film scholars continue to sing McTiernan's praises, in
particular David Bordwell, who speaks on his blog about the
director's penchant for "unfussy following shots" and
"tightly-woven classicism." And while it's true that McTiernan's
style may seem positively old-fashioned compared to today's smash-and-grab
editing techniques, like many filmmakers, he wasn't above cribbing from himself
on a regular basis.