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Posted on 6/7/16 at 8:40 am to
Posted by WG_Dawg
Hoover
Member since Jun 2004
86624 posts
Posted on 6/7/16 at 8:40 am to
quote:

Why do some people not like black and white films?



It's a bastardization of our normal lives. We see color everywhere. Clothing, TV, advertisements, nature, etc. Our world is filled with vibrant colors that get our attention. Watching a movie with no color just almost feels...substandard. Idk, I don't really feel that way, just giving reasons to answer your question. Probably the same reason some people don't like foreign movies with subtitles, it's against the norm and it's not as "easy" to digest as a regular film.
Posted by DelU249
Austria
Member since Dec 2010
77625 posts
Posted on 6/7/16 at 8:42 am to
wow, that's actually a really good answer, none of it I previously considered
Posted by FearlessFreep
Baja Alabama
Member since Nov 2009
17403 posts
Posted on 6/7/16 at 10:04 am to
quote:

It's a bastardization of our normal lives. We see color everywhere. Clothing, TV, advertisements, nature, etc. Our world is filled with vibrant colors that get our attention. Watching a movie with no color just almost feels...substandard. Idk, I don't really feel that way, just giving reasons to answer your question. Probably the same reason some people don't like foreign movies with subtitles, it's against the norm and it's not as "easy" to digest as a regular film.
This is a pretty good answer, but it fails to explain the popularity of other media that are equally substandard in comparison to reality. Watching a football game on a laptop or an iPhone isn't even remotely comparable to seeing the same game in person, but people don't refuse to watch on those devices because it's a bastardization of reality. For that matter, just 10-12 years ago movies on TV were in the form of a fuzzy low-resoultion 4x3 box, and no one seemed to reject it because it didn't look as good as it did on a big screen in a theater.

I think it's more of an acquired bias from youth. The reason many people think b&w films = boring is because they were probably exposed to a b&w film as a kid that didn't move fast enough to keep their attention, so they associated their boredom with the lack of color on the screen.

I've always loved classic b&w films, and we watched tons of them with our kids as they grew up (now 19 and 16). They can quote old Cary Grant and Marx Brothers films line by line, and love big band music they heard on Abbot & Costello and Thin Man movies. And silent movies too - I remember my then-6-year-old elder daughter crying real tears while watching Charlie Chaplin's "The Kid" and thinking, damn, 80 years later it still has the capacity to generate real emotion.

That's the power of a good story told well. If you can look past the technical limitations of the media, that's all that matters in the end.
Posted by Fewer Kilometers
Baton Rouge
Member since Dec 2007
36200 posts
Posted on 6/7/16 at 10:28 am to
quote:

It's a bastardization of our normal lives.


It's art. It's a representation of life. Anything short of a live, interactive performance would be a "bastardization".



Posted by mizzoubuckeyeiowa
Member since Nov 2015
35819 posts
Posted on 6/7/16 at 1:10 pm to
quote:

It's a bastardization of our normal lives. We see color everywhere. Clothing, TV, advertisements, nature, etc. Our world is filled with vibrant colors that get our attention. Watching a movie with no color just almost feels...substandard. Idk, I don't really feel that way, just giving reasons to answer your question. Probably the same reason some people don't like foreign movies with subtitles, it's against the norm and it's not as "easy" to digest as a regular film.


But people tend to really like Black and White photography...especially nature...

Some of our most famous photos are black and white...even when they didn't have to be...it's considered art obviously and captures the essence and play of pure light without interference. Color also plays tricks on us with our brains and how we interpret them. It's not as pure. Light affects how we see color.

Take your veins...blood is red, veins look blue, because how our eyes interpret the filtering of colors through our skin...Veins look blue because light has to penetrate the skin to illuminate them, blue and red light (being of different wavelengths) penetrate with different degrees of success. What makes it back to your eye is the blue light.

Black and white photography seems to have a higher regard than black and white films (which seem to have a regard as a product of their time) - I find that odd.
This post was edited on 6/7/16 at 1:12 pm
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