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Of course CGI is a good tool, like any other technique. Jurassic Park is a good example where multiple techniques are combined to complement eachother. However, instead of seeing it as simply another tools with all the others, Hollywood seems to think that every other type of effect is outdated now. The Force Awakens is the only film I have seen recently which understands that mixing the practicle and the digital creates the best results. Not that that film is without its share of terrible CGI.
Hollywood has always ultimately been about the money.
I really like the Golden Era of Hollywood, so 40's and 50's would win out for me.
@Mendes4Lyfe I'm seriously disagreeing with you on this one. Film can be a medium of entertainment, as can novels. But cinema can rise above that and really earn its title of the 7th art. Sorrentino, Kubrick, Hitchcock, Zimmerman, Coppola, Spielberg, Truffaut, De Sica, Antonioni, Tati, Ozon, Welles, Mendes, Inarritu ... make movies that ask questions and not necessarily give answers. Movies that make us think about the world we live in, about humankind. Those movies offer more than entertainment, even if they be disguised as genre films.
The public for these films may not be as large as for the blockbusters, but that doesn't make them any less valid.
I find that no film or piece of media doesn't have a message it is trying to impress on it's viewer/reader. The only films that geniunely don't have any answers are those made by mad art house directors like Lynch. That's because people like Lynch have no idea what they're trying to say to begin with. I mean, seriously, have you ever seen 'Inland Empire' all the way through? It's an absolute clusterf&#k. But we're getting into weird 'conceptual art' territory. Best to steer clear of that particular landmine.
Moreover, I find movies that don't give all the answers stimulating and challenging. It's strange that great literature is appreciated for the fact that it raises more questions than answers (Shakespeare is still being debated), but for movies that's apparently a no-go area.
I'm saying that there are no films which ask questions without also trying to convince you of an answer. The only way a film can do that is when the film is made solely for the appreciation of the creator. So outside of a Lynchian mindf@%king, they don't exist. Shakespeare had a deliberate message with everything he said that he was attempting to communicate. That means, by definition, he had the answers, or he thought he did, at least. You can't ask a question with art, unless its rhetorical. I don't want to spend my time living in other peoples pysches. I've tried reading Naked Lunch. It's not for me. If you're into that, fine.