Lol, what exactly makes
The Social Network, Seven, and Girl With Dragon Tattoo the measuring stick that
Memento, The Dark Knight, The Prestige and Insomnia couldn't possibly hope to aspire to??
No brainer for me, Christopher Jonathan James Nolan is a better filmmaker than David Fincher.
Now, i'm not going to take this as an opportunity to bash Fincher in an attempt to make Nolan appear superior because a) Nolan's body of work speaks for itself and b) I quite like Fincher.
I think that ultimately it comes down to a combination of examining both their strengths/weaknesses as well as your own filmic needs and desires, i.e. themes you identify with the most.
I acknowledge that Nolan's biggest weaknesses has been in shot juxtapositions used to convey action scenes. This is something that was latent before
Batman Begins. I would also agree with the criticism that he has underwritten female characters on several occasions, but not without effect. However, he has made huge attempts to rectify these shortcomings as evidenced by the barnstorming action/fight sequences in the last two
Batman films as well as Joseph Levitt-Gordon's anti-gravity exploits on the second level dreamscape in
Inception.
Fincher's weaknesses funnily enough are that of what is often directed at (incorrectly) Nolan. I love dark films, but the likes of
Fight Club, Panic Room, Zodiac The Social Network failed to connect me on an emotional level despite their technical virtuosity. It's
his films that cold and clinical. Now, i've only seen about an hour's worth of
The Social Network, but thematically, there isn't anything remarkable about it's commentary on greed and how it can destroy relationships and such. Unless some incredible **** occurs in the last hour of the film, I have to conclude that
Network appears to be a well crafted but ultimately uninspiring drama that uses a popular invention that i'm not at all interested in as a background.
Nolan's strengths are far greater than whatever weaknesses he may have. Somebody said on maybe this thread or another that most of Nolan's shots don't last more than 7 seconds. Yeah...and? Nolan's editing has always been his strongest point. He has a very brisk editing style that many people often confuse as being 'choppy', but I prefer to think of it as using this style to reflect to the state of mind of the character or scene.
Fincher does well because he does have the ability to get great performances from actors and his attention to detail is rivalled by that of R.Scott and S.Kubrick. One only needs to watch
Zodiac (a film I really need to watch for the second time) to realise that. He, like Nolan, also paces his films very well, leaving little room for pointlessness and allowing each scene to matter. I guess it's fair to say that most decent directors do this, though.
I think the biggest thing that wins it for me though is their values and codes within the film industry. Fincher is fine and dandy taking a script and putting his own spin on it. It's something he has done his whole career and that's cool. But Nolan actually writes his own screenplays, some completely original, some adapted, some inbetween. In addition, he co-produces his own films and doesn't even have a second unit. This allows him the greatest possible control even in a big studio film like
The Dark Knight. He gets to be a full on storyteller rather than simply a director for hire.
Skepsis93, your post implies that Nolan plays it safe that Fincher is this ground breaking, studio defying hero or something. Fact is anybody with a brain can see that
Inception was one of the riskiest 'blockbuster' films made in the last 15-20 years. Like I have said before, had this film been a novel first, people would have labelled it 'unfilmable' . What's risky about
Network, Dragon Tattoo, Zodiac, etc? Only
Fight Club can be considered a little risky, but that's only viewed within the contexts of it's source material. That in itself is a decent film, but not the tour de force that everyone makes it out to be. When Nolan takes risks, he never fails.
Unlike Fincher, Nolan is a keen traditonalist, which again, I value highly. Guys like myself and Nolan are interested in preserving the integrity of film. Fincher seems to reject this what with his permanent crossover to digital and scoffing at the notion of IMAX. I admit, even though they are digital, his films look amazing, but I will always be a film lover and Nolan, along with Paul Thomas Anderson and Michael Bay are the only ones within the american film industry who seem be worried about losing something that is clearly not outdated and still superior to any RED camera.
Again, I like Fincher a lot and find him to be a capable director. But his talents only go as far as to construct a tight, singular narrative. Nolan has demonstrated that he can do the same in
Following, Memento, The Prestige and Insomnia, but unlike Fincher, he has also demonstrated visionary scope and multi dimensional plotting in
Inception and the
Batman films. I know a lot of you lot disagree and think that I see something Nolan that you lot don't, but at the end of the day this man is raising the bar as far as 'blockbusters' AND independent art film goes. The same can not be said of the talented David Fincher. It's my opinion and if it pisses some of you off, then good because
Need a long break from this place