L.A confidential is probably the best of it's kind, yet Titanic was a milestone and was a film made by a true visionary.
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steve-movies — 10 years ago(October 24, 2015 08:53 PM)
I cannot believe its been four years since I posted this! I completely forgot about this until I came back to this board.
He wanted to add some depth to Titanic I guess. It was his idea to throw in the romance so that way there was an actual plot. However, L.A Confidential is a mega-masterpiece.
Don't get me wrong - I can see why Cameron won. The direction in Titanic is phenomenal. But Confidential is the way better movie. -
wylierichardson-966-922691 — 10 years ago(February 16, 2016 10:47 PM)
But that approach to telling the story of Titanic (i.e. biopic with no tacked-on love story) had already been done, twice before. Those movies were "Titanic" and "A night to remember", both from the 50s.
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mkohary — 10 years ago(December 01, 2015 03:21 AM)
Over 4 years later but I'll reply anyway.
I agree. This and "The Sweet Hereafter" were IMO the best films of 1997, and I personally would have given the nod to "L.A. Confidential". Watching these films age in later years is really telling - "Titanic" is an entertaining film but it's not especially deep (no pun intended). In fact it has almost no depth at all (seriously, pun
not
intended), and plays out like a feature-length TV soap opera. The characters are more like one-note caricatures, the entire film relies on tired tropes for its story, and the dialogue has aged very poorly. The special effects which seemed oh so special back in 1997 have also not aged well. While the set design and costuming is still top-notch, all of the CGI sequences are painfully obvious. They don't detract a lot from the picture, but they still stick out like a sore thumb. Even the miniatures are pretty noticeable these days. While I think "Titanic" is very well-directed and pays great attention to detail, and remains the kind of fast-paced romp that James Cameron is known for, it comes across as overly formulaic and I don't get anything new out of it with repeated viewings.
"L.A. Confidential" on the other hand is timeless, and it looks as sharp and handsome today as it did in 1997. The script is amazing and the 3 lead actors do it full justice (as well as a marvelous supporting cast). It's wonderful to watch Crowe in top form, well before he was a famous movie star, and Pierce and Spacey stand toe-to-toe with him, resulting in a movie that electrifies in scene after scene after scene. The characters are well-drawn and the plotting is extremely intricate yet understandable. In fact, if you've read the book you might have thought it was an unfilmable story, and really it should have been. But somehow they managed to strike just the right balance in giving the audience important information in a manner they could swallow and at a pace they could handle, all without pandering to audience members who wouldn't be willing to work a little to keep up. The result is a super smart movie that rewards repeated viewings with all sorts of tidbits and nuances you didn't notice on previous viewings; this is a movie that never becomes boring due to familiarity.
Both movies are very well made and I'm not knocking "Titanic" at all, it was a huge achievement. But "L.A. Confidential" has stood the test of time much better and I think it's the bigger achievement, due to the extreme difficulty of translating that particular book (a dense read to be sure) to the screen so effectively. I simply never tire of watching it, ever, while I feel I have seen "Titanic" more than enough times. I felt in 1997 that "L.A." should have won Best Picture, and time has only cemented that position. "Titanic" won on spectacle, but "L.A." is the better motion picture. -
FrankBooth_DeLarge — 10 years ago(December 14, 2015 06:49 PM)
LA Confidential has held up excellently and definitely should have won Best Picture. With that said I am not surprised that Titanic won best picture given that, regardless of the writing that many criticize, it had a grand scale and was a huge event at that time.
Trailer For My Second Feature -
freddie73 — 10 years ago(January 19, 2016 11:36 AM)
A thousand times yes! I am one of the those young girls that went to the movies to see "Titanic" twice, prayed that it won every single award, and jumped up and down when it did! Then I got a brain and watched this one day and just love it! It is one of my all time favorite movies and YES YES YES it should have won all the Oscars and "Titanic" had probably the cheesiest dialog ever written. This is one of the greatest films of all time, and it lost to a sinking boat Soap Opera. lol I was part of the problem back then! lol
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degree7 — 9 years ago(July 23, 2016 07:52 PM)
I don't think either film was necessarily better or worse than the other. Titanic may have a straightforward, "cliched" love triangle. Well LA Confidential has a tired good cop / bad cop routine we've all seen before a million times. Sure the plot is certainly more complex (duh, it's a mystery), but it's standard fare in any noir style film to have a complicated story. The reason people went to see both films in droves was because what they did they did well. Titanic has amazing disaster set pieces and a sense of historical tragedy that hold up to this day, and LA Confidential has great action and suspense. At the end of the day, Titanic won because the Academy likes period costume melodramas, as well as epic movies, and James Cameron was a Hollywood heavyweight. The appeal of Titanic was its notoriety as much as the film itself.
~ I'm a 21st century man and I don't wanna be here. -
DracTarashV — 9 years ago(December 30, 2016 07:21 PM)
Nah. Titanic winning seemed convenient, since it basically had everything that makes a Best Picture winner, well, a Best Picture winner. It was an epic that was bound to please the Academy.
Now I prefer L.A. Confidential myself, and I don't think all the other nominees that year were that strong, but as I say: the cooler - and arguably better - film is most of the time better off not winning an award given by a bunch of uncool dudes. Heh.
You want something corny? You got it! -
aidankost — 9 years ago(February 02, 2017 05:25 PM)
I think everyone is forgetting Boogie Nights. I don't know why, but I appear to be the minority here (or maybe Jackie Brown supporters?) Titanic is a masterpiece, but wasn't the best movie of the year. I haven't seen L.A., but I've recently ordered it from Amazon. Good Will Hunting is a great movie, as well as Jackie Brown, but they aren't anywhere near as good as Boogie Nights, the true big bright shining star of 1997, a brilliant year for movies.