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Through the Lens: A Personal Reflection on Cinematic Vision

Cinema has never been just entertainment for me; it has always been a way of seeing. I still remember watching The Taking of Pelham One Two Three and being struck by how tension could emerge not only from the story, but from the way it was visually constructed. Later, thinking about the remake directed by Tony Scott, I found myself drawn to his unmistakable style - his use of long focal lengths and fast cuts, the compression of space, the fragmentation of time. There is something exhilarating in the way his images feel charged with energy, almost as if the frame itself were under pressure. For a long time, I believed that strong cinema emerged primarily from extremes: either the expansive drama of very short focal lengths or the psychological intensity of long lenses. In that sense, filmmakers like Scott on one side and Emmanuel Lubezki on the other seemed to represent two poles of visual expression - compression versus immersion, fragmentation versus flow. But this belief began to cha...

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