Quoted Steven Spielberg creating an image is always arbitrary: every detail what we see on the screen is decided by the author’s will. The coming of computers and different effects made these decisions easier: nowadays authors cannot just illustrate what they are capable of, they can show what they want. Using of a computer creates a new genre: the computer graphics-generated imagery (CGI) defined a new category, theme and target group in the world of the studio films. As Nicolas Roeg (2013) says “Digital changed the whole attitude towards editing. In effect, it changed the whole art of movie story telling.” Kristen Whissel (2006) argues that “Through flying and falling bodies, the new vertically makes visible the position occupied by computer-generated …show more content…
Filmmakers can cut and re-cut effectively without any cost furthermore no film excerpt is being fragmented whilst the edit is taking place. By its speediness this technique takes advantage over analogue techniques, especially in a world where time can be considered as one of the most important material. Even a personal digital camera has more benefits than the traditional ones because it is enables to users to see their photos immediately and they can take as many photos as they want. Even though the computer cannot replace any artist sithence only the artist is able to bring any emotion into the film. Computers create the motion part of the film, and we create the emotional one. This is one of the reasons why Nolan wanted to use as many realistic scenes as it was possible. Inception has close to 500 visual effect shots in comparison to contemporary visual effects films that can have around 1500-2000 special effects images. In Paul Franklin’s the best visual are effects are those that don’t draw attention to themselves. According to Manovich (2002) “CGI achieves only photorealism, not bodily experience of reality” (p.200), however some of the scenes of Inception improve its opposite. The Paris Café scene with the exploding surroundings or the Ercher’s infinite stairs scene where Arthur shows one of the dream tricks to Ariadne are based on the conviction of complete reality. They used visual effects during the scenes but in harmony with the