Ok- I'll bite on your post. We live in a fast paced world. Nobody wants to sit through a 3 hour movie no matter how good it it. Also, nobody wants to see a film moving so fast, that it is speeding by so fast you cannot even see the images. It's like the fast editing of present day TV commercials where images fly by at less than a second a piece. There is a balance to be reached. In my preference, I think that balance is what makes the film move you, tells a story, shows beautiful and unrepetative scenery, and is free of technical flaws (bad editing, yaws, jerky movements, etc.). The film needs to have a pleasing sound track, and good editing from scene to scene, clip to clip. So I watch each and every one of them coming through this forum daily and I grade them in my mind through my prism. I try to offer a comment or critique that I think will help the creator with the next project, or improve the present one if still in his computer. This forum has a population of novices and experts in both flying and various aspects of photography (processing, editing, etc). I want to help the novices and I want experts to help me.
My suggestions are meant to be helpful, instructive, and certainly not malicious. My simple comment on this film under discussion is that went too fast to absorb.