Damn straightBattle of Endor from ROTJ, is still hands the best all out space battle to ever hit film. CG or other wise.
Damn straightBattle of Endor from ROTJ, is still hands the best all out space battle to ever hit film. CG or other wise.
Real > CG
I like you.
Especially the chase through the DSII interior tunnels.
Nonsense.
I'm pretty sure the shot in RotJ of the Falcon swooping toward the camera away from the Death Star II still holds the all-time record for the most non-CG assisted composited elements in a single shot. ILM had really mastered the motion control methods by the third film and some of the stuff they pulled off in it are just insane by any metric.
Again, nonsense. Why are people so silly about CG vs practical like this? It's impressive model work but it doesn't look like anything except a scale model. Without the proper lighting and shot choices, none of those shots look like real ships, they look like plastic toys. CG and model work are tools, and each has an appropriate time to be used. Neither is inherently superior to the other. It's all about how a filmmaker uses the tools and when. A hammer isn't a shitty tool just because some people tried to use it to saw a piece of wood in half.
The reason being that they like to use partical effects as apposed to it being better than CGI.There's a reason filmmakers like Ridley Scott and Star Wars director JJ Abrams himself emphasize using models and practical effects whenever possible. You are reaching by saying "nonsense."
Thank you.Ridley Scott and JJ Abrams use both. Frequently. Often in the same shot.
One isn't inherently better than the other. It's all in how you use them.
This is known, and has been known, for decades now. There's almost zero practical reason to push the idea that one form of FX technology is inherently superior to another. They're all just tools. What matters is whether or not the person using those tools knows what the fuck they're doing with them.
Holding up JJ Abrams and Ridley Scott as some sort of paragon of the practical is disingenuous. They're just as interested in using CGI when needed. And they should be. Use the right tool for the specific job. Don't just adhere to some bullshit dogma out of a sense of purism that's questionable at best.
Ridley Scott and JJ Abrams use both. Frequently. Often in the same shot.
One isn't inherently better than the other. It's all in how you use them.
This is known, and has been known, for decades now. There's almost zero practical reason to push the idea that one form of FX technology is inherently superior to another. They're all just tools. What matters is whether or not the person using those tools knows what the fuck they're doing with them.
Holding up JJ Abrams and Ridley Scott as some sort of paragon of the practical is disingenuous. They're just as interested in using CGI when needed. And they should be. Use the right tool for the specific job. Don't just adhere to some bullshit dogma out of a sense of purism that's questionable at best.
Get out of her with your logic. That has no place in here!Ridley Scott and JJ Abrams use both. Frequently. Often in the same shot.
One isn't inherently better than the other. It's all in how you use them.
This is known, and has been known, for decades now. There's almost zero practical reason to push the idea that one form of FX technology is inherently superior to another. They're all just tools. What matters is whether or not the person using those tools knows what the fuck they're doing with them.
Holding up JJ Abrams and Ridley Scott as some sort of paragon of the practical is disingenuous. They're just as interested in using CGI when needed. And they should be. Use the right tool for the specific job. Don't just adhere to some bullshit dogma out of a sense of purism that's questionable at best.
Man, there's almost an entire city modeled on top of the Super Star Destroyer.
This is what I just don't get about Peter Jackson.
He saw the magnificence of the original Star Wars trilogy and how well the ships and their models have held up even to this day. He then got a chance to see Episodes 1-3 and how badly they have aged.
So why on earth did he ditch the models for The Hobbit and go more CGI? The guy basically had a blank chequebook and decided to spend it on CGI, 48fps and 3D, all of which added very little to the overall feel of the films.
Models are the way to go.
They definitely had some starfighter modelsBy the way, was the final space battle in The Phantom Menace made mostly with CGI or models?
I think i've read it was made using models. Yet my mind insists it looks like CGI, there are some shots in the battle that look like bad CGI to me at times.
Was about to post the same picture. I can't even imagine how they come up with sooooo many little details there. True masters of their art.Man, there's almost an entire city modeled on top of the Super Star Destroyer.
I wonder what it feels like to be the guy making all those models watching them blow up.
I was watching Guardians of the Galaxy recently, and I like the movie, but despite advances in technology, that scene where they're dogfighting in those mining pods just feels so lifeless and dull compared to any Star Wars OT dogfight. There's no impact or weight to the action.
George Lucas in particular shouldn't be allowed near CG because he just ends up filling the frame with garbage.
Battle of Endor from ROTJ, is still hands the best all out space battle to ever hit film. CG or other wise.
All the good posts get passed over, and the one note speed posts against CG as some kind of devil medium are replied and quoted.
You should get your mommy to make them stop.
You are particularly guilty of said kind of drive-by posting. And this post is another gem. And here I am replying to it. I'm part of the cycle now, thanks!
Why me in particular? I didn't even demonise CG, just George Lucas.
Because he may have brought us some CG that hasn't aged well, but he has always been a practitioner of scale models. As shown above, TPM was filled with practical effects.
This is not a response to anything I wrote.
Man, there's almost an entire city modeled on top of the Super Star Destroyer.
I really don't care about the whole cgi/practical debate, as long as it looks good, but Hobbit is definitely more guilty of going overboard because they let the lack of physical restrictions of cgi take control of the scene.There is a ton of CGI in Lord of the Rings. Some of it has aged terribly.
Like, I also vastly prefer the LOTR trilogy to the Hobbit, but those films put just as much stock in then-new technologies.
The truck is CGI btw. I had always thought it was practical