Tobor said:Uh oh. Get ready for the Dino nerds to tell you how wrong you are.
whothefuckcaresosaurus
Tobor said:Uh oh. Get ready for the Dino nerds to tell you how wrong you are.
-COOLIO- said:these look great, but they're pictures. movies are moving pictures, where cg typically has a major advantage.
It may appear unreal, but it's also often doing things that would be crazy to pull off any other way. So I'd agree it has an advantage. Anything goes.Zombie James said:What? CG is usually at it's worst when it's in motion. Motion is always the dead giveaway.
crisdecuba said:One of their early CGI tests - T-Rex walking through a field in daylight (a BIG deal back then):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eQGFiRzv1hE
That is some seriously impressive stop motion. I goddamn love stop motion. But yeah, glad they went CG for JP; it was the right choice.crisdecuba said:Interesting Jurassic Park related videos:
Stop motion animation test of T-Rex walking. This was before they'd decided to pursue CGI. They were planning on working with a variant of stop motion animation called Go Motion (the difference being that some of the frames would be blurred in order to simulate motion blur). Even such a technique, based on what I can see in this video, isn't enough to achieve realism, IMO.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uEK9mitagS8
lawblob said:The kids are ridiculous, their behavior in the T-Rex scene always bothered me, though i guess the script takes some of the blame there. I just hate the way the girl fumbles with the flashlight. Seems like a kid of her age would know to not do that, etc.
I understand that kids would go into shock in that situation, but its like they do everything at every moment to impede the progress of the adults around them. /rant
Furret said:Sounds like you didn't learn anything.
It was a Brachiosaurus.
Any five year old could have told you that. It's a very famous dinosaur and they specifically refer to it by name in the film.
chicko1983 said:JP1>>>JP3>>JP2
Night_Trekker said:This is correct. Fuck The Lost World.
The book was great, though.
I felt he was reaching a bit with the active camosaurus.DrForester said:The book was a mess of a thing too. Not as bad as the movie, but Crichton was talked into writing it, and it was pretty obvious from reading that he didn't care at all.
GDGF said:What is this sorcery?
DrForester said:The book was a mess of a thing too. Not as bad as the movie, but Crichton was talked into writing it, and it was pretty obvious from reading that he didn't care at all.
Sho_Nuff82 said:I felt he was reaching a bit with the active camosaurus.
Muldoon is a complete Hoss in the book, if I remember correctly while living in Kenya working for Hammond's regular zoo, he ends up fighting a lion with only a knife. And winning. On top of that, he has a huge arsenal in the book. Including rocket launchers, and the like. Pretty sure he ends up killing a few raptors with a grenade launcher.Snuggler said:Muldoon survives? Damn, the novel really did play out better than the movie.
While not as bad as Lucas, it's not so much that he does it very well. But the imposed technical limitations on it force him too. If CG was at the level it is now, it probably would of been a lot different.JGS said:Spielberg knows how to blend the effects very well
The book was a mess, but leagues better than the film was. I went opening night of "The Lost World" and left swearing up a storm because of how little they used from the book. If they followed the book, the movie would have been badass. The raptor stampede, and especially the (completely over the top yet awesome) active camo dinosaurs.DrForester said:The book was a mess of a thing too. Not as bad as the movie, but Crichton was talked into writing it, and it was pretty obvious from reading that he didn't care at all.
That's funny, because brontosaurus hasn't been a valid name in over one-hundred years.mrklaw said:I'm 40 this year. In school those big things with long necks and thick legs were either brontosauruses or diplodocuses. Science has developed since then, and they all have fancy names like apatosaureses blah blah.
Green Mamba said:That's funny, because brontosaurus hasn't been a valid name in over one-hundred years.
mrklaw said:I'm 40 this year. In school those big things with long necks and thick legs were either brontosauruses or diplodocuses. Science has developed since then, and they all have fancy names like apatosaureses blah blah.
Did you notice how I pointed out the names were probably wrong? I don't give a fuck. In my world, they are brontosauruses/diplodocuses. And spinysaurus? No, doesn't exist. T-rex is the top of the tree for meatosauruses.
shintoki said:While not as bad as Lucas, it's not so much that he does it very well. But the imposed technical limitations on it force him too. If CG was at the level it is now, it probably would of been a lot different.
jett said:Indeed. Look at Indy 4 for instance, I wouldn't say CG blended well at all there.On the other hand I look at something like A.I. and the CG work is still flawless.
Medalion said:If JP was remade today, you better believe it would be a CG fuck fest that looked dated in no time
Joe Shlabotnik said:CG realism is really a matter of resources and time. Jurassic Park's quality is partly due to it being comparatively less CG-intense than most recent FX-heavy movies, but also because ILM and Spielberg were able to give it their undivided attention. Most special effects companies are simply stretched too thin now to produce that kind of work regularly.
Vinci said:Keep in mind I haven't seen Indy 4, but... Spielberg has always intentionally used less impressive effects in the Indiana Jones films. If you look at any of the films and compare their effects to any of his others during that time period, they will inevitably come off as very awkward or silly. I remember reading a discussion between Spielberg and Lucas in which they talked about using 'old-school' techniques for the effects as an homage to the sort of pulp novels and serials that inspired the creation of the series.
Furret said:Do you have a source for this?
I think you've become confused over the use of the term "old school techniques".
Indiana Jones always had very good effects for the time, well above the average (ILM were largely peerless during the '80s).
What comparable films are you suggesting looked better?
Vinci said:I don't have a source for this. This is based on recollection. For all I know, I'm remembering it wrong - it was some time ago when I came across this. But I do have a strong memory of that exchange, that they were very interested in capturing the look and feel of pulp novels and serials with Indiana Jones and that meant toning down the special effects.
I'm by no means a Spielberg fanatic, so I've no reason to believe my mind is simply playing tricks on me. But no, I don't know where I read this originally. You are free to say you don't believe it if you like; I've no evidence to support my memory.
Furret said:I suspect you're mixing up comments they made from Indy 4 (where they did talk, well lie, about using old school practical effects) and them talking about the old films.
The original Indiana Jones films were state of the art at the time and I've never heard anyone suggest otherwise - either viewers or the film makers.
They certainly did want to evoke the atmosphere of the old pulps but not by using purposefully sub par effects.
Compare Raiders to something like George Pal's Doc Savage and you'd think there was 30 years between the two films, not six.
Vinci said:That's the thing: I've had this in my head for far longer than that. Since the Temple of Doom era, if not longer.
It's quite possible I'm remembering this wrong. I'm just saying that it's something I do recall them mentioning, whether I'm remembering the exact phrases wrong or not. Whatever the case, it's not a huge deal to me. Odds are I'm remembering some aspect of the conversation wrong. Jett's comment simply brought it back into my head.
Count Dookkake said:Pretty certain Spielberg was talking about the map transitions, like the wipes in Star Wars.
Furret said:You must've got the wrong end of the stick somewhere, the mine cart chase in the Temple of Doom was a minor milestone in special effects.
(Not to mention video game bonus levels.)
RSP said:Jurassic Park had a total 4 minutes of CGI.
Think about that.
RSP said:You don't need a lot of CGI to make a good movie. I'd take animatronics over CGI any time.
RSP said:You don't need a lot of CGI to make a good movie. I'd take animatronics over CGI any time.
I am not talking about if JP never existed and then was made today, I am talking about a Jurassic Park reboot... different people, director etc etcVinci said:I doubt it. Spielberg seems to have a good handle on how to apply effects to his films. Unless he intentionally is doing something to look old, as in the Indiana Jones films, he appear to know how far to push something and when to pull back - whether he does that by subtraction or through the use of models or animatronics.
Medalion said:I am not talking about if JP never existed and then was made today, I am talking about a Jurassic Park reboot... different people, director etc etc
It would be a CG orgy that would fuck your eye-sockets out
Furret said:Your celebration of ignorance is really distasteful.
Brachiosaurus has been known about since the turn of the century and certainly while you were at school would have been famous for being the largest commonly known dinosaur.