Meh. Slow motion with no sense of energy. I've never understood why people think stuff like this is anything but pretty rendering. The only emotion it inspired for me is boredom.
Maybe he can be friends with Shirtless Vladimir Putin.Someone should start a parody Twitter account - Shirtless Alec Peters, or some such.
Meh. Slow motion with no sense of energy. I've never understood why people think stuff like this is anything but pretty rendering. The only emotion it inspired for me is boredom.
God, I hate myself for it, but that pushes so many more buttons for me than the trailers for Beyond...Strip away LFIM and reduce Axanar to the excellent CGI set-pieces by Tobias (the only way, I personally would ever want to see it) and it's actually not that bad........
(someone made a CGI music vid out of scenes from Prelude)
No. It's just that many of these scenes are produced by people who don't understand film and shot composition and are simply aping what they've seen before instead of questioning if that's the best approach.The slow motion ship scenes seem to be a common theme in fan CGI... is it hard to make those scenes progress at a "normal" pace?
Of course he wears the same shirt, he hasn't done his gotten enough money off of kickstarter for a new wardrode. Everybody knows the producer/former star/ego manic's wardrobe is a very important part of producing a movie.Also:
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Poor Alec. If he doesn't win this lawsuit, he's literally going to lose his shirt.
Alex Peters is Nero in "Do you smell something burning ?" Coming sometime in this lifetime way off Broadway....
Star Wars stormtroopers are manning the phaser banks.Well, the two other options are to show the ship center-frame with "stars" zipping by, or you have a long-range view with tiny "ships" zooming around like the dog-fight scenes in Top Gun.
I didn't mind the "slow dance" of the ships. But the firing range to awfully close. They look like they're just a couple hundred meters apart, but a phaser can hit a selected building at 25,000 km from orbit. Why get so close, and why do they miss?
Why get so close, and why do they miss?
Hum, nearly 1111 pages... Will we reach 1701 pages by September 8 2016 ? ;-)
Awesome is paying so much attention to an abject failure who has produced an average of about 6 minutes of content per year since 2012, while collecting some $1.3 million in donationsThat would be awesome!
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