Yuuuup. Exactly.I lived through classic Doctor Who. Complaints about CGI sound ridiculous for the most part.
Yuuuup. Exactly.I lived through classic Doctor Who. Complaints about CGI sound ridiculous for the most part.
Story and actor's performance works wonders. Captain Scarlet's Mysterons were creepy alien invaders. Puppet show where the aliens were rings of light but the story and voice work sold that unstoppable alien menace. Space Battleship Yamato, a cartoon, more character driven drama than most shows. Well done for their type of media but obviously all looked unrealistic. The stories and characters made the types of media irrelevant to the enjoyment of the tale. The quality of the CGI is just about the last thing I care about because if the story is crap the technical brilliance of the CGI won't mean shit to me. Looking at you Avatar, you tedious savior trope.I'll add Blakes 7, which was made after Star Wars. Done on a shoestring budget and it showed. Thankfully, the writing was mostly solid. If you're used to theatrical performances, you can ignore the fact that the performance is taking place on a stage with a handful or props and token backdrops provided the script and actors are up to par. Often, I get the impression that a lot of people have never been to the theatre. I find theatrical drama much more engaging than most TV or movie drama. It just seems more visceral, not necessarily more intellectual.
Story and actor's performance works wonders. Captain Scarlet's Mysterons were creepy alien invaders. Puppet show where the aliens were rings of light but the story and voice work sold that unstoppable alien menace. Space Battleship Yamato, a cartoon, more character driven drama than most shows. Well done for their type of media but obviously all looked unrealistic. The stories and characters made the types of media irrelevant to the enjoyment of the tale. The quality of the CGI is just about the last thing I care about because if the story is crap the technical brilliance of the CGI won't mean shit to me. Looking at you Avatar, you tedious savior trope.
That was supposed to be such a breakthru then, after the minature-background-and-snorkel-cam thing was developed for Carl Sagan's Cosmos series. We thought it was amazing back then. IIRC, Starlost's problem (well, one of them) was using a camera with poor depth of field, so the backgrounds LOOKED like they were only a few feet deep, with only a short area in focus.You want to talk threadbare EFX, anyone remember The Starlost? The whole thing was shot with chroma-key!![]()
Comment from Chris. "We saw Star Wars. It was like finding the USS Nimitz in your garden pond. We knew we had no chance of matching the fx, so tried other stuff, like funny lines."I'll add Blakes 7, which was made after Star Wars. Done on a shoestring budget and it showed. Thankfully, the writing was mostly solid. If you're used to theatrical performances, you can ignore the fact that the performance is taking place on a stage with a handful or props and token backdrops provided the script and actors are up to par. Often, I get the impression that a lot of people have never been to the theatre. I find theatrical drama much more engaging than most TV or movie drama. It just seems more visceral, not necessarily more intellectual.
I lived through classic Doctor Who. Complaints about CGI sound ridiculous for the most part.
Seems to be dead-in-the-water given the shake-up at the CW?Is there any news about JMS's reboot?
Jeez, the "Babylon 5 curse" just keeps giving and giving. A brain injury that alters ones personality can really tear families apart. It's sometimes almost as though the person you knew died and their body got hijacked by someone else. Quite sad.A personal article was recently put up about a member of the cast on Medium: “My Dad Starred in a Hit TV Show with a Severe Brain Injury”
Sorry to be coy about who it's referring to, but judging by the way it was written, the author apparently didn't want it to come up when you Google this actor's name, so I'm not going to mention it in the post with the actual link.
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