Just got back from seeing Indy 4. No new Star Trek XI trailer, not even the teaser trailer.
Didn't care for Indy 4.
So? The film is almost a year away from release.
Wow, you got 15 minutes? I was unimpressed from damn nearly the opening frame.Didn't care for Indy 4.
Terrible.
15 minutes in, I knew it was a lost cause.
Wow, you got 15 minutes? I was unimpressed from damn nearly the opening frame.Didn't care for Indy 4.
Terrible.
15 minutes in, I knew it was a lost cause.![]()
Is it really becoming so common, though? And have you been given reason think that STXI will suffer from it overmuch? If there's evidence that it will, please share (with appropriate spoiler warnings/coding, naturally.I'm worried what STXI will look like. The whole actors on CGI sets is becoming more and more common. Were being force fed Hollywoods version of what looks real. Special effects today suck. I fear for STXI.
Is it really becoming so common, though? And have you been given reason think that STXI will suffer from it overmuch? If there's evidence that it will, please share (with appropriate spoiler warnings/coding, naturally.I'm worried what STXI will look like. The whole actors on CGI sets is becoming more and more common. Were being force fed Hollywoods version of what looks real. Special effects today suck. I fear for STXI.)
With you, so far. I quite agree.CGI has it's place, but not to make a movie in it's entirety.
I'll have to take your word for this, for the moment, as I have not seen Indy 4 yet.Even those who liked Indy 4 complain about the CGI look and feel.
...I'm not sure I'm reading this quite the same way as you are. He's said that you can't build sets for everything, but that's not news. Even Cecil B. DeMille had to fudge on sets sometimes; George Lucas used miniatures in the original Star Wars, as had many filmmakers before him, and miniatures were also used in a number of instances in Lord of the Rings.And Abrams quote from the article above doesn't bode well for STXI.
(quote inserted here)
"Even JJ Abrams has admitted that it's impossible to build sets for everything on his Star Trek movie because it would cost too much."
With you, so far. I quite agree.CGI has it's place, but not to make a movie in it's entirety.
I'll have to take your word for this, for the moment, as I have not seen Indy 4 yet.Even those who liked Indy 4 complain about the CGI look and feel.
However...
...I'm not sure I'm reading this quite the same way as you are. He's said that you can't build sets for everything, but that's not news. Even Cecil B. DeMille had to fudge on sets sometimes; George Lucas used miniatures in the original Star Wars, as had many filmmakers before him, and miniatures were also used in a number of instances in Lord of the Rings.And Abrams quote from the article above doesn't bode well for STXI.
(quote inserted here)
"Even JJ Abrams has admitted that it's impossible to build sets for everything on his Star Trek movie because it would cost too much."
What the article containing the Abrams quote (and the quote itself, really) seems to me to be saying is that there is a growing recognition of the limitations of CGI, and that there is a visible trend among prominent directors toward using physical props and models again. CGI will still be used to fill in the gaps, but it's become apparent to a lot of people that CGI isn't the be-all and end-all, where movie effects are concerned; it's just one of the tools available.
Well, I doubt that we'll ever get all the way back to what you call the "matchstick and rubber band" days (I like the old stuff, too) but we're already seeing an adjustment away from too much dependency on CGI, which is what the article is saying, overall.Your Abrams observation is my point exactly. Of course everything can't be built full size, but miniatures often look better than CGI. CGI is being relied on for everything today. I long for the old "matchstick and rubberband" days. Go back and look at some of those old Cecil B. DeMille films. The miniature work was fantastic.
TrekXI will certainly have CGI effects -- to expect otherwise simply wouldn't be realistic, in today's state of filmmaking -- but I don't think it will be overwhelmed by CGI.
I hope you're right. Time will tell.
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