Loved the original film from 1958.
Got traumatized by the 1988 remake.
Don't even want to think how traumatized I'd be after watching a modern remake.
Loved the original film from 1958.
Got traumatized by the 1988 remake.
Don't even want to think how traumatized I'd be after watching a modern remake.
This is a screenshot I took today of the film's second trailer.
That's Grey Hulk.
It's really hard to predict how technology will evolve. And it's not just that filmmakers in the 70's and 80's made the false assumption that computer graphics will still be crude in the future, and the CRT monitor's reign will last centuries... They also made the mistake of overestimating the evolution of technology…
Marvel has, in fact, already touched this subject in an interview with IGN:
I honestly fail to see why people are so allergic to this version of Sonic.
I am aware of that.
About the business with Vision killing Ultron...
Yes, because these guys were so full of life...
There was a point during my studies as a 3D artist and animator where we had this big animation project that we'd been working on for months. People were starting to, kind of, fall out of love with the project. And one day when I was really tired, I told my classmates:
As long as someone else does the rigging, I'm good :'D
I would have written a different headline:
Dude, I'm totally gay.
Well, they're certainly not bad things :3
I have a different play style. I'll gladly sacrifice some stopping power in exchange for flexibility. I need a gun that can do what I want it to do, when I want it to do it. Strange Suspect was the perfect pulse rifle if you ask me.
I think my first Exotic weapon was probably the SUROS Regime I bought from Xûr two or three weeks after the game's release. And soon thereafter I completed the bounty for Bad Juju.
I have a Bad Juju. I've had that gun forever. But I also need a really good Legendary pulse rifle.
I got the new Vanguard pulse rifle, Time On Target, with the full-auto upgrade :D
But what you're saying here is not that it's a problem with the technique, it's a problem of using the technique in bad taste. And doing a movie in bad taste has a lose-lose outcome no matter what the technique was used in making it.
This claim makes absolutely no sense.
Myself, I'm an 80's kid. I grew up watching a lot of movies with practical effects in them. I thought they were amazing! I sort of grew up thinking of the zippers and the tubes, and the lines and the bad blue screen compositing, and the weird, jerky movements of the animatronic puppets as facts of film-making.