avclub-f97ba6a62cae77e83745f99355470508--disqus
ebolacola
avclub-f97ba6a62cae77e83745f99355470508--disqus

Yea @avclub-04d524031f29c89d78cae864bd6f0de7:disqus That "we've already met, and i'm pretty sure we have already had this meeting before too" was very reminiscent of Lost Highways "I'm in your house right now" conversation.

Did you listen to anything Henry said in this episode?

The Lady in the Water > Unbreakable.

@avclub-204453609b38abf5762fadf06f424221:disqus Do you think James Bond ever tells anyone his name?

Well maybe, I wasn't really paying super close attention, taking notes or making a bingo game of it.

You can counter those claims of 'liberal elites' pointing out all of the homophobia/racism/misogyny in the ceremony.

The D is supposed to be silent.

"The reason why I think Bilbo runs over to help first (since some of the
dwarves did run over eventually, if they were able to climb out of the
tree) was to show that the adventure is changing him, which is exactly
what happens at this point in the story."

"The reason why I think Bilbo runs over to help first (since some of the
dwarves did run over eventually, if they were able to climb out of the
tree) was to show that the adventure is changing him, which is exactly
what happens at this point in the story."

Yea, that goblin looked like he had come straight out of Labyrinth (though 26 years later, the cgi version has not caught up with the quality of puppet special effects).

Yea, that goblin looked like he had come straight out of Labyrinth (though 26 years later, the cgi version has not caught up with the quality of puppet special effects).

Well… the second season maybe.

Well… the second season maybe.

He really used much less CGI than you would expect from almost anyone else working at the scale at the time. The LOTR films came out after the Phantom menace after all.
And King Kong uses a ton of the same kind of effects that the original film used, so it seems a bit strange that he would embrace it so much in the

He really used much less CGI than you would expect from almost anyone else working at the scale at the time. The LOTR films came out after the Phantom menace after all.
And King Kong uses a ton of the same kind of effects that the original film used, so it seems a bit strange that he would embrace it so much in the

You see his love of gore and slapstick in those movies appear again in LOTR and the Hobbit (slapstick especially) as well.

You see his love of gore and slapstick in those movies appear again in LOTR and the Hobbit (slapstick especially) as well.

^^ Added a couple of notes to the post above that are kind of in response to your post..

^^ Added a couple of notes to the post above that are kind of in response to your post..

So I went straight to 24fps and 2D, a lot of long pans and moving camera shots that have been made with this HFR in mind, so they look a bit rubbish in 24fps*. But then you will cut to Bilbo's hobbit hole or something where I expect the 48fps looks like rubbish.
 It may be the case that as this technology becomes more