That's a good point. The initial T-Rex attack in 1993 is one of the places where the CGI still holds up, and a lot of that is due to how well it's folded in with practical effects.
That's a good point. The initial T-Rex attack in 1993 is one of the places where the CGI still holds up, and a lot of that is due to how well it's folded in with practical effects.
It'll come back, my friend. It has to.
I hear this a lot, and with a few exceptions I think that's a misnomer. I caught it on tv a week or two ago, and a good chunk of the cgi has not aged particularly well. The difference is that they surrounded the f/x with some decent characters, a solid plot, and terrific camerawork, so your brain readily accepts the…
FURY ROAD
FURY ROAD
FURY ROAD
FURY ROAD
Hickman is a terrific architect, but he's a cold, boring storyteller. I'd love to see him plotting a book with someone else scripting.
That's a pretty weak defense of Civil War (though to be fair, there are no possible strong defenses of it.) I'll take good not-much-happened over bad buncha-stuff-happened stories any day of the week.
My mistake.
Funny how people view things differently (literally, in this case.) Of all the films mentioned here, I'd say "Cave of Forgotten Dreams" is the only one where 3D was not just an improvement, but essential to the full experience of Herzog's vision. I've watched (and enjoyed) the movie at home in two dimensions, but…
"Up." It's a wonderful movie, but the 3d conversion made it look muddy and washed out.
If this is THE David Wain, thanks for a great show!
She's funny as hell in that episode, too.
She really is uniformly spectacular, whether it's backing up other actors (Attention Staff) or when taking over an entire episode (Children's Lawspital.)
Hands-down my favorite episode of the series.
Cocaine!
"Hot Enough For You" is great front-to-back, but that "I Killed Cancer" jam at the end is fucking amazing. It's one of those bits that seems like a harmless, fun little throwaway gag until you realize that time and money had to be spent to:
A- write and record a song
B- teach the cast dance moves and give them time to…
Shut up.
It's almost a cliche at this point because every single "fantasy casting" letter or article throughout the 80s mentioned it, but spaghetti western-era Clint Eastwood was perfect for Wolverine (frankly, I'm pretty sure he was an influence on Claremont/Byrne's development of the character.)
God dammit. Hope he comes back soon.
I missed the show this year, but am hopeful that Claremont will be back in 2017. If anyone reading got to see him this time around, what was his line like?
Whether it was his admission as a bombshell or the slow awakening over several years, Armstrong's cheating was heartbreaking to millions, myself included.