nealwiser
Neal Wiser
nealwiser

I worked on Space Jam. At the time, it was one of the most complex merging of traditional animation, live action and cgi (although there wasn’t nearly as much cgi as you would think or as ZigZag99 suggests below). Re the quality of the animation, it was simply an artistic decision by the directors. Believe me when I

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Actually, Moore admitted to copying BSG from Space: 1999 (Season 1) opening credits. See them here,

The 100 or so threads and questions left unanswered on Lost.

The only problem is that we've seen all this before. Nothing new here and I'd like to see Riddick do something new.

You know all the atrocities committed by companies like the East India Company (who had the legal right to execute people)? If Capt Kirk was a "corporate man" we'd see more of the same.

Why? Just, why?

It's absolutely ridiculous and backwards that they don't open up naming to the public. There are more objects in the sky by vast orders of magnitude than there are words in all languages combined. Allowing public participation, or better yet, buying of naming rights to support research is a logical conclusion.

And this is just the stuff that you can see. I've seen some things in development (both military and corporate) that makes this all look rather quaint.

I feel shortchanged by most of W.S. Anderson's films. I see a lot of potential in his directing, as you mention, he's good at buildup, but his film just fall apart after that.

Hi Eric, I saw EH in theaters and it just didn't work for me. Lots of great stuff, but the whole concept of opening the door to "Hell" felt contrived. I mean, you've got the whole universe so why did it have to be our (i.e., human) concept of Hell. At least if it was an alien Hell, that would have made sense. BTW;

You've got a good point there, "Miles." This is really just a PR stunt as there's no hard line to cross and say we're out. The edge of the solar system is much more diffuse. Is it the edge of the Oort Cloud (which is where, exactly?)? Or is it the end of the Sun's influence (again, which is where, exactly?)? It's like

I had that issue of OMNI. May even still have it in a box somewhere. Loved that art. it's what inspired me to read Dune in the first place.

I love stuff like this. Absolutely amazing. Of course, it begs the questions of what the "artist" was thinking.