De dood van speciale gevolgen

14 augustus, 2008 langs William Stapleton · Verlaat een Commentaar

Mijn zoon en ik ging zien De romp toen de nieuwe film van de Studio van het Wonder onlangs in de Stad van Oklahoma, opende en wij allebei werden indruk gemaakt op met de naadloze aard van de elementen van CGI in movie.  Aangezien wij vanaf het theater dreven, begonnen wij over hoe te spreken de filmtechnologie heeft geëvolueerdu, makend films als De romp en De Mens van het ijzer mogelijk. Lees meer

Wat zal gebeuren wanneer de speciale gevolgen niet speciaal anymore zijn? [Verticaal]

30 juni, 2008 langs William Stapleton · Verlaat een Commentaar

Mijn zoon en ik ging zien De romp toen de nieuwe film van de Studio van het Wonder onlangs in de Stad van Oklahoma, opende en wij allebei werden indruk gemaakt op met de naadloze aard van de elementen van CGI in movie. Aangezien wij vanaf het theater dreven, begonnen wij over hoe te spreken de filmtechnologie heeft geëvolueerdf, makend films als De romp en Ironman mogelijk. I told him about the ‘gee-whiz’ feeling I had when I saw Star Wars for the first time in a little movie theater in Sugarland, Texas back in the late 70s, and we started brainstorming about the future of film. Soon, popular stars will develop that are completely created - that is, their voices and features will be entirely generated by computers. With the inevitable improvements occurring in CGI, soon movie-goers won’t be able to tell the difference between live actors and computer-generated characters. And suddenly, we’ll have ‘actors’ who can look the same for literally hundreds of years. Imagine a storyline that spans a couple of centuries - or even a millennium - it could happen.

But what happens when the ‘gee-whiz’ wears off? My grandchildren will take CGI technology for granted, because they’ll grow up in a time when it’s the norm, instead of something that’s new and exciting. I’ll admit, I’ve gone to a few films where the only redeeming quality was the power of its special effects. But what will happen when special effects aren’t ’special’ anymore?

That’s easy - writing will become more important again. The story will become more critical to the success of a film than its visuals. Hollywood comes full circle.

Just think about the ‘website craze’ when the Internet was relatively new to public use. A million sites sprang up that had plenty of flash - but no real content. Predictably, those content-poor websites withered on the vine, and justly so. As the World Wide Web has become more mature, the emphasis has shifted away from sites with scrolling marquees to sites that are content-rich. Only the strong survive.

The same thing will happen in film. Great CGI effects won’t be enough to keep an audience’s attention. In fact today, the best movie is the one with both: great special effects and a great storyline. Marvel’s Spider-man franchise is a good example.

So, I’m excited about the future of film. As a person who would rather read a well-written book than see a poorly-written movie, I’ll welcome the soon-to-appear improvement in scripts and dialogue.

And besides, with all this new CGI wizardry, maybe someone will be brave enough to make a movie of the Foundation Trilogy. You could stretch that excellent storyline over a couple of centuries!

Bottom