山姆・傑克遜凝視您

2008年8月27日 Lorien福克納 · 留下評論

嘿人,快的頭在最新信息我們 自由電影通行證 為讀者在俄克拉何馬地區。 萬一您未注意新的加法對我們的導航條,我們致力了頁通行證,使它容易對您能按書簽和檢查更新,我們張貼他們。 讀更多

談論這篇文章在論壇 - (1)崗位

美國青少年在土爾沙

2008年8月19日 Lorien福克納 · 留下評論

比自由午餐更好沒什麼在生活中,并且進來一接近二是一部自由電影。  雖然我們會願意帶所有我們的讀者對午餐,發現一張桌為15一千大概是難的。  反而,我們全部在為幾百建立的劇院將塞并且暫時停止。 讀更多

The death of special effects

August 14, 2008 by William Stapleton · Leave a Comment

My son and I went to see The Hulk when the new Marvel Studio film opened in Oklahoma City recently, and we were both impressed with the seamless nature of the CGI elements in the movie.  As we drove away from the theater, we started talking about how filming technology has evolved, making films like The Hulk and Iron Man possible. Read more

Hang with PTD, American Teen

August 11, 2008 by Lorien Faulkner · Leave a Comment

We scored some free passes to the screening of American Teen this week and want to pass the love on to our fellow readers. If you’re pumped for a little teen-angst documentary style, then drop into our forums to download your free pass. Thanks to Paramount for hooking us up. Read more

What will happen when special effects aren’t special anymore? [Vertical]

June 30, 2008 by William Stapleton · Leave a Comment

My son and I went to see The Hulk when the new Marvel Studio film opened in Oklahoma City recently, and we were both impressed with the seamless nature of the CGI elements in the movie. As we drove away from the theater, we started talking about how filming technology has evolved, making films like The Hulk and Ironman possible. 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!

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