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Post by Lord Death Man on Feb 21, 2018 16:07:26 GMT
No, it won't even be considered. Furthermore, unlike the pomp and circumstance behind Wonder Woman, Black Panther won't even enjoy endless, indignant debate on the subject. The most that will come of this film are large sums of money for the Disney corporation and improved career trajectories for the cast and crew involved in the production. History is best made secretly, boys and girls.
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Post by coldenhaulfield on Feb 21, 2018 16:08:57 GMT
No, it won't even be considered. Furthermore, unlike the pomp and circumstance behind Wonder Woman, Black Panther won't even enjoy endless, indignant debate on the subject. The most that will come of this film are large sums of money for the Disney corporation and improved career trajectories for the cast and crew involved in the production. History is best made secretly, boys and girls.What about like for special effects?
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Post by Lord Death Man on Feb 21, 2018 16:15:10 GMT
No, it won't even be considered. Furthermore, unlike the pomp and circumstance behind Wonder Woman, Black Panther won't even enjoy endless, indignant debate on the subject. The most that will come of this film are large sums of money for the Disney corporation and improved career trajectories for the cast and crew involved in the production. History is best made secretly, boys and girls.What about like for special effects? No. That said, Marvel should consider putting some of its now considerable wealth behind new technology advancements in the visual FX space. CGI is stagnating. Audiences can see through it just as easily as they did the matte paintings of old Hollywood. VFX is key to their enterprise and I believe that same investment (and some dawdling with plastic toys) put Lucas in a position to dominate.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 21, 2018 16:23:22 GMT
No, it won't even be considered. Furthermore, unlike the pomp and circumstance behind Wonder Woman, Black Panther won't even enjoy endless, indignant debate on the subject. The most that will come of this film are large sums of money for the Disney corporation and improved career trajectories for the cast and crew involved in the production. History is best made secretly, boys and girls.What about like for special effects? The special effects were.... bad.
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Post by coldenhaulfield on Feb 21, 2018 16:24:16 GMT
What about like for special effects? The special effects were.... bad. That's racist.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 21, 2018 16:25:45 GMT
The special effects were.... bad. That's racist. I SAW BLACK TWICE OPENING WEEKEND AND WOULDVE WATCHED IT 100X IF I COULD BECAUSE I LOVE BLACK PEOPLEπ€π€π€π€π€
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Post by coldenhaulfield on Feb 21, 2018 19:20:55 GMT
What about like for special effects? No. That said, Marvel should consider putting some of its now considerable wealth behind new technology advancements in the visual FX space. CGI is stagnating. Audiences can see through it just as easily as they did the matte paintings of old Hollywood. VFX is key to their enterprise and I believe that same investment (and some dawdling with plastic toys) put Lucas in a position to dominate. What would you have them do? More practical effects a la The Force Awakens?
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Post by Power Ranger on Feb 21, 2018 19:38:06 GMT
If not then the academy is obviously racist.
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Post by Lord Death Man on Feb 21, 2018 19:52:57 GMT
No. That said, Marvel should consider putting some of its now considerable wealth behind new technology advancements in the visual FX space. CGI is stagnating. Audiences can see through it just as easily as they did the matte paintings of old Hollywood. VFX is key to their enterprise and I believe that same investment (and some dawdling with plastic toys) put Lucas in a position to dominate. What would you have them do? More practical effects a la The Force Awakens? Practical Visual FX and stunt choreography are always preferred in my book. Convincing wirework that doesn't look like a community theater production of Peter Pan is welcome too. I know this will get a few chuckles from anti-MCU activists but, I think Marvel should consider acquiring or starting their own effects house in the vein of Lucasfilm and Skywalker ranch. A Marvel VFX house could bring efficiencies to their workflow by having a continuous pre-visual and post-production pipeline exclusively dedicated to exploring VFX for the Marvel Universe and its characters. The Marvel Universe is vast and diverse, and you need a team of people devoted to mapping it's visual topology and fully realizing all of its eye-popping potentials (wait until we get to Kirby's Negative Zone). That in and of itself won't improve the state of CGI in Marvel films or Hollywood blockbusters overall but, it will guarantee consistency of quality and well thought out CGI-based storytelling. The second thing they should do is start to invest their money in cutting-edge CGI technology that brings more immersive experiences to the table. Be it augmented reality, virtual reality or something else entirely, Marvel should try to get out in front of the next wave of innovation in big-budget tentpole storytelling. Even if its just doing something as mundane as partnering with Intel, Nvidia or AMD on the next wave of CPUs that can help VFX artists bring their visions to life in a more time efficient manner. Splitting the movies' effects across multiple houses hurts - badly. Marvel should sink some of its earnings into RD for VFX - they need to be pushed further.
I loved Black Panther but, even I have to acknowledge the rubber man issues it had with the train sequence. It was not perfect. The rendering was barely passable in some parts, and the physics were beyond absurd - for a few seconds, it was like watching two weightless blowup dolls fight - absolutely no sense of gravity. At least the theatrical version looked better than the early promo clips that were circulated to the media. I dunno, man... I'm worried about the MCU.
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Post by kevin on Feb 21, 2018 19:57:40 GMT
I SAW BLACK TWICE OPENING WEEKEND AND WOULDVE WATCHED IT 100X IF I COULD BECAUSE I LOVE BLACK PEOPLEπ€π€π€π€π€
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Post by coldenhaulfield on Feb 22, 2018 4:31:48 GMT
What would you have them do? More practical effects a la The Force Awakens? Practical Visual FX and stunt choreography are always preferred in my book. Convincing wirework that doesn't look like a community theater production of Peter Pan is welcome too. I know this will get a few chuckles from anti-MCU activists but, I think Marvel should consider acquiring or starting their own effects house in the vein of Lucasfilm and Skywalker ranch. A Marvel VFX house could bring efficiencies to their workflow by having a continuous pre-visual and post-production pipeline exclusively dedicated to exploring VFX for the Marvel Universe and its characters. The Marvel Universe is vast and diverse, and you need a team of people devoted to mapping it's visual topology and fully realizing all of its eye-popping potentials (wait until we get to Kirby's Negative Zone). That in and of itself won't improve the state of CGI in Marvel films or Hollywood blockbusters overall but, it will guarantee consistency of quality and well thought out CGI-based storytelling. The second thing they should do is start to invest their money in cutting-edge CGI technology that brings more immersive experiences to the table. Be it augmented reality, virtual reality or something else entirely, Marvel should try to get out in front of the next wave of innovation in big-budget tentpole storytelling. Even if its just doing something as mundane as partnering with Intel, Nvidia or AMD on the next wave of CPUs that can help VFX artists bring their visions to life in a more time efficient manner. Splitting the movies' effects across multiple houses hurts - badly. Marvel should sink some of its earnings into RD for VFX - they need to be pushed further.
I loved Black Panther but, even I have to acknowledge the rubber man issues it had with the train sequence. It was not perfect. The rendering was barely passable in some parts, and the physics were beyond absurd - for a few seconds, it was like watching two weightless blowup dolls fight - absolutely no sense of gravity. At least the theatrical version looked better than the early promo clips that were circulated to the media. I dunno, man... I'm worried about the MCU.
Are you saying you think it needs a... reboot?
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Post by Lord Death Man on Feb 22, 2018 4:58:33 GMT
Practical Visual FX and stunt choreography are always preferred in my book. Convincing wirework that doesn't look like a community theater production of Peter Pan is welcome too. I know this will get a few chuckles from anti-MCU activists but, I think Marvel should consider acquiring or starting their own effects house in the vein of Lucasfilm and Skywalker ranch. A Marvel VFX house could bring efficiencies to their workflow by having a continuous pre-visual and post-production pipeline exclusively dedicated to exploring VFX for the Marvel Universe and its characters. The Marvel Universe is vast and diverse, and you need a team of people devoted to mapping it's visual topology and fully realizing all of its eye-popping potentials (wait until we get to Kirby's Negative Zone). That in and of itself won't improve the state of CGI in Marvel films or Hollywood blockbusters overall but, it will guarantee consistency of quality and well thought out CGI-based storytelling. The second thing they should do is start to invest their money in cutting-edge CGI technology that brings more immersive experiences to the table. Be it augmented reality, virtual reality or something else entirely, Marvel should try to get out in front of the next wave of innovation in big-budget tentpole storytelling. Even if its just doing something as mundane as partnering with Intel, Nvidia or AMD on the next wave of CPUs that can help VFX artists bring their visions to life in a more time efficient manner. Splitting the movies' effects across multiple houses hurts - badly. Marvel should sink some of its earnings into RD for VFX - they need to be pushed further.
I loved Black Panther but, even I have to acknowledge the rubber man issues it had with the train sequence. It was not perfect. The rendering was barely passable in some parts, and the physics were beyond absurd - for a few seconds, it was like watching two weightless blowup dolls fight - absolutely no sense of gravity. At least the theatrical version looked better than the early promo clips that were circulated to the media. I dunno, man... I'm worried about the MCU.
Are you saying you think it needs a... reboot? Basically.
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Post by coldenhaulfield on Feb 23, 2018 22:19:02 GMT
Are you saying you think it needs a... reboot? Basically. But we would leave Black Panther as canon. Innit?
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Post by Lord Death Man on Feb 23, 2018 22:21:46 GMT
But we would leave Black Panther as canon. Innit? Definitely.
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Post by darkpast on Feb 25, 2019 5:31:34 GMT
almost
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