Spider from Mars
tap that thorax
Having not seen Avatar yet, My top two go to Benjamin Button and District 9 respectively.
I thought I was the only one who pluralized "Button" when talking about that movie. :lolrobertsan21 said:I would probably have to say Avatar or benjamin buttons
1.Avatar
2.Benjamin buttons
3.Davy jones
4.Gollum
BobsRevenge said:... Dude, District 9's last act was all Michael Bay shit. It screamed Michael Bay.
BobsRevenge said:... Dude, District 9's last act was all Michael Bay shit. It screamed Michael Bay.
robertsan21 said:I would probably have to say Avatar or benjamin buttons
1.Avatar
2.Benjamin buttons
3.Davy jones
4.Gollum
jett said:After seeing Avatar, it's really hard to say either Neytiri or Jake's avatar. They're flawless.
Davy Jones is not flawless. There's a scene in POTC3 where Davy Jones wipes a tear off his face with one of his tentacles, looked totally retarded and fake.
Dabookerman said:There is no such thing as flawless in CG ;p
No other answer than this.nib95 said:
jett said:For now they are, for me.Not a single scene in Avatar took me out of the experience.
Zeliard said:I can't believe people are saying Gollum. Go watch Two Towers nowadays. He was a great achievement five years ago, but he stands out rather hugely in contrast to the human characters if you see it these days.
Zeliard said:I can't believe people are saying Gollum. Go watch Two Towers nowadays. He was a great achievement five years ago, but he stands out rather hugely in contrast to the human characters if you see it these days.
It went really stylish and contrived with the action sequences. It was packed with action movie cliches, but wasn't self-conscious about it. It was also violence that was meant to look cool and exciting as chief priorities. That's how it was like Bay for me.MattKeil said:No, it didn't. D9's last act is entirely motivated by story and character, and every single beat in the action sequences serves a story-related purpose. You know why what's happening is happening, you know what's at stake, you know what the characters in the scene want, and the characters are clearly trying to achieve those goals by way of their actions. Michael Bay's entire problem is that all of these elements are absent from his films' climaxes, which is why they feel hollow and occasionally boring. If you feel those elements are absent from D9, you are wrong.
I'd say the Na'vi upped the bar for believable performances in CGI, but the D9 aliens and/or Davy Jones still hold the "I believe that thing on the screen is a real creature" crown.
Ether_Snake said:Not Gollum. He moved like Roger Rabbit.
Dabookerman said:Gollum stands out less than some of the other characters in the trilogy I think. It's more the performance than the quality of the CG, which is with all characters I guess. But they really did a great job with taking that character out of the book and onto the screen.
I had this conversation with a friend the other day. Discussing if Avatar would date. Cameron's use of CG has been impeccable in the past, T2 still looks amazing for the most part, The Abyss (despite being kind of ugly) still looks totally consistent in regards to CG. And Titanic still looks really great.jett said:Nearly all of the CG in LOTR has aged badly, actually. I lulz at Gollum.
MidgarBlowedUp said:My vote goes to Aki Ross with the only fault being the animation.
* 60,000 fully rendered and individually animated strands of hair.
* 400,000 polygons.
* Fully rendered model, unlike Benjamin Buttons who is not.
* She was also rendered inside a complete CGI environment with other characters also sporting 400,000 polys a piece.
* Rendered resolution must have been insanely high due to aliasing being very minimal, unlike the new FF films.
MidgarBlowedUp said:My vote goes to Aki Ross with the only fault being the animation.
* 60,000 fully rendered and individually animated strands of hair.
* 400,000 polygons.
* Fully rendered model, unlike Benjamin Buttons who is not.
* She was also rendered inside a complete CGI environment with other characters also sporting 400,000 polys a piece.
* Rendered resolution must have been insanely high due to aliasing being very minimal, unlike the new FF films.
Ether_Snake said:Not Gollum. He moved like Roger Rabbit. Those Avatar dudes are probably the best really. But Drake is the one with the most believable and likeable character.
Zeliard said:In terms of the way his look was designed and how he was acted by Serkis? Fantastic, and that's not something that will be damaged by time.
But the way he's rendered on screen, if you watch it nowadays, it's extremely easy to tell the difference between him and the humans. To a far greater degree than Davy Jones, or the District 9 and Avatar aliens, in my opinion.
Still, Gollum is obviously hugely innovative and influential. Cameron himself said he didn't even seriously start work on Avatar till he saw Gollum in Two Towers.
stuburns said:I had this conversation with a friend the other day. Discussing if Avatar would date. Cameron's use of CG has been impeccable in the past, T2 still looks amazing for the most part, The Abyss (despite being kind of ugly) still looks totally consistent in regards to CG. And Titanic still looks really great.
_tetsuo_ said:It's still Davey Jones. I remember reading reviews after I came home from the show and multiple reviewers didn't even know it was CG.
MidgarBlowedUp said:My vote goes to Aki Ross with the only fault being the animation.
* 60,000 fully rendered and individually animated strands of hair.
* 400,000 polygons.
* Fully rendered model, unlike Benjamin Buttons who is not.
* She was also rendered inside a complete CGI environment with other characters also sporting 400,000 polys a piece.
* Rendered resolution must have been insanely high due to aliasing being very minimal, unlike the new FF films.
Burai said:They "cheat" a bit with Davy Jones. The eyes and mouth are always the most difficult bit to get right. With Davy, they, wherever possible, use Bill Nighy's actual bottom lip, teeth, tongue and eyes (with recolouring) and CGI the rest around it. In effect, they've generated the costume rather than the man. The reviewers were kind of right - Nighy was wearing a mask... A mask made of polygons and textures.
Burai said:They "cheat" a bit with Davy Jones. The eyes and mouth are always the most difficult bit to get right. With Davy, they, wherever possible, use Bill Nighy's actual bottom lip, teeth, tongue and eyes (with recolouring) and CGI the rest around it. In effect, they've generated the costume rather than the man. The reviewers were kind of right - Nighy was wearing a mask... A mask made of polygons and textures.
There are a couple of spotty bits, for me the most obvious is when the T-1000 puts his 'arms' between the doors of the lift, you see them as normal steel, then after the cutaway they are 'liquid metal', and it loses all texture, and it's just very noticeable. But for the most part, it still pretty incredible in comparison to LotR, which already looks kind of rough. Maybe they'll touch it up when they commit to the dimensionalization.Dabookerman said:T2 is funny. The amount of cheating that is used in CG is amazing. Ray Tracing wasn't used for T2, so they used refection maps. And my teacher told me to watch the helicopter scene when he jumps on, and look at the reflections and see how they don't make sense, and they don't! Now it's amazing how you get away with that. It's all about how you use the CG and trick the audience.
I agree. The CGI in Avatar will obviously eventually be topped, but I don't think it will ever look bad in retrospect, unlike a lot of the work done on LOTRstuburns said:I had this conversation with a friend the other day. Discussing if Avatar would date. Cameron's use of CG has been impeccable in the past, T2 still looks amazing for the most part, The Abyss (despite being kind of ugly) still looks totally consistent in regards to CG. And Titanic still looks really great.
Dabookerman said:Polycount is meaningless thanks to Zbrush nowadays ;p There's nothing impressive about those numbers. It's all about render times. And that fluctuates every year.
They never resorted to using his live version.
Ether_Snake said:For the eyes yes.
Dead said:I agree. The CGI in Avatar will obviously eventually be topped, but I don't think it will ever look bad in retrospect, unlike a lot of the work done on LOTR
Dabookerman said:Source?
I think most of the dodgy CG was in Two Towers and ROTK (CGI Legolas, WHY). Fellowship was mostly fine actually.Truant said:Some shots in LOTR actually look kinda good because of their apparent CG/miniature mix, in a stylized sort of way.
The green screen during some scenes is worse than the CG, though. Especially when the hobbits are hitching a ride with the ent.
Ether_Snake said:For the eyes yes.
Truant said:Some shots in LOTR actually look kinda good because of their apparent CG/miniature mix, in a stylized sort of way.
The green screen during some scenes is worse than the CG, though. Especially when the hobbits are hitching a ride with the ent.
jett said:We've had this argument in this very thread before.No part of Bill Nighy's body remains in Davy Jones.
By the end of the movie, I was in love with her.Scullibundo said:![]()
![]()
![]()
Neytiri will be spectacular.
KeeSomething said:By the end of the movie, I was in love with her.
Not only is she beautifully design and flawlessly animated, but she is a great character.
jett said:The cars in GT5 are each over 200k polys. :lol
MidgarBlowedUp said:Sigh...
Are you suggesting that the PS3 could render Final Fantasy Spirits Within in real-time?
Spirits Within was rendered on a farm of 960 Pentium III-933MHz workstations that still took 1.5 hours (5,400 seconds) per frame. At 24 frames per second, for the final movie to be rendered in real time, would take a lot more than 1 PS3.
That's what made the story so effective, even if it's been done a million times, no other movie has Neytiri.jett said:Those screenshots don't even begin to express how amazing she is in the movie. The biggest compliment I can give to Avatar is that the movie made me wish I was Jake.![]()
MidgarBlowedUp said:Sigh...
Are you suggesting that the PS3 could render Final Fantasy Spirits Within in real-time?
Spirits Within was rendered on a farm of 960 Pentium III-933MHz workstations that still took 1.5 hours (5,400 seconds) per frame. At 24 frames per second, for the final movie to be rendered in real time, would take a lot more than 1 PS3.