Teaser Trailer for 'Cars'; Info on 'Polar Express' 303
Michael Wyszomierski writes "The teaser trailer for the final Disney/Pixar film, Cars, is now available on Apple's Movie Trailers page. The film will open in theaters on November 4, 2005." And reader BoredStiff writes "The movie Polar Express will open Wednesday and could create a film genre somewhere between animation and live action. Made almost exclusively with a method called performance capture, which drops digitized human actors into a computer-animated world. The technique has been used in some video games and, to a limited extent, in earlier movies. Warner Bros. says The Polar Express is the first feature made solely with the process."
please don't ruin the story with fancy effects... (Score:5, Interesting)
I am appalled at how this article trivializes the wonder that the original book The Polar Express creates. I just want to say that calling the book "slim" might be true of the physical thickness of the book but the story and pictures contained within are fantastic. As a child I was riveted by this story and at one time seriously believed that this magic train could whisk me away to see the inner workings of all the Christmas fairytales you hear as a child.
My mother has passed the tradition of reading this book down to my youngest cousin (1st grader) and they are planning on taking my cousin to see this movie soon after it comes out.
I am really looking forward to seeing the movie myself and seeing how closely Zemeckis mimics my own mind's interpretation and expansion of the story and pictures. It *is* possible to recreate a story on the big screen from a novel and have it hold the same feeling that it did in print. I am crossing my fingers that the special effects and large budget don't take away from the real story that sits behind all the new-aged fanciness.
I really hope it doesn't ruin a great story.
Re:please don't ruin the story with fancy effects. (Score:2, Interesting)
Looks like he's using special effects for all the right reasons, at least. We'll just have to wait and see how the mov
Re:please don't ruin the story with fancy effects. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:please don't ruin the story with fancy effects. (Score:5, Interesting)
Not only did they try adapting the graphical style, they recreated each picture from the book exactly in various frames throughout the movie. I am sure someone extremely attached to the original book may be able to pick this up. If they don't, I suspect they will find it an extremely drawing movie without really knowing why. The director said this was done out of respect for Van Allsburg original work. So yeah, damn straight they just adapted the graphical style. That was the whole point.
Re:please don't ruin the story with fancy effects. (Score:5, Interesting)
When I read Stephen King's The Stand a few years ago, there was a foreword where he said that he wasn't sure he'd ever make a movie version of the story. He cited "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" as evidence of the damage a movie can do to a book. As fantastic as the movie is, it isn't the same (and does not hold the same kind of value) as the original text. If you see the movie and then read the book (as I did) you will never be able to get Jack Nicholson's performance out of your head as you read the character. Unfortunately for me, I also saw the movie adaptation of The Stand before reading the book.
I felt this way about LOTR, but was happy to see that it matched up with my expectations pretty well. Plus, it depicted what I had failed to visualize - Ents. I just couldn't figure out what they would look like.
Re:please don't ruin the story with fancy effects. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:please don't ruin the story with fancy effects. (Score:2)
And this is why I cringe at the idea of a Robert Z. redition of the book. The whole reason why the book was able to sustain its stunning dark beauty was the denseness of the artwork and story line. In stretching the story to ninety minutes in l
"Performance Capture" not ready yet (Score:5, Insightful)
Great idea. Lousy execution.
-S
Gollum was wooden, stiff and lacking emotion? (Score:2, Interesting)
I, for one, certainly didn't find him wooden, stiff or lacking emotion!
Re:Gollum was wooden, stiff and lacking emotion? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:"Performance Capture" not ready yet (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:"Performance Capture" not ready yet (Score:3, Interesting)
they could have completely created the places and situations in the book fathifully by simply doing the same tricksused in the harry potter films.
why it was 100% animated escapes me. IT would have been better and certianly more entertaining if it was live actors with CG.
and yes, it certianly could have been done. I saw the film last weekend, we had a special release here in the writer's home town.
Re:"Performance Capture" not ready yet (Score:5, Interesting)
The studios would love to make you believe that motion capture is removing an unnecessary in-between from creating the character in the computer to making him live by capturing an exact motion, but I feel that motion capture is just a cheap imitation of animation.
What "Performace capture" really is. (Score:4, Informative)
The term I heard when I was involved in classical animation (not involving computers at all) was "rotoscoping". And yes, it did and still does get a bad rap from animators from the "old school" when it is misused. The rotoscoped characters stick out like a sore thumb becasue of the inconsistencies--the characters MOVE like real life but LOOK like cartoons when rotoscoped, so they always look out of place.
Using computers to do rotoscoping in 3-D hasn't helped the situation. Computers capture real motion TOO faithfully, but are "not quite" there in generating realistic humans yet--so digital humans that look a bit "creepy" might even look creepier when rotoscoping is used.
I think that maybe one day computers will be able to visually re-create humans convincingly enough to make rotoscoping work (so a black man could convincingly perform as a white woman without it being a gag like it was in White Chicks for example). Perhaps it worked on Jar Jar or Gollum because there was little to no facial capture (just body movements) and the characters were far drifferent from humans.
In the mean time, it probably would've been better to use digital compositing to put human characters into the fanciful virtual world of the Polar Express. It has worked well enough in the past and at least the characters themselves would be consistent.
Animators exagerate and slightly alter movement for dramatic effect and visual appeal, and so the "spirit" of the movement matches the visual representation of the charater (which is very seldom photo-realistic).
Rotoscoping is a fine techniquein some cases (those being when the entire sceme is rotoscoped--background, characters and all, so the entire scene is "consistently inconsistent"). It is a bit much to ask an animator to paint a figure on movement she does not control and expect it to look better than when the visual appearance and movement of a character are under one person's control (be it actor or animator).
Re:"Performance Capture" not ready yet (Score:2)
I had the same feeling watching trailers for Sky Captain, I was always distracted by the look of the film.
It worked for gollum because it was a realistic character in a real environment. Dancing characters in a disney'ish mov
Re:"Performance Capture" not ready yet (Score:2)
I too was bothered a bit how Sky Captain looked in the trailers, but I can assure you that the full screen movie version looked amazing- like nothing I had ever seen before (in a good way). I totally enjoyed the look/feel of Sky Captain.
It'll be interesting to see if this translates to DVD/video well.
Re:"Performance Capture" not ready yet (Score:2)
Re:"Performance Capture" not ready yet (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:"Performance Capture" not ready yet (Score:2)
Re:"Performance Capture" not ready yet (Score:2)
A.) Motion Capture doesn't traditionally capture facil movement. Performance capture does.
B.) Because of point A, hiring somebody like Tom Hanks is a huge win. It wouldn't be so exciting for motion capture.
" The primary thing in mind being facial expressions. There are methods for this, but does anybody know if they used them in development of this flick?"
Yes. Sadly I don't know a lot about it, but I d
The real question though is... (Score:3, Funny)
"The movie Polar Express will open Wednesday and could create a film genre somewhere between animation and live action. Made almost exclusively with a method called performance capture, which drops digitized human actors into a computer-animated world. The technique has been used in some video games and, to a limited extent, in earlier movies. Warner Bros. says The Polar Express is the first feature made solely with the process."
...is it a good movie?
Creepy (Score:5, Insightful)
I've seen the Polar Express trailer in theaters a couple times, now. Every time I see it I think one thing: Uncanny Valley [arclight.net].
Re:Creepy (Score:2)
Re:Creepy (Score:5, Insightful)
It may not seem like a big deal, but I think it's really going to interfere with the audience forming any kind of emotional bond with the characters.
I can't remember the last time I was so put off by a movie trailer. I don't plan to go see it. I think they really need to stick to cartoonish characters and ogres and such until the realism in facial expressions and body language catch up with the pretty graphics.
Re:Creepy (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Creepy (Score:5, Funny)
I saw a preview, and they RUINED Polar Express (Score:4, Funny)
Opens in theaters November 4th, 2005 (Score:5, Funny)
I thought Pixar was done with Disney? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:I thought Pixar was done with Disney? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:I thought Pixar was done with Disney? (Score:2)
Re:I thought Pixar was done with Disney? (Score:2)
Cars is being directed by John Lasseter, who I have a lot of faith in. He was the director on both Toy Stories and on Bug's Life, so he definitely knows what he's doing.
And as for "dad gum," tha
Re:I thought Pixar was done with Disney? (Score:2)
http://www.eonline.com/News/Items/0,1,9847,00.h
It seems that Pixar resigned a contract after Monster's Inc, for 3 more pictures.
More articles explain that talks broke down in January becuase Pixar wanted the new contract to cover the Incredibles and Cars, effectively altering the contract Pixar signed in 2001.
I'd happily get refuted though.
Re:I thought Pixar was done with Disney? (Score:2)
This article [eyepiece.com] confirms that it originally was a direct-to-video project, as does this one [awn.com]. I thought Pixar had to fight harder, but I may have just read a biased story at the time. There was a story [geekroar.com] during the
Re:I thought Pixar was done with Disney? (Score:2)
Hmpf. (Score:5, Interesting)
First, I can't think of a more mundane and generic title. Continung this trend, the next Pixar film should be called Shoes - or maybe Toothbrushes. It's a moving story about a friendship between a floss dispenser and a tube of whitening toothpaste, and it also promotes dental hygiene!
Second - this is going to be hard - I love Pixar, and find their films to be great entertainment. But their schtick is starting to wear a little thin. We've done bugs, toys, monsters, and fish, and they've talked about doing robots. Now we're moving into consumer products. I'm curious how much longer this trend can continue, and whether or not they'll start slipping into that most humdrum of habits - the serial. Is it time for Toy Story 3 yet?
Pixar is brimming with incredible talent. That's why it will be such a shame if the public tires of seeing it applied to rather cliche genres. This is fantasy - we need new fantasy environments. Really alternate-reality stuff that veers between comic and wondrous. In the end, that's the highest calling of uber-powerful CGI art: to allow us to envision a previously unimaginable world. I think Pixar is, oddly enough, missing the boat in that regard.
- David Stein
Re:Hmpf. (Score:2, Interesting)
Bang. Nail. On the head. Right there ladies and gentlemen. Wake up Pixar! This is what you need to be making! Not dumass movies about a hick car (I mean, come on, how cliched can you get) and his suave buddy the sports car.
I want to see HHGTG but in technicolour! I want to see the alternate dimensions of string theory space! I want to see a five headed alien father who loses his wife in a horrible accident leaving him to look after h
Re:NEW STUFF PLEASE?!?!?!? (Score:2)
God, you assholes make me sick.
Re:Hmpf. (Score:2)
No doubt they're sitting on the best ideas for the movies that they'll be making under their own steam.
I don't know what it is about Disney, but I've liked them less and less over the years. Pretty much all they touch over the last few years has turned to crap.
Japanese Anime seems to have much more universal appeal these days. But then, I'm living in Japan, so I'm kinda biased
Re:Hmpf. (Score:2, Interesting)
I have absolutely zero knowledge about this Pixar production, but a title like "Cars", pe
Incredibles (Score:2)
They said they made Incredibles because they wanted to do something different. Lassetter said he didn't want to make the same movie again, like he has with the other films. They know they've just been making the same film, over and over.
So Incredibles is supposed to be different. I think you have written Pixar off too soon.
Re:Incredibles (Score:2, Insightful)
Sheesh. I've very much enjoyed the Pixar movies so far. I give them the full benefit of the doubt. Some people here just like to WHINE.
Re:Hmpf. (Score:5, Insightful)
Pixar surprises everyone time and time again with amazingly polished and deep movies. Have they given you a reason to doubt them before? No.
The racing part appears to have nothing to do with the movie, the only real hint of the movie is the clip with the sports car and the pick up talking. How can you judge a movie by that?
Relax and maybe you'll enjoy another great Pixar movie.
Re:Hmpf. (Score:3, Insightful)
The above list contains all the things the average kid likes. These cartoon movies are made for the average kid, with elements that their parents will like so they'll sit thru the movie with their child. Kids aren't bored with movie titles or topics like the above. Keep it rollin, Pixar, you're doing fine.
Book by its cover? (Score:3, Insightful)
By the entertainment value of the other pixar movies, I predict The Incredibles and Cars to both be enjoyable. I won't predict that Cars won't take a disney style nose dive the way their movies went after Lion King, but hey, they are fun so far, and have definitely taken children's movies to another level.
Also, the alternate worlds shtick has never worn off. It's nothing new to the chi
Re:Book by its cover? (Score:5, Funny)
You think that's bad? What about The Godfather? Come on, a movie about some old guy you barely know that sends you bizarre Christmas presents? Please. At least Showgirls sounds exciting.
Re:Hmpf. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Hmpf. (Score:2)
Blue Sky is doing Robots. Not Pixar. (Score:2)
Re:Hmpf. (Score:2, Informative)
My Vent against Zemeckis (Score:2, Insightful)
Zemeckis was a talented director pushing the envelope in just about every movie he did.
I really felt ripped off and gyped with "What Lies Beneath" and "Castaway" with the marketing and even more so with the fact that he alone approved the maketing.
What I'm referring to is the fact that the endings of both movies were given away in the trailers. Watching those movies was just a waste of time if you've already seen the trailers.
What I can't believe is what he said abo
Really? Human? (Score:2)
No thanks, I'll pass.
Anyone else feel that way?
Re:Really? Human? (Score:2)
seeing the trailer it looks like this movie was made on the same hardware to render the original Toy Story, but without the same rendering staff so it looks worse.
Maybe my expectations are much higher now since square pictures is doing such a great job with their renderings, but frankly The Polar Express characters look emotionless and puppetlike where Advent Children's characters look almost photorealistic and sometimes hard to believe their rendered.
Sort of (Score:3, Interesting)
Then I saw it was a fucking kid's movie about Santa fucking Claus with fucking
creepy creepy creepy (Score:2)
Please, if you are thinking about seeing this with your kids, make sure they see the trailer and ask them if they want to see it first. I know I would have been scared as hell seeing that when I was a kid.
Re:creepy creepy creepy (Score:3, Informative)
I have to say that the trailer to polar express has some of the creepiest looking animation I have ever seen. Please, if you are thinking about seeing this with your kids, make sure they see the trailer and ask them if they want to see it first. I know I would have been scared as hell seeing that when I was a kid.
I just saw a Sneak Preview of the actual film, and there were tons of kids in the theater. I didn't hear any of the kids get creeped out. Actually, for as many kids were there, I heard very l
Hope there's some F1 and Hybrids in there! (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:Hope there's some F1 and Hybrids in there! (Score:2)
If it has "stock car racing" in it, then it most surely has no real racing in it.
It just simply wouldn't work. Unless the story has something to do with a stock car having a self esteem problem, because it's not an f1 car. "Why does that car get to rev to 18k rpms?!?!"
Also I'll be depressed if the stock cars have different personalities, because they are all built to be the EXACT SAME.
Let's just thank God that F1 turned down Stallone when he wanted to make "drive
Where's Disney in all this? (Score:5, Insightful)
My guess is that Disney is either in deep denial, and will let Pixar slip away and then truly be SOL, they'll resolve their differences (at which point Disney is happy that they don't have to put out their own stuff to counter-act Pixar, which would probably put some unfinished and poorly thought out stuff (think Treasure Planet), or they're really honestly working on something very cool that will come out of left field a la Toy Story, and everyone will say that "Disney has found the magic again", and "Who needs Pixar when you've got Disney's
Disney had a pretty long dry period until they hit it with Little Mermaid. Seeing how they were progressing (albiet slowly) from the ballroom scene in B&tB to the rather cool herd technology of Lion King (years before RotK), I'm actually pretty shocked that they've been unable to link good technology to a good story, being content to let Pixar do both jobs for them. My guess is that the Pixar-Disney deal never mentioned sharing source code, so Disney presumably will have to figure it all out for themselves.
OTOH, maybe they're abandoning animation altogether so they can put out more "Old Yellar" movies. In a few years, they may not have much choice.
Re:Where's Disney in all this? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Where's Disney in all this? (Score:3, Funny)
Favorite US Historical Figures:
Sorry, man. I saw your sig after that comment and putting it together with Disney's notable rewriting of any historical tale, just got this really creepy image of Abe Lincoln as a princess in the next Disney movie. Yeah. It's high concept. Poor little pioneer girl, grows up to be a lawyer, puts on a fake beard and becomes President... We're talking mega-box office bo
Re:Where's Disney in all this? (Score:5, Interesting)
Simple. Layoffs. Firings. Sequels. Crap. Raising prices. Destroying their 80-years-of-excellence animation division. 24 hours a day of garbage on television. Allowing Disneyland to turn into a toilet. Unsuccessfully trying to compete with anime, losing HUGE, like eight touchdowns huge, then frantically pouring mountains of cash into licensing deals so they can keep their name in theaters, then fucking up every anime product they have or just sitting on billion-dollar licenses for years and years and years and years for no reason.
In other words, the basic middle management results: clusterfuck
Then they started making movies about theme park rides and complaining that they can't make money with Monday Night Football. During this time they were paying about 197 lawyers to avoid paying royalties to Marvel and the Winnie the Pooh licensors. Now how much money do you suppose Disney has made on Winnie the Pooh? Billions? Tens of Billions?
maybe they're abandoning animation altogether so they can put out more "Old Yellar" movies.
They're abandoning animation altogether so they can save money. Big corporations are not interested in products. They are interested in brands.
Re:Where's Disney in all this? (Score:2)
Polar Express in 3D (Score:3, Informative)
CGI IMAX Films (Score:2)
Motion-capture Animation? (Score:5, Funny)
Quick! Buy stock in Animotion!
Quoter: For automated stock prices, please state the company name.
Homer: Animotion.
Quoter: Animotion: Up one and one-half.
Homer: Yahoo!
Quoter: Yahoo: Up six and a quarter.
Homer: Huh? What is this crap?
Quoter: Fox Broadcasting: Down eight.
Re:Motion-capture Animation? (Score:2)
SPOOKY OR WHAT.
We could be linked by our brains. BRAINS.
Good Story (Score:5, Insightful)
Movies and television shows often fail miserably because stories are "written" by formula. Tired setting + predictable characters + smartass pop-culture insults = crap and it will always be crap.
Yet, just like the game industry, when something does succeed (Pixar) everybody comes running, checkbooks in hand and starts throwing money all over the place (Disney) in an attempt to duplicate the financial success without taking the time to understand the reason for the success. People like a good story. It doesn't matter if its a book, a comic book, a television show or a movie. Only the story matters.
And note, for all their money, and all their former excellence, Disney is so busy trying to avoid paying royalties to Marvel and the Winnie the Pooh licensors (and firing their animators) that they are completely unable to compete in the animation industry. Oh sure, their name is on "The Incredibles," but buying a ticket to a concert doesn't make someone an orchestra conductor.
Studio Ghibli could teach Hollywood a thing or two (Score:2, Interesting)
Trailers look dumb (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Trailers look dumb (Score:2, Insightful)
Motion capture? (Score:3, Interesting)
I was under the impression that motion capture was very widely used to create realistic 3d characters..
Re:Motion capture? (Score:3, Informative)
Unfortunately, the current technique doesn't capture eye movements, so you end up getting great facial movements but lifeless eyes, making the characters look like the walking dead, which is why this movie wil
Polar Express (Score:5, Informative)
Look, this has been rediscovered again and again, every time someone's tried to do photorealistic CGI. It's hard. Producing humans that look and move correctly is really, really difficult, and unless it's spot on it just looks really dreadful.
Polar Express probably does it as well as I've ever seen it done; the result is that it;s just good enough to make it blindingly obvious how bad it is. There are figures on the screen that look at first glance like humans, but my hindbrain just screams when it sees them. They don't move right. Their expressions don't work right. They look creepy.
Pixar and Dreamworks got this right; the state of the art is just not up to this. Notice that all their characters are cartoonish? By deliberately not trying to make their characters realistic, they managed to avoid the entire problem, because my hindbrain doesn't expect them to look like real people. But Warner Bros. for Polar Express have jumped in with both feet...
Re:Polar Express (Score:3, Interesting)
Real human actors. CGI everything else.
Oddly, an effective example of this is Drew Carrey's Green Screen Show. They do some improv skits, and then animate around it in post production. It works much better than I expected it to, and is a good example of the above rule. They actually animate clothing onto the people.
Animators hate this (Score:3, Interesting)
Yeah, but I know a lot of video games that won't touch the shit with a 40ft pole. Animators hate the thought of being reduced to the equivalent of highway-side trash collectors, trying to pretty the mocap solely by removing the trash.
Plus it prevents them from adding their own stylistic personality to characters. Look at Naughty Dog's games -- there's no way you could get that kind of genuine expression, both facially and with body language, from a perf-cap.
Of course, I have no idea how good the tech has gotten lately, I guess we'll see. Still there's just no way to replace a talented animator. All you can hope for is a more efficient way to generate gobs of average-looking content.
Re:Animators hate this (Score:2)
Therefore, management thinks it is the "next big thing" and will soon announce massive layoffs so they can invest billions in the technology. Now let's all sing the company song.
Stupid, Stupid, Stupid me (Score:2, Funny)
There are many firsts for Polar Express (Score:5, Informative)
Polar Express is not only the first to be entirely made with digitized actors it is also the first feature lenght IMAX animation movie, the first feature lenght movie in IMAX 3D and the first movie funded by Tom Hanks himself. Tom Hanks was described as an avid Imax 3D supporter, he wants to push the technology and was actually the one who suggested Polar Express as a project, he was deeply involved in the process. The result does not look like a tech showdown at all, it looks like an incredibly good animation that plays with and use the 3D technology to enhance messages, emotion and aprehensions, not to showcase it. Nowhere in the extract they showed to the crowd did I had the impression they were just showing tech, actually as soon as the extract started I kinda forgot I was watching 3D, it just felt natural.
I'm really looking forward to the full release.
Marionettes (Score:3, Insightful)
The motion capture wasn't detailed enough to catch most of the facial expressions that are created by a human face.
The way the actors are moving it seems they are over acting everything as if they were cartoons except the animation tries to go a completely different directions. What's left are ridiculous and stiff motions with out of synch speech.
It's really creepy.
Re:Marionettes (Score:2)
So it's a must see, eh?
Disney's Chicken Little Trailer as well! (Score:2)
Best part of the Polar Express Trailer (Score:2, Insightful)
This is a WARNER BROS MOVIE WARNER WARNER BROS MOVIE. See? We've even got snow on the logo! Warner Brothers! Remember that!
30 seconds of LOOK HOW IMPORTANT HOLLYWOOD IS!!
End of the trailer, for less than 0.5 seconds, the name of the author. Yeah! Way to reward the people with the ideas!
"Final Fantasy", the movie, did this (Score:3, Insightful)
From an industry perspective, the problem with "Polar Express" is that it only took 30 days of principal photography, all of it in the studio, yet it still cost $150 million. "Sky Captain" was supposed to be low-budget, but wasn't. What's needed is technology that can produce similar movies for $20 million.
Cold, dead eyes (Score:3, Interesting)
Tom Hanks's characters seem to be treated a bit better, probably because the animators/sculptors had more & better source material to work with; still, better is relative to "awful" in this case.
This is very disappointing; Chris Van Allsburg's work is very sculptural in nature (and uses a distanced style and VERY careful framinh to invoke a sense of the wonder, and sometimes of the sublime), but from the trailers it appears that the translation to a full-motion format failed his style terribly.
Re:huh? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:huh? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:huh? (Score:2)
Pixar's first post Disney movie 'Ratatouille' is due 2006.
http://movies.yahoo.com/shop?d=hp&cf=prev&id=18
Re:... Super Babies? (Score:2)
Whoa. That should be illegal.
Re:... Super Babies? (Score:3, Insightful)
ye gods.
It did suck- weeks ago (Score:2)
Your a little behind the curve, pretty off topic, and very pointless.
considering how the election went... (Score:2)
Re:... Super Babies? (Score:2)
Read the reviews on there? There was one really long post by 'kzoofilm'.
He says, at the end: By the way, Voight's next project is called "The Karate Dog," in which he'll co-star with Simon Rex, Pat Morita and Chevy Chase, who'll provide "the voice of Cho-Cho," according to the Internet Movie Database. Do an Oscar winner a big favor and call him this weekend -- really, the guy must be willing to do just about anything for a couple bucks.
Hahahaha. LMAO.
Oh, I'm so sad that such money can be thrown
Re:... Super Babies? (Score:2)
from the IMDB Comments page thingie: [imdb.com]
Summary: OH MY GOD!
Summary: Holy flaming tortillas!
Summary: Not bad, but my kids enjoyed it (WFT?!?)
Summary: worst movie ever made
Summary: This movie violates my beliefs!
Summary: My almost four-year-old grandson loved it! (STUPID CHILD)
Summary: rip off
Summary: a superb film. much better than I ever expected!!!!!!! (+5, Troll)
Summary: This One Makes Catwoman Look Good
Summary: Teething was more fun
Summ
Re:another movie... (Score:2)
"Polar Express" seems to go this one step further, animating the actors as well.
Re:another movie... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:another movie... (Score:2)
Re:another movie... (Score:2)
Re:Not much of a teaser... (Score:2)
Re:confused by marketing speak... (Score:2)
Orc #2304, on the other hand, is captured probably by the same person who did Orc #182, Orc #5003, and possibly Orc #9. That person's involvement with the character is only in the motion capture and they do not provide any dramatic elements like voice or characterization. That, it would se