

Review:Toy Story 2 225
Ok Toy Story was good. From its ground breaking animation, to its story, it was quite simply a wonderful movie. Real solid funny jokes for adults. Great jokes for kids. A lesson worth teaching. And all the while it remained visually amazing: when we finally got to the breathtaking crescendo of the final sequence with the toys chasing the truck, not only was it the most beautiful CGI ever seen, but we believed in the little charachters. They weren't pixels dancing before our eyes, they were a talking dinosaur and a Mr. Potato Head. Woody and Buzz were real.
Its the goal of animation to take still objects and convince an audience that they think, breath and exist outside of the screen. And Toy Story did it as well as it had ever been done in the past.
So we've got a pair of big shoes to fill for Toy Story 2. Everyone knows that sequels traditionally suck, and this sequel was originally destined by Disney to be a straight-to-video release (Ala the Beauty and the Beast and Aladdin cheeseball videos designed to milk a few bucks out of a franchise by bastardizing the charachters that captured our hearts just a few years earlier.
But let me say that Toy Story 2 pulls it off. Its a wonderful movie. And it does what few sequels have done: it surpases its original. This is one of the most entertaining films I've seen this year.
The Plot? Turns out Woody is a rare collectible toy. He's stolen by a toy collector and whisked off to be sold to collectors in Japan. The gang must rescue our fearless cowpoke leader, all while Woody wrestles with his destiny: A few short years left with an aging Andy, or a lifetime of being admired by children throughout the world.
All the charachters are back, with a few new ones to boot. Among the best of the new toys are Zurg (a quite funny Darth Vader parody that the film wastes no chance to exploit) Woody's female toy counterpart (expertly voiced by Joan Cusack) and a pengiun named weezy (who really shines at the end with one of the films best gags).
And as pixar likes to do, this is a kids movies, with references for the adults to get a big grin from. Witness a surprise Pixar cameo, numerous hilarious Star Wars references, and even a shot lifted directly from Jurassic Park. Each time you feel Lassater winking at you.
My complaints? The film breaks a rule set forth in the first movie by showing the adults faces. Part of the magic of the original was that it followed the longstanding tradition of representing authority figures below the neck. Presumably this was because rendering a human face was a challange that the animators weren't up to last time around: the childrens faces were mostly pretty weak. But this time around we see everything. On one hand, seeing Al's face is pretty impressive, and probably quite necessary for the way the story is laid out, but I still miss just seeing a pair of feet.
So if you aren't to old and caloused to tolerate seeing a children's movie, or if you enjoy computer animation, or if you just want to see the original 'Luxo' on the big screen, or if you just want to sit back for an hour and a half and enjoy good entertaining story telling, go see this now.
It rocked (Score:1)
You really have tiome to notice alot more things when you see it a second time.
Tim Allen is a lot better as Buzz Lightyear than Tim "The Drunk from ABC" Tailor.
I bought my zealot toy from McDonalds, but... (Score:1)
I loved the zealots from the first movie, are they back in full alien force?
Second post?
Haven't seen it (Score:1)
It's good to hear... (Score:3)
On an unrelated note, I think movies like Toy Story have an interesting significance: getting kids interested in computers. I mean, if you were four and you saw a CG movie as cool as Toy Story, wouldn't you want to figure out how they did all that with computers? (Actually, you can strike the "if you were four" part- I want to know too!) Furthermore, Toy Story (and Bug's Life, Antz, etc) don't strike me as being particularly "boy" movies, which means that they might have a hand in breaking the current gender imbalance that CS departments typically see these days. That would be good.
Cutting Edge? (Score:1)
I have to compare 'Weird-ohs' from 'mainframe.ca'. I spend way too much time looking at the faces of the characters (cartoon frogs of course) and thinking, "how do they do that", so maybe disney will be a change of pace. -d
Re:It rocked (Score:1)
For more information (Score:4)
And, to go offtopic, I read it using Sitescooper [tsx.org], a funky off-line web formatting thingy written in Perl, aimed at PalmPilot users.
hey...?! (Score:3)
What the hell is happening to
Come on. We should go back to the old days, where people would print banal pointless drivel as the first post!
BTW Tip of the day:
do:-
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=x
where x=some string
to create a comments page all of your own!
Disney joke (Score:1)
Oh, and see it in digital. I can see why George is insisting on digital for the next two episodes.
Adult Heads... (Score:1)
Oh well. Does anyone have any specs on the software they used this time around, and the size of their render farm? =)
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Look at the url above for a view of a new case design, the book case. So far people have liked it =)
-S
Scott Ruttencutter
Re:Doubtful (Score:2)
Its out of context, the quote is from the director of the movie, not Jobs.
You are right that penguins can just be pengiuns. We needn't get all corporate about the trademark please ("No, you cannot be called the clan McDonald of Scotland since 862 AD, that is a registered trademark").
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We cannot reason ourselves out of our basic irrationality. All we can do is learn the art of being irrational in a reasonable way.
Re:hey...?! (Score:2)
An Aside on Adult Heads (Score:2)
A few comments.. (Score:4)
assure you that there is no "rule" about showing the face of on
adult. If you look at the film again, Andy's mom's face shows up
a bunch of times. Granted, the rendering of her features are pretty
poor, but you *do* see her.
I have to disagree with CmdrTaco's assertion that the children's' faces
were "weak" in the first film. View the video again and look at Sid and
Hanna's (Sid's sister) faces and I think you'll agree that the animation
and rendering are very good and more important very supportive of the story.
As for the new film, I *do* agree that it is great. After seeing it twice
I am ready to pack my bags and head to Burbank to see it at the "El
Capitan" (which is showing it digitally) for a third time.
Jessie, the cow girl, is IMHO the best character to come out of this new
film.
The technical advances made in this film are great but are not as big as a
jump from Toy Story to Bug's Life.
Lastly, Disney has missed the boat by not having the Toy Story DVD out buy
the time Toy Story 2 came out. This is similar to the merchandising screw
up Disney did with not having the toys ready when the first film came out.
Re:I bought my zealot toy from McDonalds, but... (Score:1)
Oh yes.
And I completely agree with the review, except I liked seeing the faces. I wish the penguin toy had been named tux.
Hype? What hype? (Score:1)
Have Disney fouled up in the marketing? Or was I just looking in the wrong places? I would have thought I'd have heard something about it...
Any other people in a similar situation to me?
Oh, and is there any chance of a DuckPins II?
Too bad (Score:1)
My major disappointment came in that I had to see it in a regular theater, and not in one of the six "digital" theaters that they first debuted in. Now THAT would have made it monumental. Especially with their (from what I hear) extensive use of TI's Digital Projection System...
There's another comment floating around here wanting to know what kind of hardware they're using to achieve all this great stuff, and I'd like to know as well. My guess is that they're probably using a lot of _Renderman_ on the software side (which I could be mistaken about), but am still curious as to their development platform(s), and the hardware that they're using to make all of this magic...
Sqeaky == Tux?? (Score:1)
Were the Animators/Story Writers making a subtle reference to Linux with the Squeaky character?
Re:An Aside on Adult Heads (Score:1)
Re:An Aside on Adult Heads (Score:2)
Anyway, it included adults *and* adult voices (as well as one obscene (in Italy) gesture from Snoopy.
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Consult, v. t. To seek another's approval of a course already decided on.
Re:Hype? What hype? (Score:1)
However, as quickly as I was there to see it, and impressed as I was, had I heard ANYthing about the movie, I would remember. All I got? Zero, Zip, Zilch, and coming in one hour too late to cash in on the free passes given out here at work... Sad, sad day.
VeggieTales (Score:2)
It's absolutely hilarious and very hip. If you like CG stuff, check out Veggietales--it's what really got me interested in computer generated animation.
Wonderful movie (Score:2)
All the Star Wars references near the end were really funny, as was the Jurassic Park T-Rex chase scene. Pixar is not just making a kids movie. Hell, a lot of kids probably wouldn't pick up on the joke.
Also, the short at the beginning is excellent. It's primitive compared to this or Bug's Life, but it had me laughing out loud. It's really funny to see how they can give emotions and almost facial expressions to something like a lamp.
"Powered by Sun" in the credits (Score:2)
Also, I happened to notice that Bruce Perens was in the list of software developers. I assume this is *the* Bruce Perens, but does anyone know for sure?
Bon Voyage, Charlie Brown (Score:1)
CGI as good as A Bugs Life? (Score:2)
What kind of hardware/OS did they use? (Score:1)
...And what's wrong with Pokemon? (Score:1)
And what's wrong with Pokemon? OK, to be fair, if you're talking movies, the Pokemon movie had some problems - the short was cool but the Mewtwo thing got a bit preachy.. But if you're talking franchises, then what exactly is your beef w/ Pokemon?
---GEC
Great movies v. great animated movies (Score:5)
Similarly, whenever I mention to someone how much I liked the movie Antz, the invariable response is to ask me what I thought of A Bug's Life. I bristle at the automatic lumping together of these two movies into some imagined category merely due to some unfortunate superficial similarities, namely that they're both computer-animated, and that they're both about insects.
It's a pity that Antz is doomed forever to be compared to the immeasurably inferior A Bug's Life (and let's not get into the infamous behind-the-scenes politics about the making of these two movies). While Antz was smart, relentlessly witty, and darkly funny, A Bug's Life was distressingly shallow, antiseptic, and soulless -- especially considering that many of the people behind it were responsible for the great Toy Story.
I went into Toy Story 2 on Thanksgiving Day with giddy anticipation tempered with a healthy measure of trepidation due to my previous disappointing experience with A Bug's Life.
I am happy to report that I needn't have worried. Toy Story 2 is a terrific movie. I sat through almost the entire film with a goofy grin that lasted well after I left the theater. While not as technically groundbreaking as the original Toy Story was (the improvements are more evolutionary than revolutionary), Toy Story 2 nevertheless packs quite a punch. It's certainly more ambitious in its story and action sequences -- almost to a fault (the action becomes perhaps a little too frenetic towards the end). It also manages to explore deep existential issues just like the first movie, although some of the emotional wallop has diminished and occasionally seems forced.
Which of the Toy Story movies did I prefer? It's a very tough call. While the sequel wildly exceeded my very high expectations -- which is saying quite a bit -- if forced to choose, I'd have to go with the original.
I believe that the greatness of a movie should be judged for the totality of the experience, and not merely a single facet. You may have noticed that in my evaluations of the various computer-animated movies of recent years, animation quality hardly figured in at all (especially since they were all excellently animated, albeit with different degrees of excellence).
Here's to great movies, computer-animated or not.
Re:"Powered by Sun" in the credits (Score:2)
Bruce
Did anyone see the Dinosaur preview? (Score:1)
was Zurg a reference to the Zerg from Starcraft? Obviously not directly, cause the Zerg from Starcraft are alien, not humanoid.
Re:For more information (Score:4)
Bruce
Re:It rocked (Score:1)
I wonder if NASA or Kansas has the right translation, or if they are both right since I don't know Latin.
Had to leave before it started (Score:1)
My 2 1/2-year-old daughter loves Woody and Buzz so the whole family went to see Toy Story 2 on Thanksgiving Day morning. We went in late but some previews were still running. They were so loud and scary (with roaring dinosaurs and rockets) that we had to leave after five minutes.
Movies are far too loud to be enjoyable even for adults. We usually use earplugs. They are nice because they only block the explosions but let the dialogue through. However, I'm sure that within 15 years the movie industry will face some class action lawsuits for lost hearing.
Marko [mailto]
Re:A few comments.. (Score:2)
The pizza delivery guy's face in Toy Story is also the generic child face. They did very few face prototypes, and changed the parameters around for each kid without changing the basic face. So CT is right that the faces are weak in the first film.
Bruce
Expensive Sun boxes (Score:3)
Re:CGI as good as A Bugs Life? (Score:2)
Remember that A Bug's Life had its own look, and they were doing Toy Story Two with the look established for the original Toy Story, as well as some of the old data. So, being really different in the second movie would have clashed.
Bruce
Luxo (Score:1)
Rich
Re:Expensive Sun boxes (Score:2)
They don't make much use of Linux yet, although a lot of people there run it at home. They get so much stuff for free or at a discount that Linux would not save them much.
Bruce
Movie review site - Screen It! (Score:2)
Toy Story 2 got a 9 out of 10 there. Hurrah!
Sreeram
Re:Had to leave before it started (Score:2)
Bruce
Re:Luxo (Score:2)
Bruce
Re:Movie review site - Screen It! (Score:1)
Re:Starship Troppers the cartoon series (Score:1)
Re:Did anyone see the Dinosaur preview? (Score:1)
TS2 renderfarm specs (Score:5)
Seriously, the renderfarm this time around consisted of around eight dozen 14-processor Sun Ultra boxes each with 8 Gb of memory and about 36 Gb of disk. Rendering times (using Renderman) ranged from 2 to around 20 hours per frame.
Sorry, Linux was really not used at all on TS2. Pixar managers use Macs and animation/technical people use SGIs, mostly Octanes these days. Suns are used only for the fileservers and renderfarm.
BTW here are the theaters showing TS2 in digital projection. It looks absolutely stunning and, because of the digital transfer from the original image files, it blows away 35mm film. You owe it to yourself to make the trip.
AMC 1000- Theater 2
1000 Van Ness Avenue at O'Farrell
San Francisco, CA 94109
(415) 922-4262
El Capitan
6838 Hollywood Boulevard
Hollywood, CA 90028
(800) 347-6396 or www.elcapitantickets.com [elcapitantickets.com]
Media Center North-AMC Burbank
201 East Magnolia Boulevard
Burbank, CA 91502
(818) 953-9800
Edwards Irvine Spectrum 21
65 Fortune Drive
Irvine, CA 32718
(949) 450-4900
Pleasure Island AMC 24
1500 Buena Vista Drive
Lake Buena Vista, FL 32830
(407) 298-4488
Legacy Cinemark 24
7201 Central Expressway
Plano, TX 75025
(972) 517-2444
Re:Sqeaky == Tux?? (Score:1)
Never mind that 'opus' character..
pixar references (CONTAINS SPOILERS) (Score:1)
Anyone else catch all the references to other pixar stuff? While they were flipping through tv channels looking for the commercial i noticed the Pixar lamp and the Tin Toy short were playing on some of the channels.. And then of course there was the "toy cleaner".. i'm sure nobody else in the theater understood why i was laughing hysterically when he came in.
I noticed "Bruce Perens" float by during the final credits for some kind of software job.. that was surprising.. i left the theater thinking No, it couldn't be THAT Bruce Perens.. heh.. i guess it was.
Notice Pixar has once again created history, by for the first time in the history of CG creating 3d rendered dredlocks.
-mcc-baka
p.s. Anyone know how i can get hold of a copy of the Gerri's Game short? i want to see that..
Not worth $8.50 (Score:1)
Re:Doubtful (Score:1)
rpd
*The* Bruce Perns... (Score:2)
--
"Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"
Re:cutting edge 3d....done on Linux of course (Score:2)
The CS department here at UNC-Chapel Hill uses SGIs and Suns.
I believe I remember correctly that in the credits to TS2 the renderfarm was comprised of Sun machines. I caught that the 3D animation software was Alias!/Wavefront, but I don't remember what the 2D software was...
Perhaps we should all choose a superior solution: 32 FreeBSD boxes (ala _The Matrix_)! =)
Re:Hype? What hype? (Score:1)
Dinosaur preview (Score:1)
I do not know how well the story will work without dialog but it looked quite impressive.
Trailer (Score:1)
The trailer [apple.com] is well worth watching. It's interesting to single-step through the opening frames as they flip through the channels on the tube. There are shots of the chess guy who shows up later on in the movie, the original desk lamp short (sorry I don't know the names of the shorts), and a very well-built blonde... selling sunglasses? Lot's of other weird stuff, too. I'd be interested to know where it all came from.
--Brian
Re:pixar references (CONTAINS SPOILERS) (Score:1)
They showed it in the theaters before Bug's Life, so it's probably on that tape. Probably the easiest way.
Check out this article (Score:2)
Check out the most recent issue of Computer Graphics World [cgw.com] and read their cover story [shore.net].
Here are a few choice quotes:
...and:
Loads more, and they talk with all the principles of the film, John Lasseter, Ed Catmull and the rest. Not too many spoilers, and the detail is great...for instance, the dust on the shelf Wheezy was on was NOT a particle system; it was actually discrete geometry. And the hairs on Al's arm were modeled as well.
Re:It's good to hear... (Score:1)
Disney's Done It Before (Score:1)
I rented it the other day so I could do a nostalgia trip. Yes, it wallowed in cheese, yes, watching Cmdr. Sherridan and Ambr. Mollari run around in refitted hockey gear tossing frisbees around was mighty odd, but I'm still impressed with the graphics they were able to generate for this movie circa 1980.
I bet there's a fair number of puter geeks of my age who's first 3-d modelling attempt was a Recognizer or game tank. ;)
--
rickf@transpect.SPAM-B-GONE.net (remove the SPAM-B-GONE bit)
Re:Too bad (Score:4)
For modeling and development, they use a lot of SGI octanes. They also use linux + mesa for some internal tools.
John Carmack
Re:"Powered by Sun" in the credits (Score:1)
Even cooler is the appearence of Larry Gritz in the credits. Larry wrote Blue Moon Rendering Tools, a freely distributable RenderMan compatible ray-tracer. Learn more about it here [bmrt.org]. Linux, SGI, Alpha and Windows binaries available here [bmrt.org].
Phil Befreys, to my knowledge the only other person to make a commercial-quality RenderMan compatible renderer (Digital Arts DGS), is now working at Pixar as well.
Re:pixar references (CONTAINS SPOILERS) (Score:1)
Re:For more information (Score:2)
The other thing is that someone was going to suggest the penguin was a Linux reference sooner or later, so I thought I'd head that off before it started. Ho hum...
Re:cutting edge 3d....done on Linux of course (Score:1)
See the cover story at Computer Graphics World [cgw.com] for the full story. They use Alias for modeling, their own software for animation on SGIs and prMan for rendering on a giant pile of Suns.
Re:Trailer (Score:2)
Other CG (Reboot) (Score:1)
Reboot is great for a daily dose of CG.
Re:Doubtful (Score:1)
What about scrooge McDuck? He was very definetly not Irish
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We cannot reason ourselves out of our basic irrationality. All we can do is learn the art of being irrational in a reasonable way.
Re:...And what's wrong with Pokemon? (Score:1)
"The short at the beginning" (Score:1)
http://us.imdb.com/Title?0091455
Academy Award Nomination, along with a bunch of other awards and such. Came out in 1986.Re:Too bad (Score:1)
John, I just wanted to say that I felt honored to be replied to by such an esteemed character. I've been a long time admirer of your work (I know, cheesy ain't it?), and just wanted to let you know that. Again, I am honored.
Thanks...
Hell yes!!! (Score:1)
Ohh WHERE is my hairbrush
Ohh where is my hairbrush...
They're hilarious. Although my opinion may be influenced by the fact that I first saw them at about 4 AM after several hours of playing AD&D. Anything is funny then...
Re:It's good to hear... (Score:1)
I have to disagree here. I got into computers because... well, I didn't have a choice. I was 8. My mom bought a Tandy 1000. I saw something technological and mysterious and dove in head first. Most people are not like this. They don't care about what they don't understand (sometimes fear it), and many that do care are too lazy to begin their quest. Most kids don't care how Toy Story was rendered, but how they can get more flashy graphics. This is where the web comes in and tries to appeal with shockwave animations and then these kids think "Oh, now I'm a geek, I'm on the internet."
Going back more to the context of the quote, the only kids that are going to want to know how Toy Story was rendered are those that are similar to how I was as a child. Only the geeky kids are going to stop and ask themselves how Disney did it and what's involved in creating this kind of movie. Everyone else is content to believe that "it was done with computers."
Re:Disney's Done It Before (Score:1)
Forget tape! (Score:1)
Tape?! Bleagh! More importantly, it's on the "A Bug's Life" DVD. If you want to see the most amazing image ever to appear in a non-HD format, you need to check out the DVD, played through a progressive-scan device, like a Hollywood+ or a MPACT2 or the new Toshiba player. Pixar apparently re-rendered the film directly to DVD res and did the MPEG2 encoding directly from the digital files. The end result is the most astonishing display of animation ever to appear on a TV screen.
Satan's New Film... (Score:3)
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Re:CGI as good as A Bugs Life? (Score:1)
Re:Hype? What hype? (Score:1)
I quite enjoyed Sleepy Hollow, myself, it's like an old Hammer film, it even has Christopher Lee in it, briefly. (offtopic plug
Re:...And what's wrong with Pokemon? (Score:1)
exactly (Score:1)
VeggieTale History (Score:2)
Anyway.. I just thought it was cool that VeggieTales came out a couple of years before Toy Story, and is of excellent quality. It is too bad that they are hardly recoginized outside of Christian circles.
Re:A few comments.. (Score:2)
Re:An Aside on Adult Heads (Score:1)
Re:It's good to hear... (Score:1)
That's because Disney didn't make it; Pixar did.
Long live Steve Jobs, acid-dropping (technology+humanity) visionary!
PS- Anyone got a time machine? I have money now, and I want to go back to December 1997 when I was poor and Apple was at $12.75 a share. It's between $95-100 now.
Faces /were/ visible in TS1 (Score:2)
More info (Score:3)
The movie was done using Renderman (as are all of Pixar's films). More info could probably be found on the comp.graphics.rendering.renderman newsgroup (although there's not much discusion of the movie going on today).
C.
Re:Did anyone see the Dinosaur preview? (Score:1)
Re:cutting edge 3d....done on Linux of course(NOT) (Score:1)
PS. I love Linux and GNU.
Yeppers! (Score:1)
Ladygeekia
(who also had her first VT experience after several hours of AD&D (hot minotaur sex, anyone?))
Re:For more information (Score:1)
Re:It's good to hear... (Score:2)
I have no idea whether I would be a CS geek today if it hadn't been for the "'The last starfighter...' is dead! The last starfighter is dead!" scene. It's impossible to know for sure, but I am very hesitant to say that I'm just wired for CS and my childhood experiences didn't have anything to do with it.
I just have a suspicion that for some small set of kids who see Toy Story, they'll just have to know how it was that they did that. And maybe, for some small set of those, they'll get really jazzed by the answers and decide to learn more. I really disagree with your statement that "the only kids that are going to want to know how Toy Story was rendered are those that are similar to how I was as a child"- young children strike me as exceptionally intellectually curious. It's fun to ask adults what their hobbies were as young children. I was a rock collector, a stamp collector, a comic book collector, a chemist, a physicist, an alchemist, a poet and fiction author, a luthier, a magazine publisher, an animal-rights activist, an athlete, a cartoonist, a sculptor, a violist, and of course a computer programmer all before I was a teenager (sadly, I'm only a few of those things now). I was not exceptional. But I dabbled in all of those fields because there was something in each of them that made me think they were cool (yes, even viola- I never said I was a child genius). I bet that for a few people, Toy Story is that "something cool" that made them want to check out computers.
Re:Other CG (Reboot) (Score:2)
And obscure only to you, I'm sure. Why flaunt your ignorance?
An inside look at a Theatre (Score:2)
Theatres are nearly mandated to play the movie trailers (the previews that show before the movie) at a volume level about 25% louder than the actual movie, to (supposedly) draw attention in that first 12-15 minutes when latecomers are still finding seats. Add in the fact that many trailers include action scenes that are normally loud anyway and there are not a small number of complaints. The invariable response is "Has the movie started yet? No? Well then don't worry, it'll be at a normal volume when the movie starts." And over 90% of the time, it is.
Trailers, promo clips, theatre snipes, and the film itself are invariably at different volume levels. It is impossible to adjust for all of them and most of the time the volume level is just at a certain level and only gets changed if someone asks. Bear in mind the people in the projection booth cannot hear the movie at all and have no idea if they've accidentally knocked the volume control while moving platters or performing routine maintenance.
If, once the movie has started, it still seems a little loud, make a trip outside. Talk to somebody and it will get taken care of and you'll most likely walk off with some popcorn coupons for your trouble. Just remember the fact that you're paying a premium to see a feature film in its best possible presentation and you're entitled to it.
Happy moviegoing next time!
Re:Satan's New Film... (Score:2)
VeggieTale corrections and information (Score:3)
Phil's wife's name is Lisa.
Mike Nawrocki and Phil Visher do about 3/4 of the voices, Lisa does her share as well. The rest are friends and family, employees and a few hired guns.
It is true that we beat Toy Story to the punch, and we have also had tremendous video sales as well. Most of the studio uses octanes for for animating and rendering. We have a few 02s as well.
We currently started using Maya for our new prject, having use SoftImage in the past.
I can try to answer any other questions that you might have: ttoll@bigidea.com [mailto]
Re:VeggieTale History (Score:2)
Quite true, although now that they're successful enough to have a real budget, their rendering quality had really improved.
Strange but True: The reason Vischer and Nawrocki picked hopping vegetables for their first film, Where's God When I'm S-Scared? [amazon.com], was because they didn't have enough computing *oomph* available as garage-shop animators to do anything other than basic geometric shapes. So, in a fit of manic genius, they decided on vegetables as easy to render. And the rest is history, as they say ...
While Vischer, Nawrocki, and Vischer may not have the budget for renderfarms that Pixar has, they are warped comic geniuses, which is something money can't buy. (Hmm ... I wonder if CmdTaco would accept a movie review of The Toy That Saved Christmas [amazon.com]?)
Re:Too bad (Score:2)
> to them, but the speed PER CUBIC FOOT OF SPACE...
Man, that's my kind of problem. I wonder what their air-conditioning bill is per month...
Hey, Steve-o! When the hell are you going to convince your company to port Renderman to your other company's machines? Mmmmm...Renderman for G4...(drool)
#include "stdcarmackpraise.h"
Re:Satan's New Film... (Score:2)
All kidding aside, I'm their sworn enemy personally, but I find their reviews and analysis amusing, so if you want a laugh or want to see the real Christian perspective on Toy Story II, by all means check out their review.
D
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Re:Satan's New Film... (Score:2)
Anyway, the links:
CapAlert:
http://www.capalert.com
Their Toy Story II Review
http://www.capalert.com/capreports/toystory2.ht
D
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A few random thoughts (Score:2)
The "Star Wars" pardoy bit was great! The climax on the elevator had me laughing so hard I nearly passed out.
I've seen references here to various animated shorts that Pixar has done. Does anyone know where those of us who cannot go to film festivals might be able to see some of this stuff?
Anyone have a link to anything about the "Renderman" software the credits say they used? I'm just curious. I tried renderman.com [renderman.com] but all I got was a server error.
I realized something with this film: The first "Toy Story" was the only Disney animated film I've ever heard of without a character singing a song in the middle. Disney realized their error and corrected it for this movie, to increase sound-track sales, no doubt.
Re:posting links on /. (Score:2)
amazing.com is my web site!
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