Dave
unread,Aug 6, 2022, 12:20:06 PM8/6/22You do not have permission to delete messages in this group
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I've watched a couple of sci-fi movies this year, liked the story and
acting, but there were diabolically bad live action sequences,
especially with fantasy flying and the camera (viewport?) jumping from
place to place.
The recent cancellation of Batgirl shows that studios are getting the
message that no film is better than a bad film. If you've been getting
it all week from the boss two hours of fantasy escapism can really help
the sanity and assist in a full inclusivity mindset. For instance in
the height of the 1930s depression movies with much glamour were in vogue.
So the big idea is to have the live action not scripted or storyboarded,
but taken from a real-time video game. If the "hero" gets killed too
bad, need another take where they fight better, or get another person to
use the game controller. Obviously for movie projection at 8K and so on
you might want to render at a higher quality than the console might
provide, but the action is there, no edits allowed.