Yea, the sparrow hath found an house, and the swallow a nest for herself, where she may lay her young, even thine altars, O Lord of hosts, my King, and my God.
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Monday, October 22, 2012
Wow! check this out.
I was a kid when computers started being used in making animated films. In those days, though, it was a much more limited thing and the animation was still done by artists using cells. Nelvana was a great innovator in the field, and started making films that were of interest to adults as well as children.
Now, of course, they are simply astonishing, and they are producing films ostensibly for children that adults can really love. Some of my happiest movie experiences lately have been Up, Despicable Me and The Incredibles. I also quite enjoyed Ice Age (though less so the sequels) and that Hedge movie with Shatner. Looking on YouTube under "short animated films" will reveal some absolutely astounding and wondrous work. These movies are probably some of the best film making, including in the script writing, character and stories, going on right now. So much that it seems a whole new genre of high-quality movies has been created.
This thing, Epic, looks to be following that trend. I have one reservation though. A story made by modern people about fairies and their interactions with the human world seems wide open to be a vehicle for some very evil ideas. I don't know anything about it other than the trailer above, but I've got a suspicious feeling about it. I fear it could be what a friend of mine calls an "ambush movie" where the beauty of the work is concealing and slyly selling some terrifyingly evil political or philosophical message. Like that Avatar thing, that made everyone so depressed. I wanted to see the Philip Pullman movies for that reason, they looked so visually amazing. But the reviews were rather bad.
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A lot of children's movies I've seen with my son have followed that trend; ambush style. They all have the underlying message that humans are bad and evil and only want to rape the earth of it's resources. The good turns out to be the bad & the bad becomes the good in that wonderful "it's all morally relative" way of Hollywood's.
ReplyDeleteLook up Partysaurus Rex, a new short by Pixar, and a special effects masterpiece!
ReplyDeleteI found the panda movie fairly good.
ReplyDeleteWall-E was wondrous! Seriously one of the best cinematic critiques of modernity ever made.
ReplyDeleteI was also quite fond of Ratatouille and Finding Nemo.