Avatar - A new Era of Cinema begins
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@marian said:
I think this is one is the best...
ahh Russel Crowe in tights.....what a gay thought
LOL....Robin Hood and his "merry" men running around in the woods .... surely someone has made a gay parody of this tale.
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***We're men, we're men in tights.
We roam around the forest looking for fights.
We're men, we're men in tights.
We rob from the rich and give to the poor, that's right!
We may look like sissies, but watch what you say or else we'll put out your lights!
We're men, we're men in tights,
Always on guard defending the people's rights.We're men, MANLY men, we're men in tights.
[Gay voice] Yes!
We roam around the forest looking for fights.
We're men, we're men in tights.
We rob from the rich and give to the poor, that's right!
We may look like pansies, but don't get us wrong or else we'll put out your lights.
We're men, we're men in tights
[High Voice] TIGHT Tights
Always on guard defending the people's rights.
When you're in a fix just call for the men in tights!WE'RE BUTCH!***
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I guess the thread really hasn't changed course because correct me if I am wrong. . .don't the tall naked Blue people in AVATAR shoot bows and arrows too?
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Only arrows, Davit (withthe bows)
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Solo,
Alan Rickman an obscure actor? Not in the UK!
A clip from the superb Truly, Madly, Deeply with Juliet Stevenson. Rickman plays a ghost.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ll37xdj8rpU
Regards,
Bob -
My children knew him as Professor Snape. But for me it is his Star making turn as the baddie Hans Gruber in DIE HARD. He stole the show from Bruce
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Watkins, my referance to him being obscure comes from my exposure to American Television, we/they only really see him in small rolls like the Sheriff in Robin Hood, the villain in Die hard, the cheating husband in love Actually, etc.
But I'm sure he does a lot move work in the UK, I watch a lot of BBC dramas on Netflix instant (My wife is a BBC drama addict who strangely enough thinks he is hot, but then again she also thinks Willem Dafoe is hot)I heard that he was supposed to be the main character for the BBC detective Drama ' Wire in the Blood' but refused it in the end, I think that role would have been perfect for him.
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My wife loves him because he was the Dashing Colonel Brantley in Emma Thompson's Sense and Sensibility.
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I saw the movie last week and it was fabulous....not just the 3D but also the modeling is superb.
Makes Sketchup look a bit paleA friend asked me if she would be able to see the 3D effects as she has only 5% visibility in her right eye (virtually blind on one side).
I forgot to try and close 1 eye to check if the 3D would still be there.So if one you guys here go and see it, could you check that for me?
Much appreciated.It would be a pitty to drag her along to the movie theatre when she can't fully enjoy it.
My guess is that she won't be able to see it, as the 3D probably works by projecting two different images on the two eyes (left and right, 90° rotated shutterglass),tricking the brain to interpret it as 3D..... -
Hi Chris,
I had cataract on both of my eyes. One was operated in 2006 (actually, when on sick leave, I got acquainted with SU) and the other one this last December (on this, I was almost completely blind already, too).
I know that my space feeling was very bad with one eye and I did not forget to check it out closing one eye what it would have been like before the operation.
Not only you cannot see the 3D effect at all but although these glasses are not those old, cheap ones, when you watch the movie without them or just one eye, the edges are hazy and some weird coloured still. So it is very bothering also, not only she couldn't enjoy the extra.
She could watch it in a "traditional", 2D movie however.
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Yeah she could see it in 3d with only having vision in one eye, and it won't be blurry or appear as a double image or anything (as long as she wears the glasses). But it will appear as 2d only and it will be slightly dim and dull for the colors. But she could see it in a 3d theater just fine. But I would recommend just seeing it in 2d for the best results for her.
Chris
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Dear All,
Perhaps this will help explain how the glasses work. At the end of the article there is a link to how 3D graphics work too. Isn't science great.
Kind regards,
Bob -
I sometimes wondered if Cameron would surpass his success with his other big films like The Abyss and Titanic...
Avatar, for me at least, ranks right up there with the Lord of the Rings Trilogy. In LOTR I've always immersed in the world of Middle Earth, but Avatar takes it to the next level on Pandora.
Cheers.
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Just got back from the IMAX theater to see Avatar. I found the world visually stunning, and the thought put into all of the life forms and how they interacted was impressive. I could go on and on about the computing power, imagination and skill it took to put this world together - you just need to see it to believe it.
As far as the story goes, it was "Last of the Mohicans" meets environmentalism, and didn't seem all that original. I liked the new Star Trek movie better as far as the story goes. I guess for me, the big thing was that the aliens weren't "alien" enough - I "saw" (re: the film's use of that word) them immediately and I think that took some of the interest away from the film for me. Maybe that's a sacrifice that needed to be made in order for the audience to relate, but is sure made what was going to happen in the film pretty obvious. That could partly because I'm a big science fiction fan, and I like my aliens to be alien, not like Star Trek DS9 where an "alien" was just someone with different makeup on their nose and maybe a couple of neck ridges; in this case it was a bigger blue body. I also found that the name that the antagonists used for the resource they were after was quite interesting, I forget where I heard it before - somewhere in an old SciFi book.
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unobtainium
Larry Niven's 'Ringworld'
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I finally got to see it in 3d IMAX
Visually stunning
Plot.... not so much
Seem's that folks are taking it a bit to seriously
Follow the link to read "Ways to cope with the depression of the dream of Pandora being intangible"
http://avatar-forums.com/showthread.php?t=43
(via Boing Boing)
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Enjoyed Avatar - better then expected
You guys got me going: Thank you!
Special effects are stunning.. easily could have lingered longer in some landscapes
Looking for a great plot with depth... a classic like Tarkovsy's Stalker is rewarding. Anyone seen it?
Daniel
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For thos ewho would like to watch Stalker in 10 minute bites
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wow, people being depressed after watching the movie. well, then Cameron must have done something right to get such extreme responses.
@MuseumMaker: your link to that forum is hillarious! and if you look at a statement like this:
@unknownuser said:
First time I too woke up and got that strange depressed feeling. That forced me to go to the cinema the next day. Again I got that feeling, even got it after the 3rd time. Now i think I'm an addict
it becomes obvious, that Cameron is a genius. he actually created a legal drug, that can be satisfied for the prize of only one cinema ticket!
I have to admit though, that I have seen it three times already myself... once on IMAX 3D, once on normal cinema 3D and once on a crappy old 2D cinema screen with bad sound. and I have to say, I enjoyed every single time. actually, I've already booked tickets for the next time in Londond's IMAX theatre (booked it more than a moth in advance in order to get the best seats...).
but never fear! I am not addicted (at least not to Avatar in particular. I've seen each Lord of the Rings film between 4 and 5 times in the cinema too).but I promise you: once technology advances far enough, that we can render such worlds in real-time and can actually enter computer games via haptic suits and 3D glasses, then I will most definitely become addicted to it. I am already looking forward to having a blue tail
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I'd be happy enough with unbiased rendering @ 30 frames per second.
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