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Archive for January, 2016

Robert Redford in The Candidate

Robert Redford in The Candidate

Even if you’re competently media literate, it might be hard not to feel pretty burned out from the non-stop buzz of images and sounds from all the electioneering.  Maybe it might be the perfect moment to get inspired by some classic movies.  There are documentaries like PrimaryThe War Roomand Our Brand is Crisis.  Or there are the classic feature films The Candidate and Bulworth.  And from television among the best are The West Wing and House of Cards.  

Or maybe you just need to turn it all off.  But it’s not going away yet.

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"Sanjay's Super Team" by Sanjay Patel

“Sanjay’s Super Team” by Sanjay Patel

Throughout the media, there is lots of heated debate revolving around this year’s Academy Awards.  Here’s an invitation to escape the controversies about the lack of skin-hued diversity among the nominees for a moment and check out the short films nominated in the three categories devoted to shorts: animation, live-action fiction, and documentary.  Visit ShortsHD for info about where you can find the Oscar shorts and lots of other short film info.  And by the way, there’s lots of ethnic diversity represented in many of the shorts nominated for Oscars in these categories.  But evidently, these movies don’t count for anything.  However, they certainly do for us and for anyone who loves inventive, invigorating moviemaking off the beaten path.  So check them out, you will probably find something you like.

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far cryIn discussions of CG and visual effects on various occasions – such as ones at mediateacher.net with visual effects supervisor Greg Butler – one of the topics that regularly arises is the particular challenge of animating people.  This involves the concept of the uncanny valley – that territory whereby the closer one gets to creating an artificial human, the creepier and more repellant that version becomes (recently confirmed through research by Maya Mathur and David Reichling).  It seems to be not such a big issue for gamers (such as with Assassin’s Creed, Call of Duty, or Far Cry), but in fiction movies, the trend has been towards creating very cartoonish-looking people.  Among the most famous examples of the uncanny valley turning off viewers have been in the performance capture features of Robert Zemeckis, such as in The Polar Express and Beowulf, as well as earlier Pixar efforts such as Tin Toy (with that unintentionally gruesome baby) and Toy Story.  When reviewing the history of CG in animated features, it is interesting to track the development of animating humans as it settled into a distinctly stylized, successfully cartoonish look, such as in Ratatouille, The Incredibles, and Up.  One notable moment in CG features that struck me was with the release of the feature Monster House, in which the setting was animated in a hyper-realistic mode and while the characters were created using performance capture, the design distinctly pursued a claymation look, most visibly noticeable in the hair of the characters.

MogWhen I was watching some British holiday commercials that were highlighted by the blog Media Psychology, I chuckled at one long ad featuring the CG cat Mog (for Sainsbury’s narrated by Emma Thompson).  I wondered, “so when cats watch this, are they creeped out?  Do they experience the uncanny valley too?  And what about dogs?  Do they get a chill down their spine watching CG puppies like when we watch The Polar Express and they yell out, ‘please, just turn on Madagascar again!'”  

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