>90% of everything on screen at any point is CG

>90% of everything on screen at any point is CG
>Practical effects and CG purposefully designed to be indistinguishable from each other
>All facial expressions are created using CG 3D software before being printed out
What the frick is the point exactly?

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  1. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

    looks good

    • 4 months ago
      Anonymous

      Would you say it looks notably better than Worthikids' 100% CG stop motion?

      • 4 months ago
        Anonymous

        Not that anon, but Yes? What kind of a question is that? I know you’re just fishing for anons to agree with you, but even if the 3d printing is smoother than rustic materials, you can still obviously tell it’s physical. It doesn’t get more impressive than Kubo’s giant skeleton boss.

        What Worthikids does with CG is mind-blowing, but he’s still mimicking somebody else’s style, and all he has going for him are visuals.

      • 4 months ago
        Anonymous

        I think a better question would be does it look better than the LEGO movies

      • 4 months ago
        Anonymous

        Dude what the frick
        You’re favorite indie animator is not better than a multi million dollar studio.

  2. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

    Travis Knight is the son of the cofounder of Nike, the point is to make him happy.

  3. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

    >>90% of everything on screen at any point is CG
    It's composited, is every matte painting effect in old movies """CGI"""

    • 4 months ago
      Anonymous

      More than just the backgrounds, tons of the characters in movies like Boxtrolls and Missing Link are CG. Many scenes have only one or two puppets interacting with a bunch of CG characters.

  4. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

    I suspect that because the studio owners dad is the co-founder of Nike (yes, that Nike), that he throws cash at them as an investment, they lose it on what's essentially a vanity project, and he writes it off as a loss while keeping the money in his son's bank account.
    They could do everything in 3D, but then there's no room for the interpretation of value. It's like how art markets are money laundering schemes.

    • 4 months ago
      Anonymous

      >because the studio owners dad is the co-founder of Nike
      >yes, that Nike
      >he throws cash at them
      No need to repeat this every thread. Not you specifically, but it’s been like ten years and no matter what there’s always some variation of this post. Who do you all think you’re revealing this breaking news to, we all know.

  5. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

    Huge shit like the skeleton in Kubo or Snatcher's mech in Boxtrolls were actual big-ass puppets

    • 4 months ago
      Anonymous

      But the fact I probably wouldn't have known if you didn't tell me makes me ask what's the point

      • 4 months ago
        Anonymous

        > if you didn't tell me

        pretty sure the skeleton is part of the sizzle reel laika plays after the movie moron

        • 4 months ago
          Anonymous

          Do you really not get what I mean?
          During the watching of the actual movie, there is basically no difference for the viewer, whether or not something is hand made or CG, because the filmmakers have done their best to make it indistinguishable. I'm not talking about appreciating something because you saw a behind the scenes, even if that behind the scenes is in the credits. I'm talking about the actual movie.

      • 4 months ago
        Anonymous

        The people behind stop motion animation want to make their work as good as possible with little wasted time. With advancements of both stop motion and CG it has become harder to tell them apart but people making stop motion just like the process and result of making it so they'll continue making stop motion films. One remedy film makers have towards this problem is make puppets and backdrops more imperfect such as Wendell & Wild having all puppets have a line across their face.

        Ancient Japanese potters used to purposefully give an imperfection to their works since nothing in nature was perfect.

        • 4 months ago
          Anonymous

          Or Frankelda throwing in a "Miniature puppet" shot in every episode as a throwback to older Mexican stop motion projects.

  6. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

    >>90% of everything on screen at any point is CG

    But enough about the "live-action" blockbusters that trick normalhomosexuals into believing they're not watching cartoons.

    Verification not required.

  7. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

    Facial expressions are made by replacement faces switched out through frames.

  8. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

    That's just all modern movies in general. Any average high budget "live action" film should be graded as an animated film, if the reviewers or award show judges took just a glance at the behind the scenes footage instead of believing the actors going "100% practical we filmed everything for real no CG"

  9. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

    You are the reason, disney is fully 3d now. You are the type to b***h about why is everything soulless but then don't understand what it takes to be soul. It takes the extra effort, sometimes the hard route like how ed edd and eddy had the jittery lines that fit the comedy and show style. It's all about putting your heart into a project, not just corpo slop mass produced

  10. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

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