secondlina (
secondlina) wrote2010-08-02 12:12 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Entry tags:
Obsession with skulls?
Whew. I managed to finish the first ten pages of my printed comic Psychopompes. The first ten pages are needed for a preview magazine. So, that's a whole week to sketch, ink, shade and letter 10 pages. Didn't think I could do it, but I did. I spent my vacation on this. Tired now. I'm happy with the result.
I can't show you guys the actual pages. But here's a few select panels from those pages, just so I can show off a bit.

Aside from that, i'm loving all the Tangled (Disney's "Rapunzel") concept art all over the internet. Behold :




As always, Disney knows how to do expressions. I love it. I hope the artbook for this movie will be instructive. Pixar artbook tend to be a bit meh. I,m hoping the Disney 3D animated feature ones might be better. You can learn a lot from artbooks.
- Isa
I can't show you guys the actual pages. But here's a few select panels from those pages, just so I can show off a bit.

Aside from that, i'm loving all the Tangled (Disney's "Rapunzel") concept art all over the internet. Behold :




As always, Disney knows how to do expressions. I love it. I hope the artbook for this movie will be instructive. Pixar artbook tend to be a bit meh. I,m hoping the Disney 3D animated feature ones might be better. You can learn a lot from artbooks.
- Isa
no subject
Disney animators always give out their all to stylize a piece and bring out a high quality work. I still think CG offers possibilities that traditional animation cannot. The hair for example. It's really hard to animate consistently hair, especially when it moves that much. It's like the flight scenes in How to train your dragon. Sure, traditional animation would have been fun, but the scenes acquire a certain realism and flow from the 3D animation.
A style needs to go with a story, and I think Tangled is a good candidate for 3D animation. Something like "The princess and the frog" or "beauty and the beast" would have looked odd in 3D. I'm not saying that I prefer 3D to traditional, but I don't think they would have done Tangled is the 3D medium was not available.
no subject
I do think that any movie could and can be made traditionally. All that computer animation holds over it is more dynamic camera angles and realistic renders.
no subject
Hair was difficult to replicate, but they now developed a lot of awesome tools to make it. Pocahontas' hair is cool, but it's a very simplified design (black blob with escaping strands, it does look cool but it's very simple). I don't think Rapunzel would have looked cool with Pocahontas hair. There's definitely something I love about the way they did her hair in 3D.
I don't think the Disney "3D studios" are as strong as Pixar yet, and you can't compare a developing studio to a well established one. So yeah, their 3D might seem a lot weaker then their 2D, but I still think they are doing good.
no subject
And yeah....I could chomp at this all day, but I won't. I'm not arguing about this since I was never against 3D/CGI animation in the first place. Both have strengths and weaknesses, neither is truly superior to the other.
no subject
I'm not so well versed in the ways of Disney (not as much as you anyways), but i'm still happy about the 3D. Yeah, we could have a debate about traditional vs CGI until we are old and gray and still not resolve the debate. I'm sure Disney has a reason why they chose 3D for this movie. Snow Queen seems to still be in 2-D despite jumping in and out of development hell. Any new developments on that movie? Since the snow Queen is my favorite fairy tale I have high hopes for this one.
Hey, how about the Bear and the Bow? Are you excited about that one? I am! the main character looks like she could kick butt.
no subject
From what I read, Glen Keane pushed for Tangled to be in 3D, not for it being 3D, but because he wanted to make a movie that looked "like a moving oil painting", which is much cheaper to do with CGI than traditional animation. For one they can render it on a computer. For the other, they'd have to actually paint it.
I'm always really neutral on Pixar movies until I see them. I'm the same with Disney movies, too. Until I can see even a snippet of a scene from the movie, I try not to have any prejudice for or against the movie until it's out. I loved Toy Story after thinking, "How dumb!" when I initially heard of it, but I also didn't really care for A Bug's Life. In this rare situation, I need to "see it" before I'll "believe it". ^_-;
I've not heard anything on Disney's projects, but that's not unusual. Disney has always been secretive on what it works on. When Disney is ready to let us know what's in production, they'll let us know. When they feel they can make a worthy movie adaptation of the Snow Queen, it'll happen.
no subject