Revenge Kevin Costner Madeleine Stowe Anthony Quinn1989
>> YOUR LINK HERE: ___ http://youtube.com/watch?v=UtqR3DR0I28
Get some cool drag drop VFX here! ► https://www.famefocus.com/go/getvfx/ ◄ • VFX will always be at the cutting edge, pushing the limits of hardware and software to make the impossible a reality. But what was cutting edge in the 90's was done on computers with less power than your smartphone! This is why it's so surprising to find VFX from that era, that are still actually pretty good! Like the music in this video? • Get it on Google Play:► https://bit.ly/2F10vbs ◄ • Get it on itunes: ► https://apple.co/2ENGfu9 ◄ • Listen on Spotify: ► https://spoti.fi/3boTfCl ◄ • Buy it on Amazon: ► https://amzn.to/2QVJZfk ◄ • • 1. Total Recall, 1990 • Although a lot of miniature models and landscapes were built and used in this movie a surprising amount of VFX were too. One of the most iconic scenes was the X-ray scene. The original idea was to do a motion capture , so Arnold acted out the scene wearing 24 light reflecting balls, whilst 6 different Black and white video cameras captured the movement. Weeks later it was discovered that this wasn't enough to get perfect motion. Luckily they had filmed the scene from the other side of the scene for reference and were able to rotoscope Arnold's performance, flip it and match the motion of their CG skeleton to it. • 2. Terminator 2, 1991 • The T-1000 was a masterpiece that still looks remarkable even by today's standards. • ILM was in charge of the liquid metal T-1000, and in order to reduce pressure on them, wherever possible T-1000 shots were done practically: • For the helicopter pilot's reaction shot, a chrome bust was used and raised into frame by hand, Quick shots in the fight against Arnold in the steel mill were done by a stuntman in a foil suit, and the reforming of the T-1000 was done by blowing mercury with a hairdryer. ILM's main task was T-1000's morphing abilities and each shot, even though only around 5 seconds of screen time, would take 8 weeks to complete. ILM pushed the limits of their computer's memory and CPUs and it took a team of around 300, 6 months, to produce 50 shots. • 4. Jurassic Park, 1993 • Of course, Jurassic Park had to be in this video, not only because it was a game-changer that shaped the future of VFX, but it has also stood the test of time. Ironically Spielberg wasn't originally planning to use any major CGI in the film. • He hired Stop-motion expert Phil Tippett, to create stop-motion test sequences, for the Velociraptor kitchen fight scene and the T-Rex truck attack scene, and was planning for ILM to add motion blur to make the sequences appear more realistic. ILM told Spielberg that they could actually create and render the dinosaurs completely digitally and when Spielberg saw the difference between the two, he chose CGI. • 5. Forrest Gump 1994 • It may not be a film you'd think of as having many VFX, but as we often say The best VFX are the ones you don't C.....FX . The falling feather, erasing Lieutenant Dan's legs, war scenes and napalm in Vietnam, Gump shaking hands with Nixon, Kennedy, and Johnson, a CG ping pong ball and creating crowds in the national mall and the Alabama Football stadium, in fact, (apart from the lip movements done on JFK, Nixon, John Lennon, and Lyndon B Johnson), most of the VFX go completely unnoticed. In Forrest Gump, VFX stopped just being used for what couldn't be done with practical effects and started to be used in preference of practical effects. • Please give us a like if you enjoyed this video, don't forget the links to the music in this video are in the video description and be sure to let us know, in the comments, which movie VFX you'd like to see behind next! • Read more here: www.famefocus.com • Follow us on Twitter: / focusfame
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