Hey Guys,
Welcome to Mull Over Monday, This is the day where I pick
something that people discuss and have different opinions about. These things
will normally be to do with film or writing or something that obviously affects
my life directly.
So something to think about and
discuss this week is special effects and CGI. Do they improve films or make
them worse? How much is too much?
I’m going to view my opinions and
obviously, as normal, if you have other views on this topic then let me know underneath.
This may be a very one sided view
on special effects and CGI because unfortunately I’m not really the biggest of
fans, but I shall try and be as open minded as possible.
This subject has come about due
to the fact that lately I’ve been watching a lot of comic-book films, such as The Amazing Spiderman, The Avengers Assemble and The Dark Knight Rises, (which I will be
reviewing on Film Thursday blog.)
So first of all what do you class
as special effects? Well truthful anything from a simple lighting effect all
the way up to your big explosions and CGI creatures are known as special
effects, SFX for short.
So in some ways without SFX a
film would never work. There would be no light or sound SFX and it would just
look extremely boring and unappealing. So SFX are needed to make, and improve a
films quality.
The question is: How much SFX and
CGI is too much? For me this is simple, when you start creating things that don’t
look realistic at all and spoil the film; that is when you know you’ve gone too
far. Take King Kong (2005) Directed
by Peter Jackson. This remake of an old classic used so much CGI that there was
not one shred of truth left by the end of the film, all relationships with
characters were uninteresting and 187 minutes of pure CGI just was too much.
Looking through the archives over
at TotalFilm.com I looked through what they rated the worst CGI film moments
and why, so I thought I would give you a little taster, so you can see what
might be a step too far with Computer Generating.
Here’s the link if you want to
check out all of the list, or the scenes themselves:
20: CGI Sharks – Films such as Deep Blue Sea (1999) and Shark Attack 3: Megalodon (2002) have
some of the worst CGI shark attacks I’ve probably watched. There is just no
realistic sense to them at all.
17: The brawl in The Matrix Reloaded (2003). Total Film
gives a note saying ‘The Golden Rule of CGI: Just because you can, doesn’t mean you should.’ This is an extremely
good rule, and some directors do need to learn this one.
12: The Scorpion King: The Mummy Returns (2001). When The Rock turns into a half scuttling
Scorpion is one of the worst, most unbelievable things I’ve seen. This is when you
lose faith in sequels and franchises.
9: The Lions and the Infected: I am Legend (2007). All the street
clearing and lighting SFX in the world could not improve these hordes.
6: Troll Attack: Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone
(2001). Just watch a clip of the troll, not only do all the actors look really
young in comparison to how they are now, but that troll is just unbelievably
unrealistic.
1: Well we’ve mentioned this once
before. I had a feeling that King Kong
would be in this list. The whole medley of Giant Apes, Stampeding Dinosaurs and
other over the top creations. Not only are the badly made, but badly dubbed
also with the wrong Sound FX.
Now I’m not saying all CGI is
bad, because sometimes there are some great moments created. What I’m saying
is, sometimes the SFX teams might take things a little too far, get a little
bit carried away and just decide that they will have a children’s drawn troll
or way too many bomb explosions.
A film should not be about the
action, the CGI and the SFX. It should be about the story and the relationships
built between characters and audiences.
If you have any views on this,
let me know and keep the discussion going.
Stay safe,
For me I would have to say the worst effects I have ever seen in a movie was "Cloverfield". The creatures were ridiculous, making it more comical than scary. I think "Terminator 2" was the one that really broke the mold in effects. The whole morphing of Robert Patricks character was beyond anything I had seen at that time. I have to agree with the over use though. Take the movie "Battleship" for example. I love Peter Berg as an actor AND director, but this film was WAY over the top in effects, so much so that you don't get to know the characters because you are just too distracted. Yes, effects are cool, when you can't figure out the story line you may have gone a bit too far. Now the movie "Priest" is a perfect example of graphics and effects done RIGHT. The creatures weren't over done, just enough to make want to look away, and the action scenes were perfectly done. If you haven't seen this movie, it's def worth watching!!
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