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Yoda, Gollum Take MTV Awards

zoobaby writes "MTV has given the LoTR franchise credit for spectactular work with Gollum. After being snubbed by the Academy Awards, it is nice to see recognition given to one of the most expressive and best acted roles in recent films."

66 of 271 comments (clear)

  1. Oscar... by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's myy precioussss, it is... Nasty Yoda can't haves it, Noooo....

    --
    "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
    Never been known to fail..."
  2. Uhm.... by Eyston · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is obviously keeping up with the 'shiny things' network.

    Giving Gollum some recognition is great and all, but when he wins it jointly with the little guy who jumped around like sonic the hedge hog wielding a light saber, it is lacking credibility. It is obviously the 'digital characters are cool' award.

    -Eyston

    1. Re:Uhm.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
      it is lacking credibility.

      >>> mtv.credibility

      AttributeError: class mtv has no attribute 'credibilty'

      (no class either, but Python fails to recognize that)

    2. Re:Uhm.... by Achoi77 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Giving Gollum some recognition is great and all, but when he wins it jointly with the little guy who jumped around like sonic the hedge hog wielding a light saber, it is lacking credibility.

      Yoda didn't win for virtual peformance, he won an award for 'best fight scene.' So him spinning around with a lightsabre was what got him that award in the first place.

      Personally I didn't think that lightsabre scene was as sacreligious as people claim it to be. If you take a real close look, you'll see that Yoda doesn't do as many blender-style-720-degree spins as his lightsabre movements imply. While he is spinning, he's also moving the lightsabre in the same direction, giving him more speed and force. I've seen enough Kali/Eskrima classes and demonstrations to be convinced that sometimes even the most simple movements can look overwhelming.

      On a side note, I've also heard stories about an 80 year old Kali master who was able to hold his own against 3 young men in their 20's.

      Basically Yoda's movements aren't necessarily impossible - difficult yes, but not impossible. If you wanna see impossible, wait for that scene where you see Neo spinning around like a top with that pole when he fights those Smiths. And flies away at the same time. And accelerates his spinning.

    3. Re:Uhm.... by csguy314 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      he won an award for 'best fight scene.' So him spinning around with a lightsabre was what got him that award in the first place. Personally I didn't think that lightsabre scene was as sacreligious as people claim it to be.

      Well I don't know about anyone else, but I always thought it would have been much more interesting if Yoda fought Tyranus by just kinda standing there and controlling his lightsabre with the force.
      Watching Tyranus fight a phantom lightsabre would have been pretty cool, and you'd really know Yoda was a kickass Jedi master....

      this post is off topic...

      --
      This is left as an exercise for the reader.
    4. Re:Uhm.... by nacturation · · Score: 5, Funny
      If you wanna see impossible, wait for that scene where you see Neo spinning around like a top with that pole when he fights those Smiths. And flies away at the same time. And accelerates his spinning.
      But if he jumped really hard while spinning and holding the pole out at arm's length, he could bring the pole in close to his chest, thereby in order to preserve the angular momentum the rate of rotation would need to increase. Or, uh... I guess it could be done on computers. Ahem.
      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    5. Re:Uhm.... by Nazmun · · Score: 2, Informative

      Mostly good points but does neo really count? I mean it's not in the 'real' world but rather a simulation of earth now. The guy even flies :)

      Also about yoda... what if he wasn't using just his muscles for all that movement? what if he was using the force... the war could be over tomorrow... (slaps self out of matrix)

      I meant he's THE jedi master and he can move objects many times his wait by manipulating the force. I'm not a huge star wars buff but can't he manipulate the force around him to move his body or simply aid them in some way?

      --
      Hmmm... Pie...
    6. Re:Uhm.... by petsounds · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Lucas based his Jedis on Japanese samurai, especially as he was greatly influenced by Kurosawa's samurai films such as The Hidden Fortress. The fighting style of the samurai was based on efficient, effortless and movements designed to fit the task at hand. So it was completely ridiculous, and against the samurai way that Lucas stol..er..integrated into Star Wars to have Yoda, the Jedi master (aka the big kahuna samurai), spinning around like a top. All that wasted energy. And did he even hit his opponent with all that flash? Nope.

  3. No SPOILER WARNING!?!? by Phosphor3k · · Score: 4, Funny

    Some of us might have actually enjoyed watching the goddamn awards without knowing who wins beforehand. The show isnt even aired til June 5th. Once again Slashdot Editors, thank you for spoiling another (Circle one: TV Show, Movie, Game Ending).

    1. Re:No SPOILER WARNING!?!? by Eyston · · Score: 5, Funny

      Bit of advice. Next time use AC to post that you wanted to watch the MTV awards.

      -Eyston

  4. Interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...it is nice to see recognition given to one of the most expressive and best acted roles in recent films.

    Its probably a lot easier to be yourself when you know its never going to hit film (your face).

    Perhaps acting could become even better in the future, still done by humans, but mapped over with different faces?

    With acting you have to let yourself go. I think actors still hold something back though and aren't 100% of what they could be.

  5. besides.. by TCM · · Score: 5, Funny

    Eminem got awarded for best male role and said: "I can't believe I beat Mariah for 'Glitter'".

    While I can't believe it either it still puzzles me.

    --
    Of course it runs NetBSD. BTC: 1NT7QvbetmANwaMzhpVL6
    1. Re:besides.. by murgee · · Score: 2, Funny

      Certainly puts this Pet Shop Boys song into perspective.

      --
      mrg
    2. Re:besides.. by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 2, Informative

      Interesting. I guess I was surprised he got the award for best male role. Eminem always looked pretty girly to me.

  6. WTF? by JiMbOb_ka · · Score: 5, Funny

    First the Aimee Deep Story and now this MTV story...if this turns into a Teeny Bopper website, I am so out of here...

    1. Re:WTF? by DrMrLordX · · Score: 3, Funny

      Why you have to go and make things so complicated?

  7. fuck cgi gollum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    they should just have cast Christopher Walken as gollum.

    1. Re:fuck cgi gollum by Catnapster · · Score: 5, Funny

      I disagree.

      Nobody wants to see Christopher Walken dressed only in a loincloth.

      --
      The world can be wrong today for once.
    2. Re:fuck cgi gollum by hashbrownie · · Score: 2, Funny
      they should just have cast Christopher Walken as gollum.

      Yesss .... cowbell precious ... precious cowbell is to Gollum ...

      --
      Fax Baba!
  8. I'm afraid if Yoda is passed over. . . by Limburgher · · Score: 4, Funny

    . . .then the emereror has already won.

    --

    You are not the customer.

    1. Re:I'm afraid if Yoda is passed over. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      No, there is another...

  9. Sarcasm? by Telastyn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't see how recognition by a network known for not knowing the difference between art and a hole in the wall is in any way complimentary...

  10. I beg the submitter's pardon! by Kappelmeister · · Score: 4, Informative

    The LOTR makers' work on Gollum was not snubbed by the academy. They did not make Serkis eligible for an Oscar, but they gave the Oscar for visual effects to the WETA team, and (IIRC) showed a Gollum clip as they were walking to the stage.

  11. Gollum sucked by GoatPigSheep · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't know about you guys, but I still don't think CGI is ready for the big time. In every movie it looks so obvious that there was CGI used that it almost ruins the movie for me.

    Even movies from the 80's that used blue screens for everything looked more realistic than today's CGI aided movies, CGI just isn't advanced enough yet to be convincing. You also can't reproduce the human touch of make-up and hand produced costumes you get with using real actors.

    --
    GoatPigSheep, the 3 most important food groups
    1. Re:Gollum sucked by Goldfinger7400 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I don't know about you guys, but I still don't think CGI is ready for the big time. In every movie it looks so obvious that there was CGI used that it almost ruins the movie for me.

      It's not that you can't tell that it's CG, it's that it's done in a way that you don't care that it's CG. It's obvious from the looks of him that Gollum doesn't really exist, but then again, hobbits don't exist but we're willing to accept them as characters. It was the natural nature of Gollum's movement that allowed someone to accept him as a character, to the point that (some) people cared about him. You can put people in costumes in front of a bluescreen, but if they can't convey a sense of their characters (through acting) then they're no better than Jar-Jar.

    2. Re:Gollum sucked by deadsaijinx* · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sorry, but a bunch of guys in rubber suits in front of a blue screen is even less realistic than CGI work. Take Matrix Reloaded. You could definitely tell it was not Keanu in some of those scenes. But he still blended into the environment very well, and even a few shots he looked photo realistic. More importantly, there are millions of things added to scenes in recent movies that you would never have known were CG. You've just been trained over the years to accept the rubber suited monster in front of the screen, where as the new generation is being trained to accept the CGI. And as a CG artist myself, I can tell you that great strides have been made to this date.

      --
      YOU SUCK BALLS!
    3. Re:Gollum sucked by donglekey · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't know about you guys, but I still don't think CGI is ready for the big time.

      Fair enough, but just about everyone else does.

      In every movie it looks so obvious that there was CGI used that it almost ruins the movie for me

      Could you pick out all the CG in every one of the over 1000 VFX shots in Matrix Reloaded or Lord of the Rings? The answer is no, because most instances are seamless, and others are hidden very well if they aren't. You are probably talking about some instances of 3D that looks fake. Many times when visual effects do not look real it is due to budget and time contstraints like everything else.

      Even movies from the 80's that used blue screens for everything looked more realistic than today's CGI aided movies,

      It is definitly a different look, and I can understand why someone would like one over the other, but saying that 80's blue screen and optical printing is more convincing than film quality compositing and visual effects is pretty rediculous.

      CGI just isn't advanced enough yet to be convincing.

      It depends on what is being done. Trying to reproduce humans is incredibly difficult. Just because it hasn't been done doesn't mean that it can't. Just it because it can be done doesn't mean it is practical and not just a novelty. To say that CGI in general is not convincing is, quite frankly, bullshit. In just about every movie you go to, you may know where the visual effects lie in one shot, but there are 20 more that you didn't notice, I guarantee it. The movies you watch today are made possible by CGI. Deal with it.

    4. Re:Gollum sucked by Catnapster · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The problem with CGI isn't how it looks - the WarCraft III Human box art is as close to photorealistic as anything I've seen. No, the problem with CGI is when it starts moving. CGI in motion has issues with lights and shadows, reflection, and lifelike movement, among other things.

      Another issue is the use of "texture" images - a flat image looks photorealistic until you get close up. That's because it's a flat image, not a texture. The most obvious indicatior of CGI is clothing, because real clothes are exquisitely textured, while most moving CGI attempts to represent it as a flat image. Flat images would work if they could convey shadows, which is how you notice real-life texture anyway.

      There's also the issue of collisions. In the Matrix: Reloaded discussions, someone brought up the fact that there are instances where they used bullet-time when it seemed completely unnecessary, for instance when the Agent jumps on the car in the freeway scene. This is because high-speed collisions rendered in CGI apparently look bad, so they slowed it down.

      --
      The world can be wrong today for once.
    5. Re:Gollum sucked by jcdick1 · · Score: 2, Funny

      The Hulk is a good example, as well, of movement being "too smooth." In the trailer, the CGI Hulk looks like a giant green animated Jell-o mold.

      --
      What?
  12. Hmmm? by xanadu-xtroot.com · · Score: 3, Funny

    My presssssshious ssssslashdot thwarted my tv watching ssssssschedule, they did.

    (ok, was that a good merging of the two?)

    --
    I'm not a prophet or a stone-age man,
    I'm just a mortal with potential of a super man.
  13. award given? by FryGuy1013 · · Score: 3, Funny

    i wonder how protective gollum would be of his new precious.

    --
    bananas like monkeys.
  14. Give credit where its due by Goalie_Ca · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The guy who played gollum, yes there actually was a guy in a suit and his name was Andy Serkis, deserves all kinds of credit. He did a marvelous job bringing the character to life. If you look Neo for example, he was basically cg the whole movie anyways. They had other fighters/actors in suits with the little balls at every joint and they pasted his face on the body.

    SCI-FI movies esp need more cg characters to bring the world to life. Why is every species in star trek is just like a human. Wouldn't it be neater to see a different variety?

    Any one seen simone lately?

    --

    ----
    Go canucks, habs, and sens!
    1. Re:Give credit where its due by Malfourmed · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The guy who played gollum, yes there actually was a guy in a suit and his name was Andy Serkis, deserves all kinds of credit. He did a marvelous job bringing the character to life. If you look Neo for example, he was basically cg the whole movie anyways.
      And nobody's going to nominate Keanu Reeves for an acting Oscar either.

      (One exception: He was very good in The Gift.)

    2. Re:Give credit where its due by quantaman · · Score: 3, Funny

      If you look Neo for example, he was basically cg the whole movie anyways.

      Well duh, Keanu Reeves is a CG actor. I mean it's pretty obvious, the lack of facial expressions and the fact that it looks like there's something fundamentaly wrong any time he's on the screen. He was basically a very early attempt at a fully CG character, I mean even Toy Story has more human seeming characters. Also if you conside...
      huh...
      WTF do you mean he's real?!? ...

      Ahhh he a robot like R2D2 and C3P0!!
      Ohh a human being I see...

      Yeah! And wrestling is a real sport and and Linux copied SCO's code, riiight
      *snicker*

      --
      I stole this Sig
  15. Strange thing it is! by Dark+Lord+Seth · · Score: 5, Funny
    Yoda appeared on a giant screen to accept the honor and spoke in his signature circuitous manner.

    "Hmmm ... grateful am I to this award receive. To win, I did not expect," he said. "Promise myself cry I would not."

    He went on to thank supporters ranging from "Star Wars" creator George Lucas to Wookie Chewbacca, Vin Diesel, space monster Greedo and actor Steve Guttenberg.

    He didn't expect it? Boy, that rendering farm and the voice actors sure must work in a hurry to produce a rendered imagine complete with voice acting in such a hurry! You'd almost think this is a huge show, a spectacle aimed at enriching those with the largest marketing/SFX budget! Almost like the gollum thing further on in the article:

    Then, the emaciated Gollum clamored over to snatch the trophy from Serkis' hands.

    "You're a liar and a thief," Gollum hissed. "It's mine!"

    Gollum went on to deliver an expletive-filled tirade against the filmmakers, actors, MTV and audience, while Serkis stood by looking embarrassed.

    Come on people, we're talking about the MTV awards here, brought to us by MTV; the epitomy of modern pop and hype culture. We're talking about something hosted by a TV station aimed at 14 year old girls who faint at the sight of $current_hip_boyband and wish to be like $cheap_spicegirls_knock_off while flooding the rest of the market with artists like $random_teen_chick and $overhyped_guy_who_looks_gay ...

  16. Indeed by tomakaan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Gollum was a great character. Yeah, the camera work back and forth may have been a little too much, but I think that's a great way for Gollum to be depicted. His split personality was shown greatly and that is the one thing I am actually looking forward to in the third movie since they already messed with the storyline so much!

  17. Here comes MTV by Agent+Deepshit · · Score: 2, Funny

    Look at all the pointless first posts, this submission must have attracted the MTV crowd. I played right into it. Shit.

  18. Re:Sure... by SamBC · · Score: 5, Informative

    Ah but he does very much exist... Andy Serkis is a graduate of my very own Lancaster University and did a very marvelous job of portraying gollum.

    The animators used actual footage of Serkis acting out the role in a silly skintight body stocking, and the voice is all him. I am particularly impressed by gollum's dialogue with himself

  19. Bored of the Rings.... by LamerX · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Is anyone sick of hearing of Lord of the Rings... Does anyone care that CGI is taking over film, and that nobody is putting effort into special effects anymore? Why I remember back in the day, when it used to be really cool to see stuff, even if it looked a little fake, that was done. Now it's like, "That's too much effort, lets toss some CGI in there for this scene." Same with the Matrix Reloaded, the fight scene with Neo and the Agent Smiths. Obviously they thought that the first movie was cool with the spinny effects (which it was) so they'd better put more spinny effects in there. Only we want to do it really cool without spending a lot of money, so lets just replace the entire scene, actors, backgrounds, etc with computer animation and solve the ingeneuity problem. Yes ingeneuity, figuring out how to make a scene come to life with real people. Something that movies these days are starting to seriously lack.

    1. Re:Bored of the Rings.... by sylvester · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yeah, right. Reloaded was sure stingy on the effect. Like, geez. Only $100 mill. wtf.

      Choice snippets:

      o A 17-minute battle sequence alone cost over $40 million.

      o The 1.4-mile, three-lane loop highway was built specifically for the chase scene on the decommissioned Alameda Point Navy Base at a cost of around $30 million. It was destroyed when filming was complete.

      o It was reported that Keanu Reeves volunteered to give up a claim to a share of ticket sales amounting to around $38 million when producers feared that the film would never recoup the cost of the special effects.

      o The special effects cost $100 million U.S.

  20. Huh? What about Jar Jar!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    *runs*

  21. Gollum as one Actor. by lostchicken · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Some people have said that having Serkis as the actor on scene, the face actor, the expression actor and the voice actor is just a gimmic.

    This is complete rubbish. The reason that Gollum seems as real as he does is because of the connection between voice and motion that you get with every human. It is for this reason that it is always easy to tell when a voice for animation was cast before or after the animation itself was complete.

    If I walked around with somebody else's voice all day, I would seem strange. Hats off to Serkis and the LotR crew for knowing this. Now we can begin to cast by acting talent, not physical attractiveness.

    --
    -twb
  22. Is it really any surprise by thegrommit · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While there will always be acting jobs in theatre, TV and non-Hollywood productions, is it any suprise that no acting Oscars went to a film that demonstrates actors worst nightmare - i.e. that the demand for them is about to drop?

    1. Re:Is it really any surprise by SLot · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I hope you get modded up, because I think you are right - when Hollywood realizes that they can put more in the bank by not paying the actors - just creating their own via CGI, you will see a paradigm shift. And not a small one - what will People magazine do? Interview the creators?

      This is *so* _Little Heroes_, it's not funny, but I look forward to it.

      (but will the first open source star be stallman?)

  23. Gah! Spoilers by jtkooch · · Score: 5, Funny

    Well take this!

    Vader is Lukes father
    Soilent Green is people
    XXX Sucks
    And the third LOTR and the third Matrix are actually the same movie!

    1. Re:Gah! Spoilers by The-Bus · · Score: 2, Funny
      XXX Sucks


      My mpeg-filled hard drive would disgree.
      --

      Small potatoes make the steak look bigger.

  24. Serkis was Eligible by TPIRman · · Score: 2, Informative

    The Academy announced that Serkis was eligible to be nominated for an Oscar (scroll down in link, third paragraph from the bottom). He just did not receive enough votes from Academy members to receive a nomination.

    1. Re:Serkis was Eligible by Kappelmeister · · Score: 3, Interesting

      True; I meant that Serkis was not eligible because he was not nominated, but used the wrong language.

      One thing to keep in mind is that nominations are made only by the respective Academy members. In other words, only actors cast votes for Best Actor (speaking gender-neutrally), only directors cast votes for Best Director, etc. Later, everyone votes on which nominee gets each award. (It doesn't make sense to look too deeply into nomination counts, since there are parallel intenions, but everyone does it anyway.)

      So it's really not shock or mystery why Serkis wasn't nominated. The very segment of the Academy population that was the most resistant to recognizing the work of digital characters -- the actors whose jobs may someday be threatened by them -- was the only one that had any say in the matter!

    2. Re:Serkis was Eligible by Savatte · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Did you ever consider that maybe Andy Serkis/Gollum wasn't nominated because he really didn't deserve the nomination? Here are 5 far superior supporting performances from eligible 2002 movies.

      Chris Cooper from Adaptation
      Nicky Katt from Full Frontal
      Brian Cox from 25th Hour
      Ian McKellan from TTT
      Dennis Quad from Far From Heaven

  25. "In recent films" being the key... by mccalli · · Score: 3, Interesting
    it is nice to see recognition given to one of the most expressive and best acted roles in recent films.

    Perhaps, but the definitive Gollum is that voiced by Peter Woodthorpe in the still definitive BBC radio version. Anyone who is interested in The Lord of the Rings, but hasn't heard this version, should really do themselves a favour and check it out.

    Semi-interestingly, Ian Holm, who plays Bilbo in the films, is cast as Frodo here. Co-incidence? I doubt it. I rather suspect that t'old Mr Jackson has heard this version too.

    Cheers,
    Ian

    1. Re:"In recent films" being the key... by The+Only+Druid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I say the definitive Gollum (and, for that matter, the definitive Treebeard) is that done by J.R.R. Tolkien in his recorded interviews, wherein he voiced many stretches of dialogue by many characters.

      --
      "Stumble before you crawl"
  26. Yoda speak is Latin, dammit by mr_tenor · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I cannot _stand_ people who think Yoda speaks in a fashion that just randomly rearranges words. The times I've watched Star Wars (tm) movies, it's always seemed to me that he speaks in a classical Latin word order

    eg.

    "Strong you are" (Yoda) or whatever, as compared to
    "mangus es" (Romans)

    1. Re:Yoda speak is Latin, dammit by Pres.+Ronald+Reagan · · Score: 4, Funny

      Shut up.

      --

      Abortion is advocated only by persons who have themselves been born.
      --Ronald Reagan
    2. Re:Yoda speak is Latin, dammit by The+Only+Druid · · Score: 4, Insightful

      To clarify, he speaks in "periodic syntax", which is the same as the context of classical latin. Several other languages (including the earliest post-latin forms of Spanish/Italian/French).

      Modern english, interestingly, maintains this in a form: a "periodic sentence" is one with its main clause at the end, following all subordinate clauses and other elements. This is an echo of the older periodic sentence, revised to technically fit into the syntax rules of modern english (which inverts the verb order).

      --
      "Stumble before you crawl"
  27. StdMovie Spoilers by Wolfrider · · Score: 2, Funny

    o The butler did it.

    oo Everybody dies at the end.

    oo He leaves her/she leaves him (but they get back together)

    o He's/she's NOT REALLY DEAD and will come back to life.

    oo There will be a chase scene. Perhaps more than one.

    oo There WILL BE a fight of some kind.

    oo There's a built-in sequel - they even do it just for the money sometimes, and to Hell with the plot. :(

    o TLG are DEAD. Get over it.

    o SW Episode III will probably suck too. So will Hulk.

    o Gollum dies.

    o Your popcorn has been pissed in, and you probably deserve your money back. :P

    --Now please excuse me, I have to go watch Finding Nemo again.

    --
    .
    == WolfriderV6 == I'm willing to admit that *I just might* be wrong... Are you??
  28. Um.. spoilers by CaptainSuperBoy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It's not on the level of the lone gunmen spoiler or anything, but still - nobody has actually seen the awards show, so maybe you should assume that SOME of us want to be surprised? Yeah I know it's been taped already, but it doesn't air until Thursday. Being as not a single Slashdot reader has actually seen the show, this should be posted with a spoiler warning.

  29. No MTV.COM Link? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Come on guys, MTV.COM could use a good slashdotting.

  30. Bleh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Its an MTV award.

    That means its recognition that LOTR has been assimilated into popular culture.. nothing more.

    I often wonder how "serious" artists and filmmakers manage to hide their indifference about MTV awards.

  31. Human facial animation by Mochi · · Score: 4, Insightful
    It depends on what is being done. Trying to reproduce humans is incredibly difficult. Just because it hasn't been done doesn't mean that it can't.

    This point is very important. Disregarding static issues like skin and hair modeling and rendering. Human perception has evolved and is tuned for communication, primarily with other humans. Therefore we are very sensitive to minute incongruencies with our expectation of how a face shoud move, both by itself, and in the context of the surrounding environment. This is why completely hand animated human faces are almost always very poor...they strive to be real, but cannot account for the complexity. In contrast, cartooned faces are far enough from reality, that "unrealistic" facial action is accepted...as we are not expecting reality.

    It is (I'll be bold and say impossible) for an animator to get the motions perfect for anything more than relatively simple facial actuation. There are just too many, often subconscious factors that go into facial action...but all of these are important to achieve a realistic result.

    Motion capture has been used to solve this problem, taking the burden away from the animator, but the mapping problem is still difficult, we have a sparse sampling of skin motion from a human that has different facial characteristics from the model being animated. How do you handle the skin in between the motion capture points? Some sort of interpolation scheme is usually used, but this is a gross oversimplification of skin physics...not to mention, that it doesn't account for secondary motion of the skin such as wrinkling.

    Anyway, in short, its a hard problem. BUT, I have no doubt that the problem will be solved...

    rant over

    1. Re:Human facial animation by donglekey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I agree with you on most points, but I think that good, realistic facial animation, while difficult is very obtainable. Gollum's face was completely hand animated, and all the shapes were modeled. It was not motion capture for the facial animation, and there was no skin simulation. Final Fantasy's facial animation was not as good as the look of the film dictated, but I have seen realistic facial animation done very well, just not very often in a realistic setting. I think this will gradually change as more CG movies and animation are released that have a more realistic style to them. I think it is more of an artistic problem, than a technical one.

  32. Re:Close... by badasscat · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The only redeeming part about the MTV movie awards: the fact that, underneath it all, they're just poking fun at self-important movie stars.

    Inanity is not to be confused with satire, and calling the MTV movie awards such is giving the network way too much credit. If you've ever watched one of these things, they're taken about as seriously as anything can be in their teeny-bopper mentality. Obviously it's not on the same level of seriousness (and pretentiousness) as the Academy Awards, but that in no way implies some sort of smart social commentary.

    MTV has always tried to present these awards as an alternative to the Academy Awards. That's not the way you do satire - nobody reads The Onion as an alternative to the Washington Post, for example; you don't go there trying to get actual news. These awards aren't satire at all. They may be irreverent, but they're totally straight underneath it all.

    And as such, they carry even less weight than if they were satire. The Academy Awards may be overblown but they're at least decided upon by people who know a little something about the subject - those both inside the industry itself as well as those who make a living commenting on it. What the hell does MTV know about movies? About enough to make and market Jackass, I guess. Next you'll tell me that's satire too.

  33. CGI will never look human... by Jerf · · Score: 3, Informative

    CGI will never look human, because typically the CGI isn't human, not supposed to be human, would be wrong if it were human.

    In the clips of the Incredible Hulk, does it look wrong? Yes? Good! The Incredible Hulk is not human. He bounces better, moves differently, is just plain built differently.

    Did Spiderman look unusual? Good! A man swinging through a city shouldn't be normal for you.

    In fact, your claims that the old effects "looked better" are a backhanded slam against the realism of those effects. Everything moved like a human or a puppet, because everything was a human or a puppet. Both of those motions looked "natural" to you, because you're used to them, but unless they were supposed to be a human or a puppet, that actually means the effect was a poor imitation of what "the real thing" should be.

    Do you really think ET's race could have survived long enough to build those spaceships they have if they moved like an eighty-year-old arthritic grandmother? The equivalent of wolves on their planet would have torn them to pieces long before they developed civilization.

    This is not to say all CGI is perfect. But you're going to have to either cut them some slack, or watch "Finding Nemo"*-style cartoons for the rest of cinematic history.

    In conclusion, I disagree completely. Compared to modern effects the 80s effects are, well, 20 years out of date. They only look better because you're used to them. I've tried to adjust to the modern style, and while it could still use some improvement, compared to the 80s its stellar. If the (non-humanoid) aliens of the 80s are any indication, what the universe needs most from our planet is enormous quantities of Ben-Gay, Aspercreme, and Gold Bond medicated powder, 'cause there sure is an awful lot of joint pain out there.

    *: Not meant as a slam against Finding Nemo; I haven't seen it yet but I expect to enjoy it. The point is that it quite deliberately moves like a cartoon, which is another style of movement we're "used to", even though it's totally 100% fake.

  34. Easy Acting by SpamJunkie · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Acting crazy, or angry, or any single emotion very strongly is easy. Watch any high school production: the less experienced actors stand out by the intensity with which they feel each emotion. Talent in acting is revealed in the conflict of two emotions felt at once.

    You may say that Gollum's conversation with himself is just that, but it isn't. He gets to switch between two single emotions like a madman which any semi-experienced actor can tell you is pretty damn easy, even fun. Keep in mind that Gollum's conversation with himself was also shot in pieces, once from each angle. In that respect the actor didn't even have to switch emotions as quickly as it appears he did on screen.

    Gollum didn't win an Oscar because he didn't deserve it.

  35. Re:While we're on the subject... by TheAntiCrust · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What the hell are you saying? Please dont tell me Yoda has more history then Gollum! Gollum has his entire tragic past. He used to be a hobbit. Then the ring turned his childish pranks into murder. Then he spent hundreds of years being tortured by the ring in a cave hunting down goblins in the dark. He is a tortured soul. Now half hobbit, half something else, he is following one of the most important beings in middle earth during the climax of the age! I mean, yoda is cool too, but to say Gollum has no character is absolute bullshit. And you can see the torture in his facial expressions while he's on the screen. Goddam astounding if you ask me. A bunch of '1's and '0's turned into a character I can believe spent 700 years in a cave being tortured by a magical ring. I saw the pain in his expressions.

  36. My Response to Your Assessment by Chromodromic · · Score: 3, Funny

    Dude. Jesus.

    --
    Chr0m0Dr0m!C
  37. Regrets... by Queelix · · Score: 2, Funny

    Unfortunately, I was unable to make it to the MTV awards again this year. Sincerely, Relevance