2005 Halo Machinima Award Winners
ThatWeasel writes "It was announced on /. almost two months ago and now, finally, the 3rd Annual 'Rockets on Prisoner' Awards have announced this year's Winners. Several video segments have been produced documenting the Nominees and Winners, along with the acceptance speeches from the lucky few who will be receiving golden Master Chief statues for their excellent work in Machinima. With awards Ceremonies like this, who needs the Oscars?"
What is this actually about? It isn't explained either in the summary nor in the article. The title and the summary seem to have nothing in common.
I know this may come across as flame bate, but damn, some of those were downright painful to watch.
I don't really have a problem with Red Vs. Blue. Those guys can be fairly funny. But man, I found myself actually felling embarrassed for some of the directors (?) of those machinema flicks.
They weren't good, and they weren't bad enough to be funny. They were just kind of, umm, "uncomfortable" bad.
Now, for good machinema, watch Summoner Geeks
"Things are more moderner than before- bigger, and yet smaller- it's computers-- San Dimas High School football RULES!"
Over a gig of videos on that site and the 3 random ones I watched were total shit - Lots of Blue vs Red wannabe clones and some boring footage of Halo matches.
Anything in there with an actual story?
However, I'd like to plug the guys doing a new machinima: Bloodspell. That group has done a number of machinima shorts and features over the years and has constantly been pushing the envelope with machinima. The quality they get out of engines never designed for this is amazing.
No, he said "Oscars," not "Sundance Film Festival." I can see how you might get the two confused. One has scantily clad women and colorful blinking lights, and the other has films.
When you're afraid to download music illegally in your own home, then the terrorists have won!
Machinima is a genre of cinema made with video games. In the case of productions like Red vs Blue, this involves taking video feeds from a game (like Halo in multiplayer) in which "actors" control characters as per a script and subsequently, on a computer, editing the footage and adding an audio layer for dialogue; in other instances, it can mean scripting a game engine (like Half-Life 2's Source). What it always means is, as I said, films from games.
Some history here.