I was one of the DP's on Kung Fury. Thanks for the appreciation guys, it means a lot! I want to give a special shout-out to the stuntmen and stunt coordinator working on the long fight scene we called the "Oldboy scene". Without them, Kung Fury would be doing way fewer flips ;)
@@MinorityRespecter88 hes Martin Gärdemalm (@Orefield177) Martin Gärdemalm was born on 24 June 1988 in Umeå, Västerbottens län, Sweden. He is a cinematographer and actor, known for Inland (2020), Kung Fury (2015) and Tony and Lena (2013). bro it took me 2 seconds to check...
@@RavenousMaw No need to thank me... I was lucky to be offered the job. It was a fantastic first feature experience. Got to work with a lot of people I greatly admired (ADI, ILM, Joe Johnston and of course Robin Williams) as well as some friends I had in the industry. All of that did indeed make for a magical experience. I wish all the jobs were that much fun.
You totally nailed talking about working blind when making sequence back in the early days. I did a CGI MA in 1992 and the work the students did using CGAL which was a pascal based programming language, with almost no GUI was amazing. It took hours to produce a 320x240 px wire frame preview and 20+ mins for a frame render. Most of the work was done in our heads. Any ex Bournemouth Uni 1992/93 alumni out there?
A high school friend worked on the Jumanji set in Vancouver BC. Robin Williams signed and wrote a personal note to every single member of the cast and crew - I was in awe when this movie came out.
A point of note on the "fast giants" in the first clip, is that something often overlooked when people talk about giant things moving slow is perception. Giant things *appear* slow to us because, though they move incredibly fast, they are also covering incredible distances, and so our perception of their movement changes, especially when viewed from distance. A perfect example of this is the Earth itself, because though it rotates at about 1000mph at the equator, to view it from space it appears to be barely moving at all, because of just how big it is. A more comprehensible example would be footage of building demolitions. They almost appear "slow motion" because of how far the building has to fall, but the pieces are obviously moving at incredible speeds. If you consider a tiny Jenga tower falling over, it begins and ends its freefall in a matter of a few seconds, whereas a demolition of a high-rise will take many times that time to completely fall to the ground. Yet the high-rise will be falling *faster*. So in the case of the Godzilla clip inserted when saying "Giant monsters don't have to be slow", Godzilla *isn't* moving slowly there, it's covering a very large distance in a very short space of time, its just also very large, and viewed from quite some distance, so the effect is it appears slower. If you were riding on Godzilla's foot, you'd feel like you were moving very fast. This is a pet peeve I have in a lot of video games with very large enemies. In order to make said enemies attack very quickly so the player has to react fast, they make giant monsters move at comically fast speeds, far faster than is remotely realistic.
You gotta look at the storm effects in Twisters, particularly the shot where the white Ram truck is reversing down the road as the tornado wipes out a small building. It looks goooooood.
I’m surprised you guys didn’t notice! In the jumanji clip when the lion is walking towards Robin Williams you can see a transition to the puppet lion head. You can see it in the front tuft of hair that all of a sudden appears out of nowhere! Go back and check it out!
I noticed that too, and the audio. I'm kind of curious what exactly changed for this episode. Edit: They said in a reply to a different comment that they had a new editor helping for this one.
Agreed! Revisiting the process of how original CGI techniques were developed always really blows my mind too, in terms of the level of programming & physics knowledge the artists and their tool-developers had to have! These days so much of the process can be computer-automated, but not back in the early days... 😅
ya know, I am French so the "th" sound is not native to us, but that exact sentence and the closeup on Jim Carrey's mouth is what unlocked that pronunciation ability for me :D
01:57 The issue with fast giants though is that when running, their center of gravity falls at the same amount as ours and not at the same percentage of their body, so when they are off the ground, they won't be able to make contact as quickly for the next step. They will have to look as if running in slow motion, unless they have completely different running mechanics.
I intuitively knew that giants shouldn’t run the same as humans, just bigger, and watching them move just feels wrong but it wasn’t immediately obvious what the issue was and I didn’t put any thought in to it, so I’m glad you pointed this out. Now I’m thinking about how you would even go about making it accurately, the only thing I could think of is lots of tedious trial and error until it looks right enough, or just run some ai simulations to see how it decides is how a giant biped would run
Who's editing these..? Usually the react episodes are super dynamic with a bunch of sfx and music but lately there are some (like this one) where something's off... Either way, still a fan and always will be, love u guys!
Am I the only one that felt like the editing was slightly off in this video? Like parts where it’s just silent or weird cuts from when talking to him not talking anymore
2:10 akshually, yeah they do. Gravity is always the same acceleration no matter the mass/size. how fast you can run depends on how fast your legs can connect to the ground to push against it.
Maybe in realism but not in fiction. They were talking about giants and then showed a scene from a show about humans turning into huge creatures. We don't have to have realistic thinking in all aspects of fiction....that isn't fun.
@@SegginsProductions I think the first three movies had games based on them. I’m not sure about the newer movies. I remember it vividly. You play as the different characters. They grow and gain abilities and items. Large scale battles. The Minotaur design still really gets to me every time I think about it. They looked great, (for the time), and were chunky enemies to take on. By the last few fights they’re absolutely EVERYWHERE😂👌
Thanks for all these years of details we might have missed ! And here's to the next videos, no doubt there are plenty of games out there that deserve you to have a look. And as a fan of BG3 too, I know I'll answer the call !
What, KUNG FURY is nearly 10 years old? Damn, still waiting for the announced kinda-sequel with Michael Fassbender (!?), probably called "Kung Fury vs Kung Führer" or something like that.
It's helpful for people like me who want to write for film and television to listen to gents such as yourselves because it helps us visualize how our impossible scenes can become real. It also gives me specific ideas on how to produce / direct a film on a tight budget while ensuring that it looks badass. Thanks for the encouragement.
My favorite visual effect is the T-Rex against Bus scene in Jurassic Park 2 where the T-Rex is running through the city and bangs against the bus with his head. I want know so bad how they did this.
My guess is that the bus was rigged from the inside to collapse. You pull it inwards with wires attached to the wall of the bus, and then it looks like it collapses from something hitting it from the outside. Then just composite the t-rex in.
@@AWSVidsThat's exactly right, in the behind the scenes they rigged a bunch of wires and hydraulics to collapse the bus from the inside, and the T-Rex was composited into the shot.
I believe they might have done that scene on a previous vfx artists react because I'm pretty sure I remember them talking about it. edit: sorry, replied to the wrong person lmao
There's an old Indian movie called "Maya Bazaar" which was made in the 60s. But the special effects they used in it are amazing, and sometimes keep me guessing how they've achieved them. Would love to see you guys take a crack at it ✨✨
Huh... Did you re-edit this after the upload? The timing is very different now. I hope the new editor doesn't feel too bad because of all the comments.
10:35 there's another great example of this technique with a godzilla shaped ram used to smash through a miniature house and hillside in Shin Gojira (2016) the finished comp is just beautiful
Also, the "bad CGI that ruins a shot" Hobbit example they used is not that bad imo. I really dislike the Hobbit trilogy and its overuse of CGI and overall digital look, but here in this example, what is bad is not really the CGI, it's how the scene is written, the overall idea of it. The CGI by itself is not perfect but it's not that bad either. The shot and the moves of the characters are stupid and what is ruining the scene.
@@cable7152 he was talking about how fast moving monsters are more intimidating than slow moving ones like giants and those I Am Legend zombies(i know they're not really zombies)
Great episode as always! Definitely recommend checking out opening scene of season four of the original X-Files TV series. Awesome shot where they’ve got five children that look exactly the same same, with moving camera. Pretty sure they did it with one set of twins, but the comping is fantastic. The show was shot on film, but their VFX shots were rendered out in SD, the shots still has all of its resolution so it was either redone when the episode was released in HD, or they found a way to do it in Camera. Either way, it’s a great shot.
Unironcially that lion shot blew my mind. Ive seen this movie countless times and never realized this was cgi because it just so good compared to some of the more clearly rough early cgi the film has. Crazy that this is in the film.
"A tiny bite can make you itch; make you sneeze, make you twitch." --- any time there are mosquitos or bugs, I recite this.😛 One of my all time favorite films.☺
THE VINE CRUSHING THE CAR SCENE! It took me so long to find a BTS of the Vine scene in Jumanji and it's so cool how they married practical with CGI. I really wish you showed that.
SOooooo glad you covered Jack the Giant Slayer. That movie changed me the first time I saw a mountainous giant sprint. And I'm really glad you guys enjoyed it, because I've never met another soul who appreciated it like me.
I saw a clip of Jack the Giant Slayer and immediately thought it looked amazing. I googled the director and it's directed by Bryan Singer who directed other great movies like The Usual Suspects, X-men, Superman Returns, Bohemian Rhapsody. I think Jack the Giant Slayer bombed pretty bad at the box office and is basically waiting to be found on streaming services.
@@Dornvud nah man, a slow angry mob is just a crowd. They aren't bothered by you or your presence. A horde of zombies will never stop coming, slowly but surely creeping towards you and whilst you can outrun them in the short term, they'll never stop. They will always find you. A creeping death, ever looming. Fast zombies is just some chav in London who calls himself a roadman because he thinks he's hard.
Omg yes, everything felt so "Off" I was falling asleep. Weird sound mix. Weird cuts in the same scene, no transitions, no music, voices being cut off. Quite odd indeed.
The Alien squid attack on the engeniers from Prometheus is a really well done VFX shot, look so real and well implemented, would love to see you react to that
I feel like sam brought jack the giant slayer in to talk about why its cool but not good or something lol. Like he had this mild dislike for it while wren and jordan were just loving it!
I remember watching Jack the giant slayer in the movies when it first came out and I ABSOLUTELY LOVED THAT MOVIE so seeing you guys giving it props makes me wanna go back and watch it again 🥴🥴
To recommend you some animated movies/series, try the movie Mars Express (2023). It’s a French Sci-Fi and polar movie and it is refreshing and has an interesting style. They combined hand animation for humans and 3D animation for robots. By the way the budget is only 6/7 million euros. It is very refreshing especially in France where animated movies are generally made for kids. Really good pick. From the same director, there is the series Lastman. Super cool series with low budget.
Please do react to "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.". Lots of robots, spaceships, time travel, gravitonium, Inhumans and of course more importantly Ghost Rider, Lola etc. It's got quite some stuff to get its own episode.
@@LaurieCheers I mean, there are 136 episodes and most of them do feature a lot of CGI except for like a few. So kinda difficult to name Episodes individually so I mentioned some topics off the top of my mind. I will try to include some more.
Recently watched extraction 2 and I think you guys would love the one shot sequence with hidden cuts, it’s a LONG sequence but it does really well with keeping it intense
My Mats and Lighting professor in college, Ed Kramer, worked on Jumaji with ILM. He said the monkey hair was probably the hardest thing about the cg in the movie. Fun fact, the rhino who is behind the rest of the stampede wasn't actually supposed to be behind. It's a rendering error with the animation, but ILM could either remove those frames or keep them, but there wasn't time to re-render the scene. The director decided to keep it since it was funny.
Jumanji is special to me. It was filmed in my hometown of Keene N.H., and as an 8 year old to see our whole town transformed for a movie and to have Robin Williams, there was a huge deal. The Parish Shoes is still painted on the building downtown all these years later. Love that film.
"Giant creatures don't have to live in slow motion" It's funny, because while I agree to that for stylistic and artistic reasons, in reality, larger creatures do, in fact, experience the world slower than smaller creatures. So a giant would actually live life in slow motion, it just wouldn't recognize it as such because it wouldn't know any other way of experiencing the world.
Was honestly surprised you guys never looked at Jumanji before. I saw it in theaters as a kid, it scared me but i LOVED it. Seeing the stampeded sequence in theaters was incredible, the entire movie theater felt like it was rumbling. I remember later seeing that behind the scenes of the blue painted Rhino and thinking that was the coolest thing ever with how they were able to pull that off as a kid. I am really glad you showed Kung Fury also, I loved watching that when it first came out.
I was one of the DP's on Kung Fury. Thanks for the appreciation guys, it means a lot! I want to give a special shout-out to the stuntmen and stunt coordinator working on the long fight scene we called the "Oldboy scene". Without them, Kung Fury would be doing way fewer flips ;)
No you're not
I thought that this scene looked like the Old Boy corridor fight. Guess that's why !
My god. Old Boy. It makes sense now.
@@MinorityRespecter88 hes
Martin Gärdemalm (@Orefield177) Martin Gärdemalm was born on 24 June 1988 in Umeå, Västerbottens län, Sweden. He is a cinematographer and actor, known for Inland (2020), Kung Fury (2015) and Tony and Lena (2013). bro it took me 2 seconds to check...
Where's kung fury 2!
Thanks for doing Jumanji... it was the first feature film I worked on (as a makeup fx artist, not VFX). It has a special place in my heart.
I adore Jumanji, and it has a big place in my heart from my youth. Thank you for your participation in that movie, it must've felt magical
@@RavenousMaw No need to thank me... I was lucky to be offered the job. It was a fantastic first feature experience. Got to work with a lot of people I greatly admired (ADI, ILM, Joe Johnston and of course Robin Williams) as well as some friends I had in the industry. All of that did indeed make for a magical experience. I wish all the jobs were that much fun.
You finally did Kung Fury!!!!
“I was struck by lightning, and bitten by a cobra at the same time, I became… Kung Fury.”
That explains the laser raptors...
@@madrandomize5115agreed 😊
@@madrandomize5115 Laser raptors?! I thought those went extinct thousands of years ago.
@@ryanelliott6706😂😂😂
I loved this movie!
I love how joyful they get when somthing is good
"If a monkey's business is what playing is to horses, if you play like a horse, you'll never have to work a day in your life." - Sam
When something is SO on the cusp of being profound that you get it, he gets it, but it just doesn't come together to make sense.
I feel like for a minute there, Sam became Mike Stoklasa.
I still don't understand it him 😂 What does it mean?
Just like ol' grandpappy used to say.
So where does the term "workhorse" fit into this thought experiment, I wonder?
You totally nailed talking about working blind when making sequence back in the early days. I did a CGI MA in 1992 and the work the students did using CGAL which was a pascal based programming language, with almost no GUI was amazing. It took hours to produce a 320x240 px wire frame preview and 20+ mins for a frame render. Most of the work was done in our heads. Any ex Bournemouth Uni 1992/93 alumni out there?
It just boggles my mind that i cant even do half the things people did in the past with 0 resources or hardware. I need to get so much better
A high school friend worked on the Jumanji set in Vancouver BC. Robin Williams signed and wrote a personal note to every single member of the cast and crew - I was in awe when this movie came out.
7:53 I love how you can *see* the moment Wren gets the joke
15:18 Wren creating parallax with his hands was actually the most impressive part in this. I tried it myself and realized how hard that is to do.
Anyone who lived through the epic Sega Genesis/Super Nintendo War of the 1990s knows about parallax. Mode 7 graphics vs blast processing!
Had the same thought. I could do it, but not on the first go and not as smoothly. He must be used to explaining it by now. 😆
A point of note on the "fast giants" in the first clip, is that something often overlooked when people talk about giant things moving slow is perception. Giant things *appear* slow to us because, though they move incredibly fast, they are also covering incredible distances, and so our perception of their movement changes, especially when viewed from distance. A perfect example of this is the Earth itself, because though it rotates at about 1000mph at the equator, to view it from space it appears to be barely moving at all, because of just how big it is.
A more comprehensible example would be footage of building demolitions. They almost appear "slow motion" because of how far the building has to fall, but the pieces are obviously moving at incredible speeds. If you consider a tiny Jenga tower falling over, it begins and ends its freefall in a matter of a few seconds, whereas a demolition of a high-rise will take many times that time to completely fall to the ground. Yet the high-rise will be falling *faster*.
So in the case of the Godzilla clip inserted when saying "Giant monsters don't have to be slow", Godzilla *isn't* moving slowly there, it's covering a very large distance in a very short space of time, its just also very large, and viewed from quite some distance, so the effect is it appears slower. If you were riding on Godzilla's foot, you'd feel like you were moving very fast.
This is a pet peeve I have in a lot of video games with very large enemies. In order to make said enemies attack very quickly so the player has to react fast, they make giant monsters move at comically fast speeds, far faster than is remotely realistic.
Kung Fury is a certified RUclips classic
Sad Kung Fury 2 is still in rights hell and can’t be released
"You're in the Viking age!"
"That explains the laser raptors."
@@artor9175 Best quote out of all film history.
@@Cybornutwait THERE WAS A PART 2????
@@MaticTheProto look it up, has Fassbender and Arnold, but can’t be released due to issues with one of the investors.
You gotta look at the storm effects in Twisters, particularly the shot where the white Ram truck is reversing down the road as the tornado wipes out a small building. It looks goooooood.
I’m surprised you guys didn’t notice! In the jumanji clip when the lion is walking towards Robin Williams you can see a transition to the puppet lion head. You can see it in the front tuft of hair that all of a sudden appears out of nowhere! Go back and check it out!
I never noticed that before! Awesome
ooh What's the timestamp?
Hah, funny. I did notice a little jump in the fur there, but assumed it was just the early fur tech doing some clipping.
Thanks for the time stamp bub
@@infamousdnt because we all know it takes so much work to scroll through the scenes manually
7:07 that jumpcut 😢
Underrated comment
Oh wow, that's wild. It's so sloppy but I didn't even notice 😂
I thought that too haha
also weird audio cuts?
I noticed that too, and the audio. I'm kind of curious what exactly changed for this episode.
Edit: They said in a reply to a different comment that they had a new editor helping for this one.
I love Jordan. I know he's been there a while but he's such a great addition to the crew.
"They invented what you're talking about, brother" is such a dope line lol
Agreed! Revisiting the process of how original CGI techniques were developed always really blows my mind too, in terms of the level of programming & physics knowledge the artists and their tool-developers had to have! These days so much of the process can be computer-automated, but not back in the early days... 😅
Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls has some interesting FX and stunts.
"You know, you could poke somebody's EYE out with that thing." 😂
Everyone loves a slinky
ya know, I am French so the "th" sound is not native to us, but that exact sentence and the closeup on Jim Carrey's mouth is what unlocked that pronunciation ability for me :D
This needs more attention!
bumblebee tuna!
Nice trivia @@eTiMaGo
01:57 The issue with fast giants though is that when running, their center of gravity falls at the same amount as ours and not at the same percentage of their body, so when they are off the ground, they won't be able to make contact as quickly for the next step. They will have to look as if running in slow motion, unless they have completely different running mechanics.
I intuitively knew that giants shouldn’t run the same as humans, just bigger, and watching them move just feels wrong but it wasn’t immediately obvious what the issue was and I didn’t put any thought in to it, so I’m glad you pointed this out.
Now I’m thinking about how you would even go about making it accurately, the only thing I could think of is lots of tedious trial and error until it looks right enough, or just run some ai simulations to see how it decides is how a giant biped would run
Torque (2004) is all you need for an entire episode of bad VFX.
Not gonna lie, I still wanted the Y2K. That bike was dope. Did you see Jay Leno ride it?
@@cuhleef the bikes were cool, the movie was a dumpster fire.
+1
@@cuhleef He did. I do believe he described it as 'turns like a fat lady squaredances.'
What was their obsession with Indochina? The main character gets asked about Indochina several times and it amounts to nothing.
Who's editing these..? Usually the react episodes are super dynamic with a bunch of sfx and music but lately there are some (like this one) where something's off...
Either way, still a fan and always will be, love u guys!
Glad someone else noticed this.
Agree, the edit was off on this one! Almost like they accidentally uploaded the wrong version or something
Am I the only one that felt like the editing was slightly off in this video? Like parts where it’s just silent or weird cuts from when talking to him not talking anymore
I noticed the new edit but I liked it tho. I'm here for the reacts, comments and info. Not everything needs lots of sound FX and funny clips.
Yes. At first I thought it was the fault of the ad removal plugin ;)
The quiet parts were probably to get around unexpected copyright flags after they'd already finished the episode.
yeah wasn’t a fan to be honest
@@Fakan I figured it was something like that
I'm so glad you guys did Jumanji, it's one of my favorite childhood movies and a lot of the effects still hold up all these years later
“Live like a horse, play like a monkey” I WILL LIVE BY THIS FROM NOW ON!!
So are we not gonna talk about the AI images at 7:14? That’s mad weird for a channel full of actual artists,,,,
Now I'm even more impressed by Kung Fury than I was before! That's insane!
2:10 akshually, yeah they do. Gravity is always the same acceleration no matter the mass/size. how fast you can run depends on how fast your legs can connect to the ground to push against it.
Maybe in realism but not in fiction. They were talking about giants and then showed a scene from a show about humans turning into huge creatures. We don't have to have realistic thinking in all aspects of fiction....that isn't fun.
The Narnia movies really need to be talked about! Especially the large war scenes with all of the cool monsters and muthical creatures.
Narnia was a fun movie and a fun video game. Ahh nostalgia. 😅🤙
@@KING_PHILLIPhow did I not know there was a game!?! I love those movies/books.
Yes they totally need to get looked at! Love the movies!
@@SegginsProductions I think the first three movies had games based on them. I’m not sure about the newer movies. I remember it vividly. You play as the different characters. They grow and gain abilities and items. Large scale battles. The Minotaur design still really gets to me every time I think about it. They looked great, (for the time), and were chunky enemies to take on. By the last few fights they’re absolutely EVERYWHERE😂👌
Yes! Narnia
Thanks for all these years of details we might have missed ! And here's to the next videos, no doubt there are plenty of games out there that deserve you to have a look.
And as a fan of BG3 too, I know I'll answer the call !
What, KUNG FURY is nearly 10 years old?
Damn, still waiting for the announced kinda-sequel with Michael Fassbender (!?), probably called "Kung Fury vs Kung Führer" or something like that.
Sucks that its filmed like 5 years ago and the lawsuit thing is stopping the release... I want to see arnold as president in it!
@@schwartzy65 Yeah, that sucks.
Still weird Fassbender is part of this, and if this get's released, there better be a BR.
It's helpful for people like me who want to write for film and television to listen to gents such as yourselves because it helps us visualize how our impossible scenes can become real. It also gives me specific ideas on how to produce / direct a film on a tight budget while ensuring that it looks badass. Thanks for the encouragement.
7:40 Wren looks legitimately frightened and confounded, wrestling with the consequences of understanding Horseplay and Monkey-Business.
The Jumanji quicksand shot is like the original “clipping into the backrooms”
It’s kinda wild how the same fear just gets re-contextualized over time.
My favorite visual effect is the T-Rex against Bus scene in Jurassic Park 2 where the T-Rex is running through the city and bangs against the bus with his head. I want know so bad how they did this.
That scene is insanely photorealistic, amazing
My guess is that the bus was rigged from the inside to collapse. You pull it inwards with wires attached to the wall of the bus, and then it looks like it collapses from something hitting it from the outside. Then just composite the t-rex in.
@@AWSVidsThat's exactly right, in the behind the scenes they rigged a bunch of wires and hydraulics to collapse the bus from the inside, and the T-Rex was composited into the shot.
Even if you watch closely frame to frame its hilarious how good this is. It looks so real.
I believe they might have done that scene on a previous vfx artists react because I'm pretty sure I remember them talking about it.
edit: sorry, replied to the wrong person lmao
The first episode of The Orville had similar scene to the beanstalk growing, except it's a tree growing out of a spaceship. Happy Arbor Day!
There's an old Indian movie called "Maya Bazaar" which was made in the 60s. But the special effects they used in it are amazing, and sometimes keep me guessing how they've achieved them. Would love to see you guys take a crack at it ✨✨
Huh... Did you re-edit this after the upload? The timing is very different now. I hope the new editor doesn't feel too bad because of all the comments.
VFX were top notch in the 90s. Also, the word Jumanji means "many effects" in Zulu
That's SO cool!!
I could have sworn it was a combination of 'jungle' and a foreign word for 'magic'
@@holymasterchief I looked it up
10:35 there's another great example of this technique with a godzilla shaped ram used to smash through a miniature house and hillside in Shin Gojira (2016) the finished comp is just beautiful
Sam forgot the 4th CGI. The CGI you don't notice because it's so good.
Damn, that's actually true
True, the invisible CGI, where you see the behind the scene's and are flabbergasted that you never even guessed there was any CGI in that scene.
Also, the "bad CGI that ruins a shot" Hobbit example they used is not that bad imo. I really dislike the Hobbit trilogy and its overuse of CGI and overall digital look, but here in this example, what is bad is not really the CGI, it's how the scene is written, the overall idea of it. The CGI by itself is not perfect but it's not that bad either. The shot and the moves of the characters are stupid and what is ruining the scene.
Your creativity knows no bounds. This video is a masterpiece!🤩🤩🤩🤩
Damn that Jack scene was a MASSIVE dose of fantastic live action Attack on Titan, someone needs to take some serious notes!
Ikr, love that movie
aye they did a live action adaptation already, it's terrible
What part of I am Legend, was even remotely similar to that first shot though? Dude on the right is so weird sometimes.
@@cable7152 fast zombies and tight closeups.
@@cable7152 he was talking about how fast moving monsters are more intimidating than slow moving ones like giants and those I Am Legend zombies(i know they're not really zombies)
Great episode as always! Definitely recommend checking out opening scene of season four of the original X-Files TV series. Awesome shot where they’ve got five children that look exactly the same same, with moving camera. Pretty sure they did it with one set of twins, but the comping is fantastic. The show was shot on film, but their VFX shots were rendered out in SD, the shots still has all of its resolution so it was either redone when the episode was released in HD, or they found a way to do it in Camera. Either way, it’s a great shot.
Unironcially that lion shot blew my mind. Ive seen this movie countless times and never realized this was cgi because it just so good compared to some of the more clearly rough early cgi the film has. Crazy that this is in the film.
"A tiny bite can make you itch;
make you sneeze, make you twitch."
--- any time there are mosquitos or bugs, I recite this.😛 One of my all time favorite films.☺
"A game for those who seek to find, a way to leave their world behind" - Cemented in my brain since 1995.
THE VINE CRUSHING THE CAR SCENE! It took me so long to find a BTS of the Vine scene in Jumanji and it's so cool how they married practical with CGI. I really wish you showed that.
That Kung Fury behind-the-scenes looks amazing! So clever!
Thanks so much for doing jumangi! I recommended it a couple months back. Glad you guys enjoyed breaking it down as much as i did!
You guys should react to dragon slayer (1981). 25% of the budget was spent on the go-motion dragon
Still the best movie dragon.
I very much second this. It's amazing how well the effects hold up. Plus it's just a good movie.
ahh the good old Vermithrax
I too agree that practical elements, even though sometimes so difficult, almost always look ABSOLUTELY AMAZING! (With rare exceptions)
Holy cow they actually finally did Kung Fury
Agreed 😊
The avalanche scene from xXx (2002) is honestly super impressive for its time. You guys should look at that.
Original Jumanji is such a classic. Still holds up because the story and characters are great as well as the vfx being serviceable.
YESSSS. We've waited years for a Kung Fury breakdown. Did not disappoint!
SOooooo glad you covered Jack the Giant Slayer. That movie changed me the first time I saw a mountainous giant sprint.
And I'm really glad you guys enjoyed it, because I've never met another soul who appreciated it like me.
Even I loved that movie!
I saw a clip of Jack the Giant Slayer and immediately thought it looked amazing. I googled the director and it's directed by Bryan Singer who directed other great movies like The Usual Suspects, X-men, Superman Returns, Bohemian Rhapsody. I think Jack the Giant Slayer bombed pretty bad at the box office and is basically waiting to be found on streaming services.
The cathedral scenes for jack the giant slayer were filmed in my hometown! I got to see some of the filming as my school was right by it.
Nice to see Sam referring to a Cinefex magazine during the Jumanji sequence. RIP Cinefex.
Flexing his collection if he has these all to hand!
Wren's earnest, wholesome amazement was just absolutely joyful to witness
7:30 I thought i was on a trip when i first heard sam say that lol
Came to the comments to say it was the perfect time to be hitting the pipe lol
I swear listening to sam at this point gave me an aneurysm
Please, please, please "remaster" the Jumanji "monkeys in the kitchen" clip! It would be so interesting to see it done with modern tools!
The Witches of Eastwick would make for a great video. Crazy effects and great cast.
3:18
Hell no. Slow zombies are by far the scariest. It makes them special. Fast zombies might as well just be any old angry mob.
100%
And slow zombies can be just a slightly angry slow mob :/
@@Dornvud nah man, a slow angry mob is just a crowd. They aren't bothered by you or your presence. A horde of zombies will never stop coming, slowly but surely creeping towards you and whilst you can outrun them in the short term, they'll never stop.
They will always find you. A creeping death, ever looming.
Fast zombies is just some chav in London who calls himself a roadman because he thinks he's hard.
Would love to see you bring David Sandberg onto the couch!
Watching these react videos make me appreciate older movies more and makes me want to rewatch them 😅
That's pretty weird to see this moment of silence in episodes, no music on background.
16:22 and onward, racking focus on a moving rig like THAT... dudes a master at it! XD
Its just a matter of time before Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman are on here.
We can hope!
Why? They are not VFX artists
"In the 90's VFX booth, no one can hear you scream." - Sam(Corridor Digital, 2024)(Allegedly)
Some weird editing in this one.
I prefer it, it’s less cutty
Haha noticed it too.
I think is because it's lacking background music?
Seee, raro debe ser por la lógica que manejan de rotar equipos de gente
Omg yes, everything felt so "Off" I was falling asleep. Weird sound mix.
Weird cuts in the same scene, no transitions, no music, voices being cut off.
Quite odd indeed.
Mortia and Gomez dance in the Addams family. The scene where he spins her on the floor. Wild stuff going on here
Kung Fury has the most badass depiction of Thor I've ever seen in a film.
Editing kinda off in this video, but u know what? Still funny. Kkkkk
I'm so happy you've finally looked at Kung Fury
The Alien squid attack on the engeniers from Prometheus is a really well done VFX shot, look so real and well implemented, would love to see you react to that
20 minutes after post and Temu doesn't have a Live Like a Horse, Play Like a Monkey shirt yet. They slippin.
7:50 Sam needs to lay off the gummis
No sponsor ad, that was very nice. Thank you
Nobody cares.
@@cenciende9401er...but you just commented?
I feel like sam brought jack the giant slayer in to talk about why its cool but not good or something lol. Like he had this mild dislike for it while wren and jordan were just loving it!
I couldn’t click fast enough when I saw Corridor Crew and OG Jumanji.
Thanks for doing Jumanji! Asked for this for a while
11:45 just casually reading a magazine lol
lmao yeah, he seemed kinda checked out this episode.
Heh it's actually the Jumanji issue of Cinefex magazine from 1995, probably looking up details.
When I see things like this, it always makes me wonder if it's an easter egg clip they'll use in a different video.
That's awesome I recommended come Fury a couple months ago and you guys actually did it and feel validated in life now😂
What's going on to edit? It feels stumble to me.
They could be using a new editor who is still unfamiliar with the editing style of this series idk but, I know what you mean.
I remember watching Jack the giant slayer in the movies when it first came out and I ABSOLUTELY LOVED THAT MOVIE so seeing you guys giving it props makes me wanna go back and watch it again 🥴🥴
To recommend you some animated movies/series, try the movie Mars Express (2023). It’s a French Sci-Fi and polar movie and it is refreshing and has an interesting style. They combined hand animation for humans and 3D animation for robots. By the way the budget is only 6/7 million euros. It is very refreshing especially in France where animated movies are generally made for kids. Really good pick. From the same director, there is the series Lastman. Super cool series with low budget.
13:42 Caually citing Dune as a negative example lol
This video features the most fun movies yet! I WANT TO SEE THEM ALL NOW. haha
"Tank you!" for doing Kung Fury!
One Cut of the Dead!!!! Seriously. It's so creative. Cost thousands to make and made millions.
Please do react to "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.". Lots of robots, spaceships, time travel, gravitonium, Inhumans and of course more importantly Ghost Rider, Lola etc.
It's got quite some stuff to get its own episode.
There's a lot of it, maybe call out some specific episodes for them?
@@LaurieCheers I mean, there are 136 episodes and most of them do feature a lot of CGI except for like a few. So kinda difficult to name Episodes individually so I mentioned some topics off the top of my mind. I will try to include some more.
Very good show. Kudos for suggesting it. 👍
Recently watched extraction 2 and I think you guys would love the one shot sequence with hidden cuts, it’s a LONG sequence but it does really well with keeping it intense
0:32 there’s actually 4: the fourth one being cgi that’s so bad it’s funny
My Mats and Lighting professor in college, Ed Kramer, worked on Jumaji with ILM. He said the monkey hair was probably the hardest thing about the cg in the movie. Fun fact, the rhino who is behind the rest of the stampede wasn't actually supposed to be behind. It's a rendering error with the animation, but ILM could either remove those frames or keep them, but there wasn't time to re-render the scene. The director decided to keep it since it was funny.
Jumanji is special to me. It was filmed in my hometown of Keene N.H., and as an 8 year old to see our whole town transformed for a movie and to have Robin Williams, there was a huge deal. The Parish Shoes is still painted on the building downtown all these years later. Love that film.
Lots of implied "don't mention Bryan Singer!" in the Jack The Giant Slayer bit.
Why is that?
How's that tin foil hat fitting?
"Giant creatures don't have to live in slow motion"
It's funny, because while I agree to that for stylistic and artistic reasons, in reality, larger creatures do, in fact, experience the world slower than smaller creatures. So a giant would actually live life in slow motion, it just wouldn't recognize it as such because it wouldn't know any other way of experiencing the world.
Wouldn't this be an interesting project? Make videos as reality is experienced by smaller to bigger animals?
I always thought that one shot of the lion in Jumanji was just animatronic with roto. Amazing.
Gotta agree, the editing this time kinda weird, so much silence and weird cuts, it feels awkward.
RIGHT, im 5 minutes in and its sooo weird!
I get the feeling these days the CorridorDigital versions are the 'real' cut and RUclips gets a half-assed edit.
Was honestly surprised you guys never looked at Jumanji before. I saw it in theaters as a kid, it scared me but i LOVED it.
Seeing the stampeded sequence in theaters was incredible, the entire movie theater felt like it was rumbling. I remember later seeing that behind the scenes of the blue painted Rhino and thinking that was the coolest thing ever with how they were able to pull that off as a kid.
I am really glad you showed Kung Fury also, I loved watching that when it first came out.
Love the series but I would much prefer it if you didn't use AI generated images
yeah those shitty ai images were a huge bummer.
I was born in 1990 and Jumanji is one of the earliest movies I remember seeing in theaters with the fam. Still a banger.