Yeah you sure showed me, Darunia. And you're totally right, having digital effects does make the movies cartoons. Just like the original trilogy is nothing more than a painting behind some muppets and miniatures. CG is totally fake! I can't believe they can do that! Movies are real, dammit! It doesn't matter if you can do things with CG that you can't any other way, it doesn't matter that you can only tell that something is CG a lot of time because you know that there's no other way to do it--it's all super fake cartoon stuff! OMG!!!
You're a bright man, Darunia.
Haha, Terminator II was a pioneer in CG effects, genius. So was Titanic.
You call those effects "old-fashioned"? Old-fashioned is Citizen Kane. Those movies you mentioned are still state-of-the-art.
Titanic is a pretentious fluff piece with great special effects. It takes one of the most terrible disasters of the 20th century and turns it into what is essentially a high-budget WB movie made for 12-year-old girls.
Look kid, if you're going to try to sound like you know anything about movies and "great directors", I suggest you start with someone better than James Cameron. Try Sergio Leone or Jean Renoir for starters. I could suggest a bunch of movies to you that'll make you redefine just what great cinema actually is. Just put down that Entertainment Weekly and expand your horizons.
You're a bright man, Darunia.
Quote:Titanic WAS a great movie. Any movie combining the skills of James Cameron and James Horner cannot be anything less than amazing. Terminator II, perhaps you've heard of it? Oh--but George Lucas didn't make that one, and there's virtually not CG in it---so you wouldn't be interested in that crappy, old-fashioned thing.
Haha, Terminator II was a pioneer in CG effects, genius. So was Titanic.

Titanic is a pretentious fluff piece with great special effects. It takes one of the most terrible disasters of the 20th century and turns it into what is essentially a high-budget WB movie made for 12-year-old girls.
Look kid, if you're going to try to sound like you know anything about movies and "great directors", I suggest you start with someone better than James Cameron. Try Sergio Leone or Jean Renoir for starters. I could suggest a bunch of movies to you that'll make you redefine just what great cinema actually is. Just put down that Entertainment Weekly and expand your horizons.