The state and future of animation

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Re: The state and future of animation

Post by droosan » November 1st, 2021, 6:29 pm

deleted ..
Last edited by droosan on November 1st, 2021, 11:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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Re: The state and future of animation

Post by Dacey » November 1st, 2021, 7:27 pm

I’m not sure if we’re talking about the “state and future” of animation so much as some very random topics at this point.
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Re: The state and future of animation

Post by Daniel » November 1st, 2021, 7:40 pm

Well, the staff kept merging Geffrey's post in here and told him to quit making new threads... doesn't give the guy much of a choice!

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Re: The state and future of animation

Post by Ben » November 1st, 2021, 8:39 pm

I think we have covered and moved on from Happy Tree Friends after Geffrey's previous comments…

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Re: The state and future of animation

Post by GeffreyDrogon » November 2nd, 2021, 11:23 am

If hand-drawn animation is expensive, then why are the most expensive animated films CGI?

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Re: The state and future of animation

Post by Ben » November 2nd, 2021, 6:10 pm

Because it costs a lot more to render digital pencils.

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Re: The state and future of animation

Post by GeffreyDrogon » November 3rd, 2021, 3:13 pm

Though animated films made with CGI require massive forests of computers called "render farms" to render a film to a nice quality fit for whatever platform it will be released in.

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Re: The state and future of animation

Post by Farerb » November 3rd, 2021, 3:25 pm

Computers don't get salary. An army of in-betweeners does.

As far as I know every big Hi-Tech company has huge "forests of computers". There's no reason that big animation studios wouldn't be able to afford that as well.

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Re: The state and future of animation

Post by GeffreyDrogon » November 3rd, 2021, 6:27 pm

I always wonder why My Little Pony: The Movie didn't do better than it did because of Friendship is Magic's massive following. Even if the marketing was lackluster, it could've easily out-grossed Alpha and Omega domestically and made close to $100 million, maybe even more than that. But I don't know if that would've made Lionsgate take animation more seriously.

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Re: The state and future of animation

Post by GeffreyDrogon » November 3rd, 2021, 6:30 pm

Was another reason for the decline of hand-drawn animation due to only accepting people who could draw?

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Re: The state and future of animation

Post by Ben » November 3rd, 2021, 8:39 pm

Accepting the who that could what now…!!?!!??? :? :roll: :lol:

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Re: The state and future of animation

Post by GeffreyDrogon » November 7th, 2021, 4:32 pm

If Simon Wells is a descendant of the great English author H.G. Wells, then why didn't his work on making films give him little recognition?

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Re: The state and future of animation

Post by GeffreyDrogon » November 7th, 2021, 4:33 pm

How much does an animated film need to make in order to have a theatrical sequel? Is that somehow related to budget?

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Re: The state and future of animation

Post by EricJ » November 8th, 2021, 12:27 am

GeffreyDrogon wrote:
November 7th, 2021, 4:32 pm
If Simon Wells is a descendant of the great English author H.G. Wells, then why didn't his work on making films give him little recognition?
Once they found out about his great-uncle, DreamWorks created the 2002 live-action "Time Machine" remake just for him...OHHH, lordy. :shock:
If that doesn't answer your question about whether talent can be inherited, in pretty quick order, nothing will.

(And I have a sneaking fear that I mean that. :roll: )
How much does an animated film need to make in order to have a theatrical sequel? Is that somehow related to budget?
(pfft!)...You think independent studios make sequels because of MONEY??
How many times are we going to go back to the beginning of this thread?

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Re: The state and future of animation

Post by Ben » November 8th, 2021, 2:19 am

Thanks for playing, Eric.

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