Draugluin wrote:
How can you possibly say something looks real or not when it's is obviously a fantasy creation? Who's to say that trolls don't really look like that? No one, because they aren't real. Considering both when it was made and the things that were in it, LotR had some of the best CG. Meanwhile, it's blatantly obvious which dinosaurs were CG and which were animatronixs in Jurrasic Park.
I really don't see how you can judge a film's CG just from the trailers. You can't form an opinion off of them.
I'll concede I cannot judge the quality of the Hobbit CGI from the trailers--but it is obvious that much more CGI was used, which is the main point, the main thing I dislike.
Who's to say trolls wouldn't look like that in real life? As in, who's to say the trolls wouldn't look digitally rendered in real life? The trolls
look computer animated in LotR. Regardless if it's a fantasy creation or not, you can tell they were digitally rendered with computer technology. I'm not arguing if their anatomical structure or apparent texture would be biologically possible in real life, but here's the thing: live action actors and animatronics
are real. They exist in reality and can be physically filmed on screen. Computer generations are not real. So OF COURSE (if done properly) live actors and animatronics will look more "real" than CGI, even if the object in question is a fantasy creature like a troll.
Take a look at this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=pl ... 1iVJExd5vAIt is still possible to differentiate animatronics from living actors, so there is still an element of "fakeness" about animatronics. They're "real," so to speak, but you can tell they aren't living, breathing creatures. However, compare especially the gorilla in this clip to the apes from Rise of the Planet of the Apes--then compare both to a real gorilla. Which movie-magic option looks more convincing?
I understand that CGI is more practical in Rise of the Planet of the Apes. But the argument is which option looks more real, and imo the film would have benefited is the believability department if a mixture of both options would have been used.
Everything in this clip looks better on-screen than every CGI element in LotR. I'm not saying LotR should have been devoid of CGI, that would have been impractical, and in the case of Gollum, the worse choice. But the physical presence of a properly done animatron troll would have been much more convincing. I don't feel like just accepting that the trolls--or others--were perfectly done when they could have been better. They were "good enough" for the trilogy based on the standards set by Gollum. Even if you could call them "great," even if their appearance was the most practical option, is must be admissible that they were very obviously computer animated, and that there was room for improvement in making them more convincingly real.
Even if you can tell when the dinosaurs are CGI or animatrons, the computer animation in JP is easily just as good as most of the CGI in LotR, imo. It doesn't seem like the industry has come very far. Rather, the increased use of CGI (more commonly used, more of it used per film) has harmed its credulity.