Badmovies.org Forum

Movies => Bad Movies => Topic started by: Dr. Whom on December 29, 2016, 04:40:04 AM



Title: Seeing Peter Cushing in Rogue One
Post by: Dr. Whom on December 29, 2016, 04:40:04 AM
made me think: if only Ed Wood had had these CGI capabilities back then. What a movie Plan 9 from Outer Space would have been!


Title: Re: Seeing Peter Cushing in Rogue One
Post by: Skull on December 29, 2016, 08:49:12 AM
made me think: if only Ed Wood had had these CGI capabilities back then. What a movie Plan 9 from Outer Space would have been!

lol... I'm still for somebody to make a CGI movie by piecing together old (or even unfinished films)... Just like Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid (1982)...

It's nice that Disney used Peter Cushing... I still don't feel any NEED to see the new Star Wars film.


Title: Re: Seeing Peter Cushing in Rogue One
Post by: Newt on December 29, 2016, 09:07:52 AM

It's nice that Disney used Peter Cushing... I still don't feel any NEED to see the new Star Wars film.

People keep asking me and I cannot quite muster up sufficient motivation to get me off my chair and go see this one.  Not sure why, I just am not feeling it. 


Title: Re: Seeing Peter Cushing in Rogue One
Post by: Skull on December 29, 2016, 09:22:50 AM

It's nice that Disney used Peter Cushing... I still don't feel any NEED to see the new Star Wars film.

People keep asking me and I cannot quite muster up sufficient motivation to get me off my chair and go see this one.  Not sure why, I just am not feeling it. 

I think it's because we all saw Star Wars and we all know only one person comes out of the space ship alive. The other pods were shot up except the droids because it was assumed that nobody was inside... [I hope I didn't spoil anything]


Title: Re: Seeing Peter Cushing in Rogue One
Post by: Ted C on January 05, 2017, 09:45:17 AM
I was pretty impressed with how well Tarkin looked. You can still tell he's CGI, but it's pretty impressive CGI.

Also, the guy who did the voice acting for him is spot-on.


Title: Re: Seeing Peter Cushing in Rogue One
Post by: ChocolateChipCharlie on January 08, 2017, 08:57:06 PM
Anyone else find it even the least bit ghastly that they're putting dead actors in movies in CGI? I mean, this isn't a Crow type situation where they're trying to finish a film after an important actor died during filming. This is just plopping the guy in there twenty years after his death.

The classic Malcolm paradox. Sure, they can do it, but did they ever stop to think about whether they should?


Title: Re: Seeing Peter Cushing in Rogue One
Post by: Dr. Whom on January 09, 2017, 01:11:03 PM
I was pretty impressed with how well Tarkin looked. You can still tell he's CGI, but it's pretty impressive CGI.

Also, the guy who did the voice acting for him is spot-on.

As i said elsewhere on this forum, I thought he looked quite cadaverous. I'm still not entirely convinced that this whole CGI business is just a cover, and they found some eldritch way of actually bringing Peter Cushing back from the dead.

But perhaps I watch too many dumb movies.


Title: Re: Seeing Peter Cushing in Rogue One
Post by: akiratubo on January 09, 2017, 02:44:02 PM
I LOVED seeing Peter again.  Made me smile.   :smile:


Title: Re: Seeing Peter Cushing in Rogue One
Post by: BoyScoutKevin on January 09, 2017, 05:28:02 PM
CGI or not. They did a good job of it (IMHO.)

As to whether they should do it . . .?
His family approved, because they had to get their approval to do it.

The question I have is whether he'll ever get a film credit for his appearance. As his appearance lasted longer than some of his film credited appearances in other films. Which is actually what took me by surprise. While I expected to see him, I did not expect such a lengthy appearance in the film.



Title: Re: Seeing Peter Cushing in Rogue One
Post by: Alex on January 10, 2017, 04:12:03 AM
Randomly I was wondering what would happen if a CGI'd actor was nominated for an award?


Title: Re: Seeing Peter Cushing in Rogue One
Post by: dean on January 10, 2017, 05:07:10 AM
Randomly I was wondering what would happen if a CGI'd actor was nominated for an award?

Don't think they can just yet but surely Andy Serkis is circling that one like a hawk


Title: Re: Seeing Peter Cushing in Rogue One
Post by: Newt on January 10, 2017, 06:33:43 AM
...his appearance lasted longer than some of his film credited appearances in other films. Which is actually what took me by surprise. While I expected to see him, I did not expect such a lengthy appearance in the film.

That surprised me, too.  I was expecting a token cameo toward the end. 


Title: Re: Seeing Peter Cushing in Rogue One
Post by: kakihara on January 10, 2017, 05:13:16 PM
This could easily become an ethics issue. Mark my words, we will see more dead actors returning in movies. Princess leigha will return! She will probably be in the next 5 sequels. This is the future, the technology is almost there. Why woyld you pay a real actor 10s of millions of dollars when you can just have a computer do anything you want? No contracts, no red tape, no demands or negotiations, no stunt doubles, wardrobes, or anything.  Thats the future. Sorry for any misspells.


Title: Re: Seeing Peter Cushing in Rogue One
Post by: Zapranoth on January 11, 2017, 12:28:54 AM
For me, the CG'd in actors were yooky and distracting.     No sir, I don't like it!        Example:  Gollum in the LOTR.   NOT a real person, didn't resemble a real person, but the live-capture acting and animation had me suspend my disbelief.  Awesome character.   But trying to make someone look CG'd in but real?  Really, really distracting and off-putting.  (Yes, the whole uncanny valley thing.  It's real.)     When the CG gets a lot better, it'll eventually work.   Well, probably.   But we're definitely not there yet.

When it comes to disc I'll watch it again, but my first go through this movie has me wondering how people are gaga about it.  I don't get it.  But, guess it wasn't my thing.   My favorite moments in the movie mostly had nothing to do with the characters (about which I cared not a bit):

1.  Vader rampage,
2.  Star destroyer collision,
3.  The droid.  Whatever his name was.  Wash's voice droid.   

Well, okay.

4.  The blind not-quite-really-a-jedi guy.  He was pretty watchable.

The rest was just not interesting or engaging.  Did I have the queasy feeling of wishing the movie was actually fun (like when I watched Episode II)?  No, no, I didn't.  But was I waiting for something to spark some connection between me and the characters?   You betcha.       I liked the ending -- not a happy ending, no Hollywood neat bow.   But c'mawn... it was all pretty hackneyed and there was nothing to draw me into giving a damn about any of them.

Show me some moments in the film that drew some pathos, some connection with the characters.   'cause I've named most of the moments in the movie I can remember!


Title: Re: Seeing Peter Cushing in Rogue One
Post by: Derf on January 11, 2017, 06:38:31 AM
For me, the CG'd in actors were yooky and distracting.     No sir, I don't like it!        Example:  Gollum in the LOTR.   NOT a real person, didn't resemble a real person, but the live-capture acting and animation had me suspend my disbelief.  Awesome character.   But trying to make someone look CG'd in but real?  Really, really distracting and off-putting.  (Yes, the whole uncanny valley thing.  It's real.)     When the CG gets a lot better, it'll eventually work.   Well, probably.   But we're definitely not there yet.

When it comes to disc I'll watch it again, but my first go through this movie has me wondering how people are gaga about it.  I don't get it.  But, guess it wasn't my thing.   My favorite moments in the movie mostly had nothing to do with the characters (about which I cared not a bit):

1.  Vader rampage,
2.  Star destroyer collision,
3.  The droid.  Whatever his name was.  Wash's voice droid.   

Well, okay.

4.  The blind not-quite-really-a-jedi guy.  He was pretty watchable.

The rest was just not interesting or engaging.  Did I have the queasy feeling of wishing the movie was actually fun (like when I watched Episode II)?  No, no, I didn't.  But was I waiting for something to spark some connection between me and the characters?   You betcha.       I liked the ending -- not a happy ending, no Hollywood neat bow.   But c'mawn... it was all pretty hackneyed and there was nothing to draw me into giving a damn about any of them.

Show me some moments in the film that drew some pathos, some connection with the characters.   'cause I've named most of the moments in the movie I can remember!

Cinemassacre does a spot-on review of Rogue One on You Tube. They point out that the characters are all interesting, but not too interesting, likeable but not quite enough for you to get too attached since this is a one-off movie. I've seen some calling this the best movie in the franchise, which I don't understand at all--the character are bland and hard to care about overall, the story is good but overly drawn out in spots, and the Empire has the least efficient library system in the known universe.


Title: Re: Seeing Peter Cushing in Rogue One
Post by: BoyScoutKevin on January 19, 2017, 05:12:41 PM
Randomly I was wondering what would happen if a CGI'd actor was nominated for an award?


It has happened. When Oliver Reed died during the making of Gladiator in 2000, $3 million was spent to recreate his face, a body double being used for the rest of him, or 3x his salary, for his scenes which were yet to be filmed.

After his death he, though he did not win, being nominated for his performance with a . . .

BAFTA Film award
and a SAG award with his fellow co-stars for . . .
Outstanding Performance by the Cast of a Theatrical Military Picture

AS for the library system or archives system, in the film, as a retired librarian with over 30 years experience, I think that was one of my favorite scenes, and while he have had some unhappy patrons from my last position. None of them, fortunately, were unhappy enough to kill you. Though, it has happened to others. Instead, what we normally got was people who came in to the library and almost left crying. Not because they were unhappy, but because they were so happy, as we were one of the few places that ever treated them with the respect all our patrons deserved.

As a film archivist in South Africa, how about you, Trevor?