i fucking LOVE y'all's star wars oc's, esp the amazing and beautiful nonhumans,,
so when i watch new star wars shows and the main & background characters are like 98% humans it's kinda frustrating like??? there are SO MANY wonderful sw alien designs out there and SO MUCH room for creativity but oooohhhh nnnooooooo another plain ol human being coming RIGHT UP 😒🥱
wait are they actually showing the sonic 3 trailer at cinemacon rn i was expecting for them to not really have much to show yet and just briefly talk about it .. god damn
Cool looking robots... what else do you need??? This certainly give off Love, Death + Robots vibes minus the real dark nature of violence or death. This is the type of interstitial programming you'd see in the early 2000s on cable tv, so give it view!
Wait, Powerhouse is making a Tomb Raider show too? Are they just making every single video games adaptation in existence now?
They are lol
youtube
I guess we're in the "Castlevania proved that videogame adaptations don't automatically suck and in fact they can be great! We can do this with everything!" era.
Director: Ken Jacobs
Type: Short Film
Country/Region of Production: United States
Language: English
Duration: 40 minutes
IMDb: tt2174143
Type: Appropriation
Summary:
In this new short, Ken Jacobs attempts to determine a place between two and three dimensions, pushing time to take on substance.
For our VFX tests for Omelette, which is currently in preproduction, I originally wanted to do all of the VFX shots practically (meaning a special effect produced physically, without computer-generated imagery) but getting the movement of the egg to not feel like it was swinging off of fishing line proved to be too difficult, so we settled on creating the egg via CGI (which also wasn’t easy - but I’m pretty happy with the results)
Omelette is a Horror/Comedy about a young boy who just wants to practice his telepathy, but his mother has other plans.
Could this have been a few minutes shorter? Sure, but looking past that, this is certainly a love letter to German Expressionism, specifically: The Cabinet of Dr Caligari. The animation design and use of only music to convey what's going on and the emotions the characters are feeling, works great!