The drivers not caring about the killers on the arc de triomphe is the most realistic element of this scene. Paris is hell.
I think the life expectancy of a pedestrian on the Arc de Triomphe roundabout must be about 5s…
What’s least realistic is that I doubt that you have enough room to do a 360° around another car, especially with an American muscle car.
But more than that are the lack of crazy vibrations on the cars from the paved road.
Plus the fact that it’s such a high risk spot for terrorism that there are armed military units at all time in this place that would secure it and engage very quickly.
Was about to say this. I've never been on a taxi ride in Paris where we didn't hit something, and in each case, no shits were given by either driver.
How fucking cool are films that modern vfx artists are still confused at figuring out effects utilised in the 40s?!!
I think it's because back in the days before CG, they had to improvise and come up with creative ideas to execute those shots. These days, artists are so heavily reliant on CG that they rarely really have to think of those creative tricks to get their shots.
It's like how we build structures now, relying on heavy equipment, but back in Egypt, they built pyramids with very primitive techniques to move massive sandstone blocks. I'm not sure if we even know the exact methods they used to build them, but we have a pretty good idea. Humans just invent methods to make their work easier and eventually forget the old methods with time.
Also, a lot of the time the VFX weren't well documented. Just folks on-set or in post-production coming up with weird crap that worked, and never wrote down their techniques. So even today, people have to guess at what they were doing.
It's that they're aware of the tools available in the 40s. Those shots would be reasonably easy to do in modern compositing, but obviously that doesn't inform you as to what had to be done to get that shot at that level of quality eighty years ago.
@@gavinderulo12 Agreed, a better point would be to say that modern VFX is about a different sort of creative problem-solving than pre-CGI VFX was. I daresay they almost aren't even the same field anymore. So of course modern VFX artists would struggle to figure out pre-CGI VFX, they deal with different problems
Guys. I live in Paris. I know the the Arc de Triomphe roundabout (l’Etoile) by heart… this sequence is 100% perfect… really… the light environment, the street texture, everything
Some were actually shot in Paris, just not all of it to avoid needing permits to close it down longer periods of time.
its look 100% fake, like a old game, some blur etc like mission impossible, car choregraphie
Having experienced traffic at the Arc de Triomphe, I can confirm that the other drivers not caring about the gunfight is possibly the MOST realisting aspect of this scene.
"I did not hide spiders under the couch" is a wild thing to have to say seriously
I think a really cool episode idea would be breaking down hologram VFX from over the years. How has the style evolved along with the techniques?
As a french person, I'm really glad you covered Infested! Most of our cinema is either comedies or familial dramas, and it's so cool to see a young director like Sébastien Vaniček tackle a genre that we don't often see made in France, especially one that requires quality VFXs and SFXs, and knock it out of the park like this. And now if everything goes well, he's gonna direct the next Evil Dead movie, and I couldn't be happier for him. I'm also studying to work in the film industry (I'm in 3D animation school) and that makes me very hopeful.
May God bless your career, brother! We'll meet at a French movie set!
I wish we in Germany made such movies, but recently it’s all stupid comedy/dramas as well here :(
It was funny for me to watch this film because when I saw the building, I was like 'hey I know this one" because I live like 200m from this building.
The first half of the movie was really good, I did loose interest for the second half. Nevertheless it was technicaly on point, Sébastien Vaniček did a good job on this one overall.
As an arachnophobe myself, I can understand Wrens pain. Had to scroll down here to avoid looking myself.
on god, i watched a bit and the moment he yelped with that spider crunch sound i had to pause and nope out.
I guess this is a bad time to mention I wanted a pet Tarantula as a kid because they're cute and fluffy, Jumping Spiders are also adorable
I was ok with the fake spider shots from that movie, but the moment they started doing close ups on real spiders I noped outta there!
same. I flinched a couple times and then gave up and fast-forwarded thru that whole part
That clip from "A Stolen Life" was legit mind-bending. It's so cool how well it still holds up today.
I'm in Australia. Any given moment there's 200 spiders within 10 metres.
And they all have enough venom to kill 300 men. Everything in Australia wants to hurt and/or kill you. Even platypuses are venomous (the males, at least).
3:19 I legit was actually looking for a ping pong ball 🤣
What does that exactly mean though? Where they patched/taped the actual film together?
@@thespicemelange.1she put her foot down and back up while the other “actor” kept moving. It’s called a “ping pong” like how a ping pong goes back and forth really quick. Idk if it’s an actual film term but that’s how they used it in this context.
@@jrdiggie3382 makes sense, would have been nice if they explained it for people unfamiliar with their nomenclature. Oh well I guess that's what the comment section is for...
You guys should check out Trials and Tribble-Ations from Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. They stich together footage from the original TOS tribble episode with new footage, Forrest Gump style. It's one of my favorites of the series, and I'd love to hear your take on how they accomplished the effects and how you think they did! Great show as always, guys!
That would be a good thing to react to. I would like to see them react to special effects from tv shows, since they have a lot smaller budget to work with compared to movies.
@@thepayne7862 Hell....they should react to fan films like "Prelude to Axenar."
DS9 in general would be cool to look at, especially it's space battles in the later seasons.
They were very impressive for 90's TV
That shot from 'Stolen Life' is some gorgeous pre-CGI FX!
I’m so curious about the process of it. No computers, did they animate a matte? what were the layers/composites, what did it look like before being processed.
@@GoetiaTV Pre-computer compositing of this type was often done with an optical printer, basically a device that copies movie film to movie film, with a third strip or still frame interposed. That third strip is the matte, which indeed was animated, but the part that moves is some simple black and white shapes, so it's relatively easy to do. Then you make a negative copy of the matte. That way, by repeatedly exposing the same film with the positive and negative mattes, you can combine two layers without getting a weird ghostly look from multiple overlapping exposures.
I'm constantly blown away by the ingenuity of classic films, pure magic!
I don't know if you've already watched it but Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow was entirely shot on blue screen and had almost everything else added in
I'm 100% sure they know about that movie. They should talk about it in an episode though.
I love watching you guys react to old movies. It's so amazing what they did back then
I was watching when worlds collide it was a movie from the 50s good effects for its time 😊
I realized the road was fake the moment I saw it. There's no way he'd be drifting that smooth over cobblestones
In the 1997 movie THE BORROWERS there is a scene in which a full size kid places a tiny person is inside a fish bowl and their figure is distorted appropriately. There are other cool effects in the movie also.
"They use twins" Yep, the very famous actress Bette Davis and not quite so famous twin sister Dotty Davis 😆
Lmao I was also laughing at this! Yes, Bette and Bitty Davis had a long, storied career in vaudeville with a tapdancing routine until a runaway circus lion mauled Bitty's feet. Bette began acting, but Bitty would only do roles that let her sit down. True Hollywood story. 🤞
by referencing the magicians’ tricks you’ve revealed in past episodes to expound upon new revelations, you guys are building a new media literacy database for young creators to glean insight from. thank you for this treasure.
i love the strat of changing the movies language, because i often watch stuff in other languages and when i read the subtitles im like "well thats worded kinda wierdly but im sure its just getting lost in translation" whereas if i watch an english dub im alot more critical of the dialogue and word choice
The first thing i ever animated was a spider, and i found that the trick to make them creepy is to make each leg move forward on its own timing (in a way that physically would make sense obviously), some spiders move pairs of legs, some spiders hop and run etc but the classic creepy spider is one like a sack spider or widow that crawls around
Edit: -_- love when you comment something smart and they immediately say what you commented 😂
What blew my mind was that spider legs are basically just tubes and they use blood pressure to fill them and empty them to cause movement. That's also why they curl up when they die because the pressure stops.
That stunt car looks like the Cybertruck lol
Atlas “looks” good. But turning the Japanese Dub on is BRILLIANT!
You can watch in English. J-Lo's performance isn't nearly as bad as Sam is expecting. in fact i'd say Jen did really well.
@@kruleworldi think they're expecting the dialogue to be bad, not nevessarily the performance
The thing that we may not realize about the effects on the old films is that the concept of pausing, going back and checking what happened wasn’t a thing, in a way it must felt like someone doing a magic trick in front of you
There’s an alternate universe where Jack Quiad became a VFX artist with corridor and Wren was casted as Hughie in the boys.
Aww man... I felt genuinely bad for Wren during that Infested clip! Thank you for your sacrifice, sir!!
The blows in John Wick 4 all felt so real that I came out of the cinema with a black eye, broken nose and three fractured ribs
The Believers (1987) spider scene, which probably mortified a lot of children watching it on TV in the 90's, comes to mind watching this episode. Re-watching the scene, I think there's some light comp work, heavy make-up, and hectic editing that made it so visceral at the time.
you guys should look at the amazingly cheesy effects in House (1977) the japanese horror movie. there's a girl being eaten by a piano that's amazing.
House is great, but I'm not sure if there's much for them to talk about. From a technical standpoint, the VFX were incredibly primitive and it's easy to see how they were done. But they were absolutely perfect for the insane tone the movie was going for.
@@jasonblalock4429 Yeah but this should be about bad and great cgi and recently it seems we only get great ones.
The excitement un-puzzling the Bettie Davis clip was infectious 😂
Love that double work in Stolen Life! Amazing.
That Bette Davis clip is genuinely one of the most impressive things you’ve ever featured.
I’m speechless. Speechless! I have no speech!
the clip from 'a stolen life' has another ping pong at the start just before the sitting lady puts the cigarette in her mouth.
A very classic suggestion: the flying scenes (horseback, genie, magic carpet) from The Thief of Baghdad (1940). It won the Special Effects Oscar for the first use of blue screen!
Here is a great effect to check from 1942: In the final scene of Casablanca (1942) the mechanics visible behind Bogart and Bergman were actually Little people hired to make the Cut-Out plane in the background look real.
There is a documental about Emilio Ruiz Del Río, a very famous Spanish matte painter that worked on films such as conan or the earlier dune, where they reveal the techniques used, very impressive craftsmanship!
You called for suggestions recently. I thought the acting on the part of the CGI ape in Umbrella Academy has been quite good. It might be fun to interview people from the show to find out how they did such a good job.
As someone who has driven around the arc I can confirm the real thing is much more chaotic and dangerous than the gunfight.
0:14 Good wrenpression Sam!
I thought it was Kalki's VFX breakdown at first when looked at the thumbnail.😅😅
Just in case, if anyone from the 'crew' sees this comment, the movie name is 'Kalki 2898AD' because there is also a movie named 'Kalki'.
Out of all the reacts they do here these are always my favorite. Just the 3 guys. I just wish they were longer.
The last few have maybe been shorter in case of copywriting issues. With Marvel, music videos, Netflix, they’re less likely to make longer videos if they get demonetized for copyright
I'm so so so SO happy you clearly warned about the spiders. Thank you!
Poor Wren. Just wanna give our good boy a hug and reassure him everything is ok. 🤗
My reaction to the spider hallway would have been like in Event Horizon "We're leaving!"
Wren, buddy, I feel you...
My theory on the John Wick universe is that people are unfazed by the shooting because there are more assassins than civilians and it’s a common occurrence for fights to break out.
Heart beats are how the spider moves its legs. Each beat pushes blood into a leg and you get moving bits
I feel you Wren, phobia is not a joke
yeh, feel the same way. Not particularly phobic about spiders, but I respect that his terror is real and am sympathetic.
@@sloth0jr I mean phobia itself is a serious thing, I have one too for different reason.
I am not as bad, and I worked on not showing it around my kids. But poor Wren, this had me squicked. Too many eyes and legs!
....but it really is, though. A) any fear can be addressed and overcome with a little courage and a less defeatist attitude, and B) EVERYONE is BORN with a genetic-level fear of spiders that for most of human history helped little infants and children stay away from snakes and spiders.......but unless one is an infant or small child....😅.
I was TERRIFIED of spiders......so one day in 8th grade I started catching and keeping/feeding then to slowly get over my fear,starting with jumping spiders. There's still a sliver of fear when one startles me, but it's almost completely gone.
So, 'scuse me saying, but,: notwithstanding very serious tramautic event involving real injury.....nah, just writing off a currently unaddressed fear as simply "impossible" IS, in my opinion, a joke. Perhaps the only fear I haven't yet more directly faced and overcome is that of swimming in deep ocean waters. But I know that with enough experiences doing so and not having terrible life-threatening things happen I would overcome that fear as well.
Just gotta be willing to face your fears.
My wife was driving and watched a dump truck t-bone a CRV type car. The four cars in front of her kept driving and all the other cars behind her kept driving. She is the only person that stopped to check on people. So the cars in the Wick Paris scene are 100% believable that people wouldn’t acknowledge it.
Merlin, 2008 BBC TV show about Merlin and Arthur. Almost every episode they do wacky ass stunts, throwing people down huge flights of stairs, throwing people off horses, dragging people behind horses, running people over with horses, basically a lot of horses. Also some super jank late 2000s all CG characters
You guys should check out the plane stunts from "It's a mad, mad, world"
I was so sleepy the day after watching ATLAS.
I was looking for a dumb movie to watch for 20 minutes while I was eating,before going to bed and getting up super early. Thought I'd catch 20-30 minutes, and see the rest of it after work the day after.
But it actually sold me quick! I'm not saying it was a great movie, but it kept me hooked, so I watched the entire thing, and loved every second of it. The I went to work with five hours of sleep. Haha. Never seen a jlo movie before that, but watched the mother the day after, and I loved that too.
Another J-Lo movie with some great visual effects is The Cell. It's kind of a cross between Silence Of The Lambs and The Matrix, and it's well worth watching.
i enjoyed atlas a lot, too. dunno why people think it is so horrible. i can see them not liking it, sure, but not that much.
@@carlgibson285 thanks for the recommendation! I'll put it on tonight and not get enough sleep for work tomorrow 😂
I share Wren's fear of spiders. Really suprised he didn't stomp the one that came out from underneath the sofa. Nevermind, he did. Good job!
And the movie, I have to watch it...
@@zeno6111753 It's really good actually, but...
There's A LOT of spider !
@@zeno6111753 I have a huge arachnophobia but still went in theatre to see Infested. It kinda helped to battle the fear, and the movie is well made nevertheless. I'm glad we keep making such great genre/horror movies in France !
The random shot of a jumping spider is so cute and every time I see one it makes me think "jumping spider" sounds like the worst possible thing, but no, adorable.
Right after filming: "Breaking news, half of LA is currently on fire! The fire started in a film studio owned by the digital effects team and TH-cam channel 'Corridor Digital'! Wren Weichman said 'It all happaned so fast, I didn't mean for it to end like this!' and claims it wasn't his fault."
I'm legit impressed at how Sam fixed Atlas in 6 seconds....... I hope we start seeing big studios saving their films like that! YOLO!
You might (or might not) be surprised at just how many shows and movies can be made better by changing the language. Sometimes its humorous, sometimes it's much more dramatic. Atlas is a good example, but for a humorous one try watching The Boys in Japanese.
@@AnHRTBus Money Heist is a good example. Incredible boring to watch in English, but stick it in French and use subtitles and you can get emotion through their tone and actions instead of the words they use. and for a show like that, the confusion of another language adds to the intensity of the scenes.
He didn't fix it. It's still horrendous. They gave an inanimate robot suit pronouns. 🤣
@@iambetterthanuare you saying humans haven't been calling ships and planes and cars and other things "she" or "he" since forever?
@@AnHRTBus Not sure about The Boys. The don't capture Karl Urban's Butcher and the other top actors in the Japanese dub in my opinion. Now, BoJack Horseman, NetFlix live action remakes of anime (One Piece, The Last Airbender, Cowboy Bebop, etc), even Rick and Morty are amazing to experience with the top talent that Japanese voice acting industry brings to the table. Same goes with a lot of Star Wars and Marvel series.
6:18 poor wren. I can't watch this part either buddy... It's ok
The fact that the first clip is a movie that's 80+ freaking years old is awesome.
I was watching this at my desk and i kept thinking that spiders were crawling under my desk
You should do an entire video dedicated to 2 actors on the same screen - oldest, to Parent Trap to something more recent like Legend. The evolution of it is amazing!
The editing in this video matching the editing in the films goes so unbelievably hard.
instant iconic episode. the fact that it's at episode 140 is fucking awesome
Do one on data time plssssss, such an underrated channel, they need this so baddd
Poor Wren... Admit it, you definitely threw some spiders under that couch😂
Poor Wren. I want to give him a comforting hug away from the spiders.
That clip from A Stolen Life is amazing, pure filmmaking ingenuity!
“It’s a soft car designed for hitting people” lol what a line
6:59 he was so proud that the protagonists werent stupid!
I got you buddy, Niko has been hiding his spider fear all along 7:22 🤣
Family Switch, there is a scene where a baby runs around like a dog, there bodies switched places like Freaky Friday, its the most terrifying CGI baby I have every seen.
In the John Wick 4 art gallery shootout sequence theres a bit where a "dead" body moves his hand out of thr way of someone who is about to land on it. It really sells "I'm watching actual people doing this".
1:43 I love when there is an acceptable way for them to shoot the scene and tell the story without going for all these effects, but they do it for the FLEX.
Poor Wren. Tortured for education and entertainment.
I have always been a cinema fanatic, but you guys opened a new doorway to how I view movies. I just would like to say thank you.
You totally should watch the Witches of Eastwick, it has crazy groundbreaking effects and an awesome cast.
13:32 "This is sick, It is harder to keep a car in a tight circle like that when you are drifting than you think"
No one saw that and thought it was easy Nico
I think it's cause he already drifted like that in a previous video and it was harder than he thought
Padded is probably how we should’ve designed all cars in the first place!
A very nice touch of that John Wick scene is that civilian cars headlights are dimmer than assassins' cars. To keep the two well separated
When you watching old movies with special effects - I recommended the old Czech ones like "Adela Has Not Had Supper Yet" (1978). Its full of old "animation", stuns and stuns.
There’s a scene in The Tingler which is in B&W except for one scene where a bathtub of blood is red.
It’s probably easy for you to determine how it’s done, but take a look.
Brandon just reviewed it and I thought of your channel.
These old special effects from way back are my favourite to break down. Even when they are not perfect they are always impressive.
How about the movie Wag the Dog (1997)? It won an academy award for best visual effects in 1998. Would love to hear your views about the way they portrayed VFX in that movie, and the techniques they used back in 1997. There are some behind the scenes videos available on TH-cam.
I’m with Wren. The spider stuff is hard to handle. I’m freaking out.
I know what a torture it must have felt for Wren having the leg movements being thoroughly scrutinized. Poor dude was almost fainting there.
@@henrique88t you just made me realize I’m not spelling his name right lol. But yeah. Wren’s got it bad.
It helps to learn to appreciate spiders for what they are capable of and lower your fear if you expose yourself to the cuties, the jumping spiders.
They are the only spiders that react to their environment based on visual input, like when they see you they turn towards you and observe you, assessing if you are a threat and they dont just run away on such a trigger, they will back off while watching you and they legitimately pull the Spider-Man move of jumping off a table's edge, while attaching a string and then dangle there or swing right back under the table while you look at the ground! 😅 I'm not kidding, I've experienced it with my own set of eyes.
In that scale of creatures, they behave almost eerily like mammals... 😮 And that is super fascinating.
This was amazing!!!
Guys if you ever do a Mad Max Furiosa episode, in the first 4 minutes there are already some CG fails, exactly at the 4:07 min in the background you can see a CG extra repeating keyframes (without looping) and like 10 seconds later there are (in the same shot) 2 CG extras with the same animation
The girl with the cigarette ping-pongs at the very beginning when the cigarette is near her mouth. Really cool how they did that and the timing was almost perfect.
9:40 there is a curser at the top of the screen
The CG spiders are actually so good ;-; it really demonstrates how good they are that they craft spiders that can REALLY reach into our fear instincts and make us question if it’s real. Those movements almost capture the emotions of the spiders themselves tbh ;-;
If you want some extra cool old school cloning effects, please check out the movie "Cover Girl" (1944).
There's a scene where Gene Kelly dances with a semi-transparent version of himself. It has everything, cloned actors, moving shots, the clones overlapping each other, and handling the same props. It's absolutely mind blowing.
Do the reaction on Thunderbirds (1964) special effects
Wren, next time they say "You don't have to watch this", DON'T WATCH IT! (I didn't like watching Wren get traumatized)
Yeah, if it *had* been that someone planted spiders under/around the couch for that bit I would have disliked and unsubscribed.
Don't make fun of peoples' genuine phobias.
FTR: No, I'm **NOT** arachnopohobic, nor any other -phobic that I know of.
Okay, 19% for Atlas is just unfair. It's very cliche, but fun enough, definitely not below average, I mean have you seen some shit out there that gets better scores?
I can't begin to describe how funny I find with just the concept of "a soft car designed for hitting people"
Kalkai 2898 ad VFX breakdown please
You should review some videos from Data time. He also does some twin effects.
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React to the CGI from The Killer by David Fincher. one scene in particular are the shots with Michael fassbender's character driving a moped in Paris.
Kalki 2898 AD VFX breakdown
Two things:
1) The Corridor Crew should do an episode fixing the bad CGI of the Blood God from the end of the movie, "Blade".
2) Wren should know that on average, you are approximately 3 feet away from a spider at any given moment.
THANK YOU for warning about the spiders. THANK YOU.
Please, please react to the Sci-fi vfx and stunts Hardcore Henry, it's one of the few first person perspective fi!ms out there and they have a load of behind the scenes videos so you can see how they did things!