@@sergiokaminotanjo: I enjoy learning from people who have a wealth of experience. This person does. If given the option, why would we forgo such an opportunity?
You did it! You finally found a CG artist who is willing to talk about WHY their shitty vfx were so bad. And as always, it's rarely about the lack of talent - it's about something behind the scenes (lack of time, lack of reference, etc.). This was a fantastic video.
Honestly, people with common sense knows that it's lack of time. They did one episode about Endgame and the Iron Man shot was the first shot they got and was the last one they finished. These movies nowadays have such a fast turnaround that they don't have the time to make them look "good". These people who work in the industry are professionals, they don't set out to make bad special effects.
@@AnthonyMcNeil That's pretty much why I don't really overreact when a new Marvel property has some dodgy CG. The pandemic thew everyone's schedule off. It was going to have a ripple effect for many years after the lockdown ended.
@@goodjoejoe True. My complaint is that rather than these companies making FEWER movies and making them look good, they are so obsessed with churning out as many as they can, that they release dodgy CG. It must suck for the CG artists working on these knowing that they could do better.
@@goodjoejoe the only movie that has no excuse in my eyes is Avatar 2, it was made from the bottom up with the CG in mind since 2010. 12 years of planning and even innovation of tech just for the movie itself, means their should be no rushed shots, hopefully...
@@TomWDW1 Just makes you think what would be possible these days if these experts were given all the time they needed to really fine tune everything before release instead of being mismanaged and forced to make shots "good enough". These people are seriously talented but unfortunately everything is at the mercy of the almighty dollar these days. I too would prefer fewer movies that are better written with better CG but what do I know ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Wow just wow! This guy has influenced me more than I ever thought! He's been around for some of the foundations of VFX and this episode felt even more special for the history this guy brings to the new generation!
@Aman Kapil are you brain dead my friend? Or just trolling? Because if you truly can't figure out who he is referencing, then you may need a brain replacement lol
You guys have provided a space where visual effects people are actually VERY excited to visit you. It's like they all know about you and are waiting to get their episode 🤣👍 I love seeing all these older guys get showcased... It's like they are finally getting their credit for all the hard work and they get to come to talk about it for once in a none professional environment.
Giving a voice and platform to those in the middle... not behind or in front of the camera.... the middle that blends both together for the final product
I would really appreciate it if you would put the guest name in the title or even the description for that matter I tried to look up this guy after watching the video but I couldn't find them anywhere because I couldn't see how his name was spelt
I have always enjoyed these "Special Features" with the industry veterans, and for some reason, this one is by far my favourite. I have no experience with VFX whatsoever, but still i was able to follow what John was saying. I would also like to point out, I felt that, John has a very calming and "approachable" presence.
This veteran is a true storyteller. He mightn't be anywhere near the newest or most complex things but there's a level of lived generational experience and passion in his tonality that the others don't quite have.
It's extremely satisfying to hear from someone who was at the cutting edge of that generational technological transition. He's a true pioneer in the literal sense of the word, and his ability to articulate his thoughts and experience is second to none. We must hear more from him.
because they managed to make it look "real", and you can't make anything look better than real, hence even in 100 years it'll look like "it was made today"
John is easily one of the best guest corridor ever had. Brought a very different vibe to the couch, and it was incredible. can't wait for him to participate more.
I kinda loved that you addressed the mummy returns bad CGI and followed it up immediately with potentially the greatest cgi character ever created. As in you made sure that while he was being crapped on for that scorpion King shot, it was equally as important to show that this man is capable of ingenious levels of special effects 👏.
This was the best episode in ages. Having guests who talk about the indirect decisions which end up effecting the final VFX (like the stop motion hires for Jurassic Park and the morph timing on T2) is so interesting and speaks to the deeper artistry and ingenuity of visual effects artists
15:57 those skeleton T-Rex walking an skinned T-Rex walking animations were created secretly by ILM artist Steve "Spaz" Williams against the wishes of his superiors to see if he could do it. And when he proved that it could be done and look convincing THAT'S when the filmmakers decided to use CGI instead of stop motion. There's a show on Netflix called The Movies That Made Us, Season 2 Episode 3 is all about Jurassic Park. That's where I learned about Spaz.
The Davy Jones VFX are outrageously good. Looks incredible even 16 years later, I see those shots and if I didn't know any better I'd think they were from today.
Good VFX, of any kind, knows how to use work within it's limitations to make it look good. Looking at Star Wars: A New Hope, there's this great shot of a Y-Wing getting a nacelle blown off and crashing. I thought it was CGI from 1997, but it's from the original footage, still looks great. The Dinos from Jurassic Park, 30 years ago, still looks great, as they knew how to get it to work in the situations where they used it, and then got the rest of the way with the Actors and music, the shot where you first see a Brachiosaurus in full still works great.
This is why the original releases of the Star Wars trilogy look better than the 90s remasters. In the OT they were pushing their limitation but were working with the knowledge of how to make it look good. By comparison the remasters look like Lucas just decided he do anything because it was CGI, but it's not nearly advanced enough to actually pull it off. Like all bad CGI, the remasters look worse with every passing year.
That makes me wonder if it would still look as good if it were made today. I’m assuming yes because of the attention to detail, and if you look at characters like Thanos you can see that if you don’t have time or budget really limiting you, you can make an almost photorealistic character.
What a class act: the way he owned his own shortcomings in the past. A true professional, a true teacher from whom so many people (and future professionals) could learn.
Never realised how good Davy Jones' animation was. Probably because I never felt like it was unreal. And this person one of the best guest I've ever seen. He's seen the evolution of CGI up close. He explains everything so well.
@@LuisSierra42 yep some of the best ever, better than most modern movies, i read somewhere that studios dont like "perfect" effects, cause effects are expensive and if they are perfect no one notices they are effects, so all that money is lost, so is better to do cheaper more "noticeable" effects so people would go "wow look at the great effects" (matrix, transformers, comes to mind) they save money and get the wow factor.
John Berton was one of my favorite college professors! He really does love talking about the work that he has done to try to inspire the next generation. I've heard these same nuggets of information over and over again from him so it's surreal seeing him on the couch. I always appreciated his old school approach and sense of wonder and excitement for the craft. I'm so happy you were able to give him a platform to help him share his expertise with such a wide audience!
He seems to be able to talk about his work not in a gloating or promoting sortve way, but rather to show whats possible and inspire to reach higher. Its a fine line but some professors especially in the creative fields definitely cross it.
Please keep bringing on these legends, the folks who really got their hands dirty making all these amazing films. I love John’s reflections on what he learned with each picture, and how that helped inform the next one. It gives so much more weight to successes when we can hear about the challenges.
@@vvvvgggg why you hating lol i’d be acting like that too if i had someone i looked up to talking about their work with me. go outside and get a life kid
I've been watching corridor long enough (since around VGHS came out) to know that this is pretty much what Wren is like all the time. He is a very enthusiastic and animated person!
14:30 God, Davy Jones is still so damn good, after all these years. Major kudos to all the VFX artists that worked on him, but I also think that Bill Nighy's performance helps a lot.
This series has almost become a really awesome way of interviewing heroes and makers in the film industry and I'm all here for it. What started out as just watching a bunch of CGI clips and reacting to them has become this very awesome series where some really amazing people in the industry gets to teach us little nuggets of wisdom and I'm here for 100 more episodes.
As an eight year old, seeing Willow, and that morph shot, fundamentally altered the course of my life. No effect you've seen today has blown your mind open the way that Willow effect did back in the day. Truly groundbreaking stuff and in the pantheon of vfx history. Thanks so much guys for doing these films in particular.
I think i was around 8 when i first saw Willow back in the 90s... loved the movie (although i never really knew many friends who watched it). Im hoping the new Willow series has that magical feeling that the movie once had
It's one of the only movies that still captures that "how did they do that?" factor. Absolute cinematic perfection contained in every frame of that film
But... There isn't actually something to redeem from the scorpion king considered what elements they had to work with. Expecting a very good CGI was like expecting to win the F1 championship with a bicycle
My thanks to John for all his great work, especially on T2. Blew my mind back then as a kid and still adore it today. Truly one of the highlights of my life experience. I also saw Mummy 2 back then and I gotta say expectations were much different back then and it didn't even come across as lackluster until much later when we began to see high quality human faces. We were playing Half-Life 1 and literally saw blocks of cube as human heads on a daily basis. You can only measure based over previous best. The ceiling wasn't high.
Yeah it wasn’t until years later rewatching that I was like oh no that’s what that looks like? I was still playing game boy and ff7 and stuff. It didn’t look bad back then
John Berton Jr. is such an amazing pioneer, and what a class act. He never excused the work, but you gave him an opportunity to explain the difficulties of what they had to work with at the time. So fascinating.
He's a good sport about the Scorpion King. :-) And hey, I hope these guys realize (and you guys too), people who know better aren't criticizing them directly. It's all art. Sometimes art works, and sometimes it doesn't. But not trying at all is the biggest sin, and I appreciate that these guys are always trying, whether it works or not. Great episode!
78 episodes in and these are still offering amazing insights into the industry with wonderfully qualified special guests that really contribute to the discussion. Great stuff.
Davy Jones in my opinion is the single greatest marrying of animation / VFX and an actors portrayal / performance working together to create a believable character. EVERY SINGLE ASPECT of the character design from posture, to stance, to iris depth / emotion, and down to every individual tentacle on his face is animated to match the performance of the actor. There is 0 disconnect between the actors performance and portrayed emotion with the physical appearance and minute details / micro expressions. Truthfully something that even pure live action or pure animation couldn’t have accomplished. This is what VFX are meant to be.
It would be interesting to have an episode purely on CGI humans and how that's evolved over the years. What technology was invented for which film etc.
Two Suggestions for a reaction: The first would be the Adventure of a Lifetime Music video by Coldplay. The other would be a certain shot from Top Gun Maverick. I know a lot of the shot in that movie were practical (which is an extreme understatement), but there’s one particular shot of a helicopter getting shot down out of the sky that looks PRETTY SWEET for the 3 seconds you could see it on screen…. Anyways just a couple ideas, since I imagine you guys said you are running out of things to react to.
Him having worked on JUST T2 would have been mindblowing, but then John just kept!!!!!! bringing up more BENCHMARK projects!!! Was losing my mind this entire episode, thanks boys
This is awesome! My dad and John grew up together and were best friends throughout their years together in school. Growing up my dad and I would always watch different movies that John was involved in and wait to see his name in the credits. This was always a big moment for my dad. Thank you for interviewing one of the original pioneers of visual effects. More John!!
The thing about Davy Jones is that he doesn't feel like CGI while watching the movie and not concentarating on details you just kinda assume that they found a tentacly pirate somewhere and filmed him.
they made the tentacles feel natural, so it wasnt a distraction... if the cgi was bad or jenky, everyone would of deff crapped on it. Sometimes the best CGI are the ones that dont take your attention from the scene
Such a cool guy. You can tell a true seasoned professional when they can shrug off criticism as part of the job, call it a learning experience and not take it as a personal attack. A lot of creatives can’t do that. Love how he then proceeded to flex and show off the Pirates work 👏🏻👌🏼
Easily the best guest ever. So down to earth and willing to share his vast knowledge from a long career creating some landmark effects in the industry, you could tell they felt honored to have him on the show. I hope he returns on many future eps.
This was one of the best episodes in a while! I loved hearing John talk about Phil Tippett. You should try to get Phil on the show! He's done so many amazing things.
Phil was just on WTF with Marc Maron. It’s not super technical, it’s a good big picture interview. He does cover the Jurassic Park episode where he gets CG’ed out of a job.
As Mad God is finally released, I think it would be awesome to have him come on here and talk not just about that forever project but also Starship Troopers 1 and 2, and his work on the Robocop films. And much more like Go-Motion and stuff like that.
Hope they do more of these. Special guests who feel comfortable talking about the "bad VFX" and giving everyone an insight into why they ended up as they did. Of course, getting the ones who were directly part of the amazing VFX from cinema history is also good 🤣
omfg how have i only just seen this and the other John Berton Jr. video - you lucky SOB's getting to meet this absolute legend!!! this was fantastic esp to hear him talk about the T1000 morphing front-to-back shot - that and walking through the jail bars are still some of the greatest film moments ever - pure brilliance
You guys should try to get John Gaeta on here. He was VFX supervisor on The Matrix trilogy. I'd love a VFX dissection of those movies from someone who worked on them.
The displacement effect on The Abyss is still shocking to learn about even after all these years. It's a neat trick that is very accessible in today's world of technology that is still overlooked to some degree. I feel like that bit of wisdom was priceless for visual effects artists old and new.
One of the best shows you guys put together! You have to have John back in the show again.. the way he shares his vision and knowledge reminds me of the old good university professors.. :)
I just want to say how freaking cool it is to see a man who has been on top of the VFX world for most of his life but yet still just as giddy about VFX as I am Who is just learning. I really feel like I relate to this guy. Especially what he said about complexity versus spectacle.
The animation of Davis Jones was incredible.. and to this day stands the test of time for good CG. I love the fact that the dinosaur puppets were used as skeleton reference, would love to see ye guys react to more puppeteering, maybe the movie The Labyrinth would be an interesting watch
When someone who is truly passionate about a topic and is allowed to talk freely about what they love it's very hard not to get engrossed in what they are saying regardless of your own personal level of knowledge . Thanks Corridor Crew for yet again introducing us to the genius behind the entertainment.
One of my best friends was responsible for compositing the Davy Jones shot that they always bring up -- especially the smoke part. Everytime they mention it I'm like (✨️👄✨️)
@@okashi10 i wish i knew of the people who worked on vfx shots more, Movies just get pumped out and vfx ppl are tirelessly working their butts off, they are one of the most underappreciated ppl in the industry i feel
The way John spoke about each shot and his fellow artists that helped him for every piece of work, this is definitely a man thats passionate about his work and takes inspiration and awe from his fellow artists, I hope he continues to do what he loves
The moment I started watching this I thought: “That is the actor from the Men in Black Mailroom scene!” to then find out that he was but so much more known in the VFX world.
I loved the aliens in MIB. They all feel so real because of how kooky they look. MIB design team made an important decision to blend CGI with practical makeup. The aliens in MIB that are “avatar-like” are done practically. Because making an alien that has humanish features that are skewed is hard in CGI. In opposite they made super not real not human aliens CGI because we have no basis. Plus the aliens are SOOO creative and unique. It makes them pop even more.
Maan what a legend. One of the OGs. Guys like him paved the vfx way and created tools for next generations. Please bring him and other pioneers as often as possible. Great watch as always
I’d love for you guys to do an entire episode about Terminator 2. I feel like there are so many different bits that even without the ones you’ve already covered (the morph flip, the T-1000 slipping thru the bars, etc), you’d have plenty to talk about.
Davy Jones will always and forever be one of if not, the best CGI character I've ever seen. For 2006 and them working on it for who knows how long before? That is incredible! Props to him and his team on that feat!
One of the things that has always impressed me was how well they did Robert Patrick. He has a very unique shape to his ears that I would imagine would be hard to render due to them coming out and up to a point, but they morphed it perfectly just like his fingers. I always wondered if that was something they took into account at the time.
I guarantee you there was at least one FX Artist working on T2 who was working on Robert Patrick's ears and specifically said "Fuck this guys ears" at some point after having to manually account for them for the 27th time lol
Every time I've watched T2 with my brother, that shot where he reverses himself always gets a laugh out of us! Such an amazing shot and serves the story in such a great way!
You guys get the BEST guests. John was incredibly insightful, and has some great maxims that guide his creativity. This might be one of my new favorites. And let me say, when Wren and Niko's heads exploded, mine did too. That was a great way of distilling the essence of Vfx down to a few sentences, but in a way I'd never thought of before.
Hey John Berton Jr. You and the old team at ILM is the direct reason I have had a 21 year; - and going, career in sound design. Thank you for the inspiration!! :)
I was binge watching Pirates of the Caribbean for the first time during the AH v. JD trial and Davy Jones was one of the few times ever I thought, "wow, the CGI here is incredible". So much emotion.
Yeah but….you spent so much time wondering if Wren COULD make a Morphing Time Joke….but you never stopped to ask yourself, if Wren SHOULD make a Morphing Time Joke… Must go faster, must go faster, The fly, goldblum.
during the whole episode I was struck by the fact that his face looks familiar. the feeling triggers a MIB memory, i wonder if he modeled an alien after himself. anyway, great episode as usual!
OG creators like John, Adam Savage, and Nick's dad and the likes are so refreshing, and i can spend hours listening to them talk about their experiences and the love for their craft, truly something else
This video with John was my favourite of all the experts and veterans you’ve gotten in. He was so eloquent, insightful and down to earth. Please get him back in the future.
Please! You Guys need to seriously consider doing a Star Trek episode!! You have multiple generations of tv and movies to choose from spanning any and all forms of sfx! I highly recommend doing the DS9 episode “Trials & Tribble-ations” where the modern crew go back in time to the OG series and they are actually seamlessly inserted into an old 60’s episode!
Really good choice. And yes, a trek themed episode is long overdue. They could also look at the season finale of Strange New Worlds and compare the original series' episode Balance of Terror. Explain how the original episode created their effects practically, and how they went about recreating it like SNW did.
Corridor crew, i just wana say I freaking love this series. Like an unhealthy love possibly. I’m a digital member but I still wait til Saturday to watch the extended edition. I look forward to it every week and don’t want it to b over too soon.
@@Biring1 Yes, they have people who've worked on Disney shows and often praise their work (rightfully so) but there's a lot of talk about artists unions and working hours which are ridiculous which I'd really like to hear from their point of view from considering that they are VFX artists but have essentially created their own studio and have established their own company culture.
I'm pretty amazed with the amount of insight and perspective that this show brings around the intricacies and history of VFX, and in a very down to the earth way, without sacrificing technicalities and thoughts around the artistic values of the discipline. Congratulations, big fan here 🙌🏼
I'd be interested to see a reaction video with Makeup Artists coming in to discuss good use of make up, prosthetics etc. Don't know how practical that'd be, but it'd be interesting to have a guest come in and breakdown scenes they've worked on that they found hard, or have regrets over. Love the show guys, keep up the good work!
Hey there! I normally don’t comment on things but I saw this comment and just had to add to this. He’s my current VFX Supervisor on a show at a certain company. I talk/joke with him everyday, and I learn so so much. Such a great guy, had me smiling from ear to ear watching him on screen. Glad to know he resonates the same with the rest of the world 🙌🏼
What an awesome guest, you've gotta get him back for another episode. It was great that he was willing to talk about the bad VFX shots and how they ended up the way they did, not everyone would be willing to do that.
That has to be the best episode of Vfx Artists yet John was a treasure trove of knowledge and the way he didn’t even make excuses for shots and how he captured my attention he absolutely needs to return
I feel like you guys are doing a legit great job of helping people find the magic in visual effects again. It's heartening to see people discuss it enthusiastically rather than cynically.
I remember seeing that John Berton in one of those 90s Behind the Magic type of shows, and between those shows, people like John, and CG films, got me wanting to be a 3D artist, it's been hell of a journey, but I am sort of doing what I set out to due thanks in part to OG wizards.
This was the best guest spot you guys have had for a while. John's experience w/ ILM and all those movies was insane. More OGs. Thanks John for helping the Crew!
Let's just take a moment to understand just how big and amazing corridor has become. They aren't doing major Hollywood movies but look at all the people they have come through to give knowledge. Who recognize Sam, Nikko, and the rest of the team for what they do. Not only are they good at it but they are helping the next generation to learn by all these very experienced film makers. Honestly I wouldn't be surprised if they got a job to do scene in a major Hollywood movie soon. Not to mention they have pretty much become a school for special effects. To all the people who have worked for them and ones who watch to learn from them. I'm excited to see them keep growing and expanding.
Corridor found an unexploited niche, which is smart business. Everybody wants to talk to the actors and directors, but when was the last time you saw an effects artist or stuntman on a talk show? Corridor is able to attract these big but unknown names because they have zero competition.
This was fantastic! I found a couple shots from Ms. Marvel, the new marvel show on Disney Plus with a couple janky shots. In most scenes with Kamala Kahn (the main character) that use cgi platforms and parkour across those, the cgi render of Kamala used tends to be a little bit more rubbery than normal human movement. In Episode 2: Crushed, the scene from 7:49 - 8:03, this is shown very prominently, and the rubbery movement also shows up here. The same rubbery movement also shows up in Episode 6: No Normal, from 10:57 - 11:10, but the transition from the CG double to the live shot of her back works fantastically! I'd love to see this breakdown on one of these videos in the future!
second this! its always interesting to note on shows where there are a lot of effects to get done on a smaller (by mcu standards lol) budget where the time and money gets concentrated and where some corners are cut to put more resources into the other shots
@@SylviaCrisp ya, i feel bad cuz i had 0 interest in the show, but i know Marvel will get me invested, i think thats why a big name from the movies help garner more attention (Banner for She-Hulk as example). Im going to have to binge it one of these weekends.
Ok guys... I am finally subscribing, because of this video. More of this please! I had the pleasure of working with John several years ago on a project that was shelved during pre production. I love that you guys are bringing in experts who can share their unique insights into our industry. ... but just so you know, I am not a fan of the earbud ads
One of the best episodes yet! I love when you guys get such a talented and awesome artist to join you, and tell their amazing stories and journey with VFX.
i just watched “call of the wild” with harrison ford and the cg dogs sent my brain to vfx react. cg animals are a topic you guys have touched on frequently, but i think it would make for a fun episode if you did a whole stack of cgi animals scenes/films. G-force, garfield, scoobydoo (live action), charlottes web, are some i can think of. im not a movie guru but google is! could be fun
Immediately recognized him, not as a special effects artist, but as the upper torso alien from the mail room in Men In Black II. Cool to know it was a cameo for the VFX artist. Makes me wonder if the other guys in the room were also artists who worked on the film!
Yeah I saw T2 before the first one and now my mind refuses to even believe that T2 isn’t the first movie. When I think of Terminator, I immediately think of T2.
This guy was a gold mine. He was around for everything. You NEED to have him back.
P.S.: Please do Prehistoric Planet and Walking With Dinosaurs.
100% agree with this!
@@sergiokaminotanjo Saying cringe? Cringe
@@sergiokaminotanjo: I enjoy learning from people who have a wealth of experience. This person does. If given the option, why would we forgo such an opportunity?
@@sergiokaminotanjo get your trash attitude out of here. The only bad vibes here are coming from you.
He is
You did it! You finally found a CG artist who is willing to talk about WHY their shitty vfx were so bad. And as always, it's rarely about the lack of talent - it's about something behind the scenes (lack of time, lack of reference, etc.).
This was a fantastic video.
Honestly, people with common sense knows that it's lack of time. They did one episode about Endgame and the Iron Man shot was the first shot they got and was the last one they finished. These movies nowadays have such a fast turnaround that they don't have the time to make them look "good". These people who work in the industry are professionals, they don't set out to make bad special effects.
@@AnthonyMcNeil That's pretty much why I don't really overreact when a new Marvel property has some dodgy CG. The pandemic thew everyone's schedule off. It was going to have a ripple effect for many years after the lockdown ended.
@@goodjoejoe True. My complaint is that rather than these companies making FEWER movies and making them look good, they are so obsessed with churning out as many as they can, that they release dodgy CG.
It must suck for the CG artists working on these knowing that they could do better.
@@goodjoejoe the only movie that has no excuse in my eyes is Avatar 2, it was made from the bottom up with the CG in mind since 2010. 12 years of planning and even innovation of tech just for the movie itself, means their should be no rushed shots, hopefully...
@@TomWDW1 Just makes you think what would be possible these days if these experts were given all the time they needed to really fine tune everything before release instead of being mismanaged and forced to make shots "good enough". These people are seriously talented but unfortunately everything is at the mercy of the almighty dollar these days. I too would prefer fewer movies that are better written with better CG but what do I know ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Wow just wow! This guy has influenced me more than I ever thought! He's been around for some of the foundations of VFX and this episode felt even more special for the history this guy brings to the new generation!
Who???
@Aman Kapil are you brain dead my friend? Or just trolling? Because if you truly can't figure out who he is referencing, then you may need a brain replacement lol
He made me unable to take my eyes off him, every scene was amazing
You guys have provided a space where visual effects people are actually VERY excited to visit you. It's like they all know about you and are waiting to get their episode 🤣👍 I love seeing all these older guys get showcased... It's like they are finally getting their credit for all the hard work and they get to come to talk about it for once in a none professional environment.
FR
Giving a voice and platform to those in the middle... not behind or in front of the camera.... the middle that blends both together for the final product
Your pfp reminds me of Drake's One Dance
I would really appreciate it if you would put the guest name in the title or even the description for that matter I tried to look up this guy after watching the video but I couldn't find them anywhere because I couldn't see how his name was spelt
@@Canislupes7 its in the description
I have always enjoyed these "Special Features" with the industry veterans, and for some reason, this one is by far my favourite. I have no experience with VFX whatsoever, but still i was able to follow what John was saying. I would also like to point out, I felt that, John has a very calming and "approachable" presence.
The Bob Ross of VFX
@@santishorts chef's kiss for you
Don't read my name!
i would happily watch a two hour version of this video tbh
I know right? I feel the same way.
I love Nico’s facepalm when Wren actually said “it’s morphin’ time”
it's morphin time
morb
Its morbin' time
morphius is one of the movies of all time
He made me unable to take my eyes off him, every scene was amazing
This veteran is a true storyteller. He mightn't be anywhere near the newest or most complex things but there's a level of lived generational experience and passion in his tonality that the others don't quite have.
It's extremely satisfying to hear from someone who was at the cutting edge of that generational technological transition. He's a true pioneer in the literal sense of the word, and his ability to articulate his thoughts and experience is second to none. We must hear more from him.
I loved seeing him smile as he talked shop with the next generation.
Other guests, I should clarify.
Davy Jones is probably the best VFX work ever. 15 years later it looks like it was made today. It’s incredible.
because they managed to make it look "real", and you can't make anything look better than real, hence even in 100 years it'll look like "it was made today"
I consider the T2 special fx to be exactly like that. They still hold up pretty nicely until today
It looks FAR BETTER than many many many newly released huge blockbusters.
It looks better than a lot of things made today
@@LofusRose calm down pixar fan
That T2 wall reversal... The fact it holds up so well in slow motion, and zoomed in, really drives home just how good of a VFX scene it is.
He made me unable to take my eyes off him, every scene was amazing
John is easily one of the best guest corridor ever had. Brought a very different vibe to the couch, and it was incredible. can't wait for him to participate more.
I could listen to him talk about this forever. His input and commentary is absolutely fascinating.
I kinda loved that you addressed the mummy returns bad CGI and followed it up immediately with potentially the greatest cgi character ever created. As in you made sure that while he was being crapped on for that scorpion King shot, it was equally as important to show that this man is capable of ingenious levels of special effects 👏.
And that most vfx artists acknowledge the flaws in their works enough to learn from that to progress.
This was the best episode in ages. Having guests who talk about the indirect decisions which end up effecting the final VFX (like the stop motion hires for Jurassic Park and the morph timing on T2) is so interesting and speaks to the deeper artistry and ingenuity of visual effects artists
15:57 those skeleton T-Rex walking an skinned T-Rex walking animations were created secretly by ILM artist Steve "Spaz" Williams against the wishes of his superiors to see if he could do it. And when he proved that it could be done and look convincing THAT'S when the filmmakers decided to use CGI instead of stop motion. There's a show on Netflix called The Movies That Made Us, Season 2 Episode 3 is all about Jurassic Park. That's where I learned about Spaz.
The Davy Jones VFX are outrageously good. Looks incredible even 16 years later, I see those shots and if I didn't know any better I'd think they were from today.
Good VFX, of any kind, knows how to use work within it's limitations to make it look good. Looking at Star Wars: A New Hope, there's this great shot of a Y-Wing getting a nacelle blown off and crashing. I thought it was CGI from 1997, but it's from the original footage, still looks great.
The Dinos from Jurassic Park, 30 years ago, still looks great, as they knew how to get it to work in the situations where they used it, and then got the rest of the way with the Actors and music, the shot where you first see a Brachiosaurus in full still works great.
This is why the original releases of the Star Wars trilogy look better than the 90s remasters. In the OT they were pushing their limitation but were working with the knowledge of how to make it look good. By comparison the remasters look like Lucas just decided he do anything because it was CGI, but it's not nearly advanced enough to actually pull it off. Like all bad CGI, the remasters look worse with every passing year.
Back in 2007 I was convinced it was mostly practical. That's how amazing the effects were and still are.
That makes me wonder if it would still look as good if it were made today. I’m assuming yes because of the attention to detail, and if you look at characters like Thanos you can see that if you don’t have time or budget really limiting you, you can make an almost photorealistic character.
@@Scuzzlebutt142 you show Jurassic park to a kid now and they will completely believe it's real.
What a class act: the way he owned his own shortcomings in the past. A true professional, a true teacher from whom so many people (and future professionals) could learn.
That's what VFX Supervisors do, mine is like Hades from Disney's Hercules
Had the honor to take classes with John Berton! He is the coolest and most sincere person! Amazing seeing him on this!
100% Adios Amigopadres! 🤣😂
I think this man might be the most incredible guest you guys have had so far, the insights he shared are crazy I learned so much just in 20 minutes
Yeah, seriously. This might be the richest episode I've seen of them.
Never realised how good Davy Jones' animation was. Probably because I never felt like it was unreal.
And this person one of the best guest I've ever seen. He's seen the evolution of CGI up close. He explains everything so well.
Goes back to the fact that great visual effects are the ones that you don't notice.
I rewatched the pirates movies last year and i was astonished that these effects look as if they had been done yesterday
@@LuisSierra42 yep some of the best ever, better than most modern movies, i read somewhere that studios dont like "perfect" effects, cause effects are expensive and if they are perfect no one notices they are effects, so all that money is lost, so is better to do cheaper more "noticeable" effects so people would go "wow look at the great effects" (matrix, transformers, comes to mind) they save money and get the wow factor.
John Berton was one of my favorite college professors! He really does love talking about the work that he has done to try to inspire the next generation. I've heard these same nuggets of information over and over again from him so it's surreal seeing him on the couch. I always appreciated his old school approach and sense of wonder and excitement for the craft. I'm so happy you were able to give him a platform to help him share his expertise with such a wide audience!
He seems to be able to talk about his work not in a gloating or promoting sortve way, but rather to show whats possible and inspire to reach higher. Its a fine line but some professors especially in the creative fields definitely cross it.
Please keep bringing on these legends, the folks who really got their hands dirty making all these amazing films. I love John’s reflections on what he learned with each picture, and how that helped inform the next one. It gives so much more weight to successes when we can hear about the challenges.
They need to get Dennis Muran on the couch...
@@Backroad_Junkie oh 110% !
get em on the podcast too please
is that the obsidian guy?
This guy is a really great speaker, his insight and the way he explains his thought processes are just fascinating. Awesome video.
@@vvvvgggg why you hating lol i’d be acting like that too if i had someone i looked up to talking about their work with me. go outside and get a life kid
so good at explaining and teaching
Agreed! I was waiting for him to mention he also plays an alien in Men in Black 2, post office scene
I've been watching corridor long enough (since around VGHS came out) to know that this is pretty much what Wren is like all the time. He is a very enthusiastic and animated person!
One of the best guests they've had so far.
14:30 God, Davy Jones is still so damn good, after all these years. Major kudos to all the VFX artists that worked on him, but I also think that Bill Nighy's performance helps a lot.
This series has almost become a really awesome way of interviewing heroes and makers in the film industry and I'm all here for it. What started out as just watching a bunch of CGI clips and reacting to them has become this very awesome series where some really amazing people in the industry gets to teach us little nuggets of wisdom and I'm here for 100 more episodes.
Sorry you won’t make it for 101 man 😔
As an eight year old, seeing Willow, and that morph shot, fundamentally altered the course of my life.
No effect you've seen today has blown your mind open the way that Willow effect did back in the day.
Truly groundbreaking stuff and in the pantheon of vfx history.
Thanks so much guys for doing these films in particular.
I think i was around 8 when i first saw Willow back in the 90s... loved the movie (although i never really knew many friends who watched it). Im hoping the new Willow series has that magical feeling that the movie once had
That shot is still up there with the best morphing I’ve ever ever seen, Raziel from 🐢 to 🐅 to 👵🏻 is just *clean*
I remember T2 as being completely mind blowing in the theater. We talked about it forever. Absolutely classic.
It's one of the only movies that still captures that "how did they do that?" factor. Absolute cinematic perfection contained in every frame of that film
Man, to go from the Scorpion King to Davy Jones is one hell of a VFX redemption arc.
Don't read my name!!!!
But... There isn't actually something to redeem from the scorpion king considered what elements they had to work with. Expecting a very good CGI was like expecting to win the F1 championship with a bicycle
I will read your name!!!!
Not even mentioning t2 in there
I will effin read your name!!!
My thanks to John for all his great work, especially on T2. Blew my mind back then as a kid and still adore it today. Truly one of the highlights of my life experience. I also saw Mummy 2 back then and I gotta say expectations were much different back then and it didn't even come across as lackluster until much later when we began to see high quality human faces. We were playing Half-Life 1 and literally saw blocks of cube as human heads on a daily basis. You can only measure based over previous best. The ceiling wasn't high.
My first reaction of Mummy scene was : 'This looks so real'. 🤣 when you go from ps2 graphics to this.
Yeah it wasn’t until years later rewatching that I was like oh no that’s what that looks like? I was still playing game boy and ff7 and stuff. It didn’t look bad back then
John Berton Jr. is such an amazing pioneer, and what a class act. He never excused the work, but you gave him an opportunity to explain the difficulties of what they had to work with at the time. So fascinating.
He's a good sport about the Scorpion King. :-) And hey, I hope these guys realize (and you guys too), people who know better aren't criticizing them directly. It's all art. Sometimes art works, and sometimes it doesn't. But not trying at all is the biggest sin, and I appreciate that these guys are always trying, whether it works or not. Great episode!
78 episodes in and these are still offering amazing insights into the industry with wonderfully qualified special guests that really contribute to the discussion. Great stuff.
Thats 78 of just CGI. I love the entire CGI, Animation & Stuntmen series.
The guy in the middle just seems like such a down to earth, nice human being.
Davy Jones in my opinion is the single greatest marrying of animation / VFX and an actors portrayal / performance working together to create a believable character. EVERY SINGLE ASPECT of the character design from posture, to stance, to iris depth / emotion, and down to every individual tentacle on his face is animated to match the performance of the actor. There is 0 disconnect between the actors performance and portrayed emotion with the physical appearance and minute details / micro expressions. Truthfully something that even pure live action or pure animation couldn’t have accomplished. This is what VFX are meant to be.
Gollum walked so Davy Jones could run, and ever since then people have been trying to catch up.
It would be interesting to have an episode purely on CGI humans and how that's evolved over the years. What technology was invented for which film etc.
Yes! This would be a good wren solo too especially as a companion to his recent "why caustic is a difficult sim" vid
Two Suggestions for a reaction:
The first would be the Adventure of a Lifetime Music video by Coldplay.
The other would be a certain shot from Top Gun Maverick. I know a lot of the shot in that movie were practical (which is an extreme understatement), but there’s one particular shot of a helicopter getting shot down out of the sky that looks PRETTY SWEET for the 3 seconds you could see it on screen…. Anyways just a couple ideas, since I imagine you guys said you are running out of things to react to.
Him having worked on JUST T2 would have been mindblowing, but then John just kept!!!!!! bringing up more BENCHMARK projects!!! Was losing my mind this entire episode, thanks boys
This guy is the coolest ever! Seriously most down to earth best attitude of anyone in the industry. Definitely bring him back if you can 🙏💯🎶
This is awesome! My dad and John grew up together and were best friends throughout their years together in school. Growing up my dad and I would always watch different movies that John was involved in and wait to see his name in the credits. This was always a big moment for my dad. Thank you for interviewing one of the original pioneers of visual effects. More John!!
The thing about Davy Jones is that he doesn't feel like CGI while watching the movie and not concentarating on details you just kinda assume that they found a tentacly pirate somewhere and filmed him.
they made the tentacles feel natural, so it wasnt a distraction... if the cgi was bad or jenky, everyone would of deff crapped on it. Sometimes the best CGI are the ones that dont take your attention from the scene
Such a cool guy. You can tell a true seasoned professional when they can shrug off criticism as part of the job, call it a learning experience and not take it as a personal attack. A lot of creatives can’t do that. Love how he then proceeded to flex and show off the Pirates work 👏🏻👌🏼
Bring John Berton Jr. back, please!!! I agree, he is a gold mine on VFX and made this episode a joy to watch.
Easily the best guest ever. So down to earth and willing to share his vast knowledge from a long career creating some landmark effects in the industry, you could tell they felt honored to have him on the show. I hope he returns on many future eps.
This was one of the best episodes in a while! I loved hearing John talk about Phil Tippett. You should try to get Phil on the show! He's done so many amazing things.
Phil was just on WTF with Marc Maron. It’s not super technical, it’s a good big picture interview. He does cover the Jurassic Park episode where he gets CG’ed out of a job.
As Mad God is finally released, I think it would be awesome to have him come on here and talk not just about that forever project but also Starship Troopers 1 and 2, and his work on the Robocop films. And much more like Go-Motion and stuff like that.
Davey Jones is just about the most perfect cgi character I've ever seen.
He made me unable to take my eyes off him, every scene was amazing
Hope they do more of these. Special guests who feel comfortable talking about the "bad VFX" and giving everyone an insight into why they ended up as they did. Of course, getting the ones who were directly part of the amazing VFX from cinema history is also good 🤣
I mean honestly most of the "bad vfx" shots out there will all have similar stories. Actor broke ankle and can't shoot. Ran out of time and etc.
Literally the best episode ever. Please have him back. This was extraordinary. So proud of y’all
omfg how have i only just seen this and the other John Berton Jr. video - you lucky SOB's getting to meet this absolute legend!!!
this was fantastic esp to hear him talk about the T1000 morphing front-to-back shot - that and walking through the jail bars are still some of the greatest film moments ever - pure brilliance
You guys should try to get John Gaeta on here. He was VFX supervisor on The Matrix trilogy. I'd love a VFX dissection of those movies from someone who worked on them.
THIS
Ya, a Matrix vet would be a must have for this channel
The displacement effect on The Abyss is still shocking to learn about even after all these years. It's a neat trick that is very accessible in today's world of technology that is still overlooked to some degree. I feel like that bit of wisdom was priceless for visual effects artists old and new.
One of the best shows you guys put together! You have to have John back in the show again.. the way he shares his vision and knowledge reminds me of the old good university professors.. :)
I just want to say how freaking cool it is to see a man who has been on top of the VFX world for most of his life but yet still just as giddy about VFX as I am Who is just learning. I really feel like I relate to this guy. Especially what he said about complexity versus spectacle.
The animation of Davis Jones was incredible.. and to this day stands the test of time for good CG. I love the fact that the dinosaur puppets were used as skeleton reference, would love to see ye guys react to more puppeteering, maybe the movie The Labyrinth would be an interesting watch
When someone who is truly passionate about a topic and is allowed to talk freely about what they love it's very hard not to get engrossed in what they are saying regardless of your own personal level of knowledge . Thanks Corridor Crew for yet again introducing us to the genius behind the entertainment.
One of my best friends was responsible for compositing the Davy Jones shot that they always bring up -- especially the smoke part. Everytime they mention it I'm like
(✨️👄✨️)
that smoke thing is one of the best details ever! love it so much every time I see it, does he know how much we love him for his work?
@@alfredogonzalez9420 Yes, I send him the videos whenever it's mentioned 😊
@@okashi10 yeii good to know, we must protect him at all cost
@@okashi10 i wish i knew of the people who worked on vfx shots more, Movies just get pumped out and vfx ppl are tirelessly working their butts off, they are one of the most underappreciated ppl in the industry i feel
@@DeRockMedia actors get all the fame and recognition while most often putting in the least effort
I love these interviews with SFX and CGI artists, who paved the way to where we are today. So interesting.
The way John spoke about each shot and his fellow artists that helped him for every piece of work, this is definitely a man thats passionate about his work and takes inspiration and awe from his fellow artists, I hope he continues to do what he loves
The moment I started watching this I thought: “That is the actor from the Men in Black Mailroom scene!” to then find out that he was but so much more known in the VFX world.
i thought the same exact thing.
This guy is amazing and clearly a fan of the show. Such a chill and knowledgeable dude.
Fun fact: The guest of this show played the role of an alien in Men in Black 2, and is one the aliens disguised as a postal-worker where K worked.
I knew his face looked familiar from some movie.
Great catch! And now that he's got a new episode they actually showed it and told the story!
I loved the aliens in MIB. They all feel so real because of how kooky they look. MIB design team made an important decision to blend CGI with practical makeup. The aliens in MIB that are “avatar-like” are done practically. Because making an alien that has humanish features that are skewed is hard in CGI. In opposite they made super not real not human aliens CGI because we have no basis.
Plus the aliens are SOOO creative and unique. It makes them pop even more.
Yeah, actually visualised the scene in my mind while reading this and it sure is him.
Maan what a legend. One of the OGs. Guys like him paved the vfx way and created tools for next generations. Please bring him and other pioneers as often as possible. Great watch as always
This is the best guest they have had on VFX React. Absolutely fantastic gentleman.
I’d love for you guys to do an entire episode about Terminator 2. I feel like there are so many different bits that even without the ones you’ve already covered (the morph flip, the T-1000 slipping thru the bars, etc), you’d have plenty to talk about.
Davy Jones will always and forever be one of if not, the best CGI character I've ever seen. For 2006 and them working on it for who knows how long before? That is incredible! Props to him and his team on that feat!
The VFX of Davy Jones will never cease to amaze me....
One of the things that has always impressed me was how well they did Robert Patrick. He has a very unique shape to his ears that I would imagine would be hard to render due to them coming out and up to a point, but they morphed it perfectly just like his fingers. I always wondered if that was something they took into account at the time.
I guarantee you there was at least one FX Artist working on T2 who was working on Robert Patrick's ears and specifically said "Fuck this guys ears" at some point after having to manually account for them for the 27th time lol
Every time I've watched T2 with my brother, that shot where he reverses himself always gets a laugh out of us! Such an amazing shot and serves the story in such a great way!
thats always the best part of the fight imo
After 31 years terminator 2 still has incredible visuals that have stood the test of time and it's amazing how they did it
Don't read my name....
@@dontreadmyprofilepicture960 i wont then
They should do more scenes from it, especially since it's such a landmark
This dude is super genuine, definitely bring him back 🙌
You guys get the BEST guests. John was incredibly insightful, and has some great maxims that guide his creativity. This might be one of my new favorites.
And let me say, when Wren and Niko's heads exploded, mine did too. That was a great way of distilling the essence of Vfx down to a few sentences, but in a way I'd never thought of before.
Hey John Berton Jr. You and the old team at ILM is the direct reason I have had a 21 year; - and going, career in sound design. Thank you for the inspiration!! :)
I was binge watching Pirates of the Caribbean for the first time during the AH v. JD trial and Davy Jones was one of the few times ever I thought, "wow, the CGI here is incredible". So much emotion.
C'mon man, that "It's morphing time" joke was right there, no way Wren could miss it. I actually would have complained if he hadn't said it. XD
Yeah but….you spent so much time wondering if Wren COULD make a Morphing Time Joke….but you never stopped to ask yourself, if Wren SHOULD make a Morphing Time Joke…
Must go faster, must go faster, The fly, goldblum.
He's too old for that...
@Don't read profile photo Sod off.
We all know he actually meant “it’s morbin time”
I loved the part when John morbed all over them.
during the whole episode I was struck by the fact that his face looks familiar.
the feeling triggers a MIB memory, i wonder if he modeled an alien after himself.
anyway, great episode as usual!
guy in the back of the post office in men in black 2 perhaps?
He has a cameo as one of the post office aliens in MIB II
Specifically, hes the alien in the mail room that splits in half
I had the same thing. He looks so familiar. Haven't seen MiB2 so that isn't it either.
Yes! Same here! He's the guy that splits in two in the back room of the post office!
This is my favourite episode in ages. A fantastic and insightful guest who's been doing it from the start.
Davy Jones will always be one of the best CGI characters ever made.
OG creators like John, Adam Savage, and Nick's dad and the likes are so refreshing, and i can spend hours listening to them talk about their experiences and the love for their craft, truly something else
This video with John was my favourite of all the experts and veterans you’ve gotten in. He was so eloquent, insightful and down to earth. Please get him back in the future.
Please! You Guys need to seriously consider doing a Star Trek episode!! You have multiple generations of tv and movies to choose from spanning any and all forms of sfx! I highly recommend doing the DS9 episode “Trials & Tribble-ations” where the modern crew go back in time to the OG series and they are actually seamlessly inserted into an old 60’s episode!
Seconded! I’d love to see that episode
Really good choice. And yes, a trek themed episode is long overdue. They could also look at the season finale of Strange New Worlds and compare the original series' episode Balance of Terror. Explain how the original episode created their effects practically, and how they went about recreating it like SNW did.
YES! Compare TOS with Strange New Worlds. The new show is AWESOME!
Yes! Excellent idea. Please do Star Trek!
Yesss that episode is brilliant
Corridor crew, i just wana say I freaking love this series. Like an unhealthy love possibly. I’m a digital member but I still wait til Saturday to watch the extended edition. I look forward to it every week and don’t want it to b over too soon.
Me too man. And this extended edition seemed *especially* extended. And I also watch on here just to make sure the algorithm counts my view and like.
@@adamplace1414 yup me too
I LOVED how he walked through the improvements from specific movie to specific movie.
I'd love to hear you guys do a vid on the VFX industry and how artists are getting overworked by studios all the time
Yeah, several artists have come out saying Marvel projects suck because they set unrealistic deadlines and expect perfect results
They would never step on the toes of the mouse
@@Biring1 Yes, they have people who've worked on Disney shows and often praise their work (rightfully so) but there's a lot of talk about artists unions and working hours which are ridiculous which I'd really like to hear from their point of view from considering that they are VFX artists but have essentially created their own studio and have established their own company culture.
I'm pretty amazed with the amount of insight and perspective that this show brings around the intricacies and history of VFX, and in a very down to the earth way, without sacrificing technicalities and thoughts around the artistic values of the discipline. Congratulations, big fan here 🙌🏼
I'd be interested to see a reaction video with Makeup Artists coming in to discuss good use of make up, prosthetics etc. Don't know how practical that'd be, but it'd be interesting to have a guest come in and breakdown scenes they've worked on that they found hard, or have regrets over.
Love the show guys, keep up the good work!
The Man. The Myth. The Legend. What I would give to learn from John. This was a great episode.
Steve The Spaz William is the guy that was secretly working on the 3D demo behind everyone's back.
Hey there! I normally don’t comment on things but I saw this comment and just had to add to this. He’s my current VFX Supervisor on a show at a certain company. I talk/joke with him everyday, and I learn so so much. Such a great guy, had me smiling from ear to ear watching him on screen. Glad to know he resonates the same with the rest of the world 🙌🏼
What an awesome guest, you've gotta get him back for another episode. It was great that he was willing to talk about the bad VFX shots and how they ended up the way they did, not everyone would be willing to do that.
That has to be the best episode of Vfx Artists yet John was a treasure trove of knowledge and the way he didn’t even make excuses for shots and how he captured my attention he absolutely needs to return
5:04 i always loved this shot, but now i am even more amazed, how much thought went into it and how well it was done!
You have Gods of Visual Effects on your show. Every guest has blown our minds at one time or another.
And a lot of them bring up things from other episodes so they definitely watch or did some research on the channel before visiting.
I feel like you guys are doing a legit great job of helping people find the magic in visual effects again. It's heartening to see people discuss it enthusiastically rather than cynically.
I remember seeing that John Berton in one of those 90s Behind the Magic type of shows, and between those shows, people like John, and CG films, got me wanting to be a 3D artist, it's been hell of a journey, but I am sort of doing what I set out to due thanks in part to OG wizards.
right on man, I was very artistic growing up and wanted to get into 3D art type of work, but life had other plans for me, kill those goals my guy!
You guys are documenting iconic history that will be enjoyed by viewers hundreds of years into the future. Thank you!
Seriously. This is important knowledge from experts to pass down to the next generation, and the boys are ensuring that knowledge is not lost.
This was the best guest spot you guys have had for a while. John's experience w/ ILM and all those movies was insane. More OGs. Thanks John for helping the Crew!
Let's just take a moment to understand just how big and amazing corridor has become. They aren't doing major Hollywood movies but look at all the people they have come through to give knowledge. Who recognize Sam, Nikko, and the rest of the team for what they do. Not only are they good at it but they are helping the next generation to learn by all these very experienced film makers. Honestly I wouldn't be surprised if they got a job to do scene in a major Hollywood movie soon. Not to mention they have pretty much become a school for special effects. To all the people who have worked for them and ones who watch to learn from them. I'm excited to see them keep growing and expanding.
Corridor found an unexploited niche, which is smart business. Everybody wants to talk to the actors and directors, but when was the last time you saw an effects artist or stuntman on a talk show? Corridor is able to attract these big but unknown names because they have zero competition.
This was fantastic! I found a couple shots from Ms. Marvel, the new marvel show on Disney Plus with a couple janky shots. In most scenes with Kamala Kahn (the main character) that use cgi platforms and parkour across those, the cgi render of Kamala used tends to be a little bit more rubbery than normal human movement. In Episode 2: Crushed, the scene from 7:49 - 8:03, this is shown very prominently, and the rubbery movement also shows up here. The same rubbery movement also shows up in Episode 6: No Normal, from 10:57 - 11:10, but the transition from the CG double to the live shot of her back works fantastically! I'd love to see this breakdown on one of these videos in the future!
second this! its always interesting to note on shows where there are a lot of effects to get done on a smaller (by mcu standards lol) budget where the time and money gets concentrated and where some corners are cut to put more resources into the other shots
how was the show? its the first MCU show i hadnt started yet despite me seeing everything they put out.
@@DeRockMedia It's actually pretty good :3 The creativity on display is phenomenal, even if it really isn't a "marvel" kind of marvel tv show
@@SylviaCrisp ya, i feel bad cuz i had 0 interest in the show, but i know Marvel will get me invested, i think thats why a big name from the movies help garner more attention (Banner for She-Hulk as example). Im going to have to binge it one of these weekends.
I mean, it IS a TV show not a full budget film, but still interesting to analyse
Ok guys... I am finally subscribing, because of this video. More of this please! I had the pleasure of working with John several years ago on a project that was shelved during pre production. I love that you guys are bringing in experts who can share their unique insights into our industry. ... but just so you know, I am not a fan of the earbud ads
One of the best episodes yet! I love when you guys get such a talented and awesome artist to join you, and tell their amazing stories and journey with VFX.
You can tell just how excited John is to talk about these scenes and his energy is so infectious throughout
One of my favorite episodes. Great guest! What joy he holds for his work!
i just watched “call of the wild” with harrison ford and the cg dogs sent my brain to vfx react. cg animals are a topic you guys have touched on frequently, but i think it would make for a fun episode if you did a whole stack of cgi animals scenes/films. G-force, garfield, scoobydoo (live action), charlottes web, are some i can think of. im not a movie guru but google is! could be fun
He really likes to explain stuff passionately and he is a great guy
Immediately recognized him, not as a special effects artist, but as the upper torso alien from the mail room in Men In Black II. Cool to know it was a cameo for the VFX artist. Makes me wonder if the other guys in the room were also artists who worked on the film!
T2 hands down is THE definitive Terminator film for me. My mom loved the movie as a kid and years later I am still enjoying this classic
Yeah I saw T2 before the first one and now my mind refuses to even believe that T2 isn’t the first movie. When I think of Terminator, I immediately think of T2.
I love them both but t800 always felt a bit neutered in T2 by John. Terminator 1 has always been my favorite but damn are they both great.
T1 is just the prequel which supplements the story of T2. T1 is not even necessary for it, just helpful.