DetritusMaximus wrote:Ambient enhancements, like adding dust, removing stunt safety equipment and adjusting color, is fine. The problem with using cgi is that once a director/producer goes down that path things start to get silly. They begin stretching the believability of the action, it's just too easy to go for 'a little bit more'. The appeal of Mad Max was the gritty realism of that world. The wrong application of cgi and that realism is lost and it just becomes a cartoon. Look how Fast and Furious has to keep trying to top themselves with each movie. It started off silly and just got worse.
I would be willing to bet that the two sides of the cgi argument (in general, not necessarily this film) can probably be divided along age related lines. The older crowd knows it's fake and it detracts, the younger has been raised on cgi movies, anime and incredibly detailed video games so they don't see a problem. In fact, maybe they don't see a distinction any more, it's just all the same.
Nailed it.
I'm not opposed to the idea of CGI to literally "enhance" the feeling/mood etc. But as DM eloquently stated, CGI opens the door to things ala Matrix where people are running up walls, and breaking every other physical laws. And then it just needlessly eliminates the raw power of the film. The best work to describe it is "grit."
Grit doesn't happen when cars are parachuting out of the back of C130s with the characters mocking and joking around like it's a big game. Grit doesn't happen when characters are bending this way and that dodging bullets, running up walls, and levitating 4' off the ground during their roundhouse kicks.
We all have a natural sense of the laws of physics in a movie. No need to embellish the MM world with needless CGI. While I don't know what happens to the guy jumping full spread between the two vehicles, from the back of the tanker to the front of the car, arms spread open, high rate of speed, etc, if it's anything but horrific death then that's a strike against the film because in the real world that person just committed suicide and suffers a mangling horrific immediate death.
While I've not seen the film, I remain cautiously pessimistic about it, and the claims about "all real stunts." Exhibit A. Clearly the guy jumping from the truck to the car is NOT a real stunt, in that he didn't actually do that. So, that's a half-truth or lie. My guess is that was done on a green screen and inserted. Or there were other safety wires and harnesses, slower speed, etc. Again, cheating. Not a stunt, as they are intended.
Folks here are critical of ME personally, lobbing personal attacks rather than addressing the ISSUE raised. That's a common thing for people who cannot debate an ISSUE. Most people here have not seen the film, and nobody has seen the final version. So we're all entitled to have our own, relatively uninformed, opinions. For those that attack me as being too harsh, have you considered that you're just a fanboy lapdog eager to drink whatever is poured down your gullet without a discerning or thoughtful eye to quality. I'd much rather have NO sequel, than a poorly done sequel. And most would agree there is plenty to question in this one (notably the 30 years delay, the over-production and total costs, location choices, cast including Tom Hardy, the voiceovers, the BOB return and destruction, the changes in character background needlessly, and a host of other issues)...
Some folks here remind me of a product fan who will buy anything a company puts out no matter the quality or reviews, like the people that line up for the newest $600 Apple Iphone just to have it. To each their own, but that is some level of "fandom" that is irrational...
Many here seem so eager for a movie, they don't care about the QUALITY. But my well-formed fear of the overuse of CGI is based on the fact that the number of movies with actual good CGI are very few. The overwhelming number of films - those that are amazing and stand the test of time - which is what I hope for in MM4 - there are very few actually great FILMS that rely or use CGI. I can't think of many. Heck, Star Wars and many other franchises were ruined by CGI.