First 9 Minutes of Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse
32 replies, posted
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zzH4rV08TLI
If you haven't seen this movie yet, go see it!
Easily my favourite movie of 2018 if not the last decade. It's one of the only opening sequences where I've been hyped before they even shows anything.
Possibly my favorite superhero movie of all time. Definitely my favorite out of Marvel or DC.
fucking loved this movie. stunning in every way. (not a big superhero fan)
I want to see that movie, but I'm not sure if I can get used to that low FPS style. I kind of see what they were going for, but I wonder if fluid animation worked just fine.
Gives me a literal headache.
I unfortunately was not able to watch the movie when it first came out because I don't do movie theaters. But these nine minutes pushed me to buy it digitally. And you know what?
It was a hell of a time.
It's not about how many frames you have -- it's about what you do with what you got.
This movie's a masterclass in efficiency and deserves your attention.
Fantastic movie, so glad i saw it on the big screen
Is the 3D effect in this youtube clip? It feels like I'm seeing double on some things that are too close to/far from the camera
I really hope the movie isn't supposed to be like that
It's a stylistic choice, but you do bring up a good point. I wonder if the 3D version got mixed in a little somehow.
Could be the Chromatic Aberration the movie uses a lot
Aw man. I like the comic book artstyle but Chromatic Aberration is a cancer to my eyes. Makes me kinda torn on seeing the movie.
The CA seemed subtle enough for me to not feel bothered by it back when I watched this movie in theaters. Probably just a matter of preference, though.
That is chromatic aberration and is the new visual fetish that replaces using orange and teal in everything and is also hot garbage.
it's animated on 2s, which means instead of every frame moving, it moves every second frame, done intentionally to make it look more like a cartoon. it looks fine while watching the movie
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jEXUG_vN540
I don't know about you but I barely noticed it in the movie. Its worse in video games because you have to actually interact and look at a screen up close, but in Spider-Verse it's applied pretty well.
it took a little getting used to for the first few minutes of the movie for me but my eyes adjusted fairly quickly. You should check it out, this is truly a must see movie.
It's a totally different thing in this movie, it's used in place of lens blurs for DoF. Just like they used smears instead of motion blurs
I'm not really into superhero movies but I really liked this one
Come on, I can understand the meme about 30 FPS being unplayable; but now even animation is unwatchable at 15 FPS? Why do I feel like nobody complained about this stylistic choice before high fps in game became the standard?
TBH my biggest complaint was the shading style that made it look like the theater I was in accidentally showed the 3d version in a regular theater. It bugged me to no end for the first 30 minutes because I thought I had missed the part where the attendants gave us the 3d glasses.
Still a fantastic movie though.
I don't mean to nitpick, but I just found it incredibly hilarious the juxtaposition between statement and particular frame they used for this. I immediately noticed it when I watched the video - in fact, I had to back it up to double-check I wasn't seeing things.
https://files.facepunch.com/forum/upload/107272/e360d6e1-41f8-48d9-aa33-edb4d8ec6cf5/image.png
I've dealt with enough UV seams over the years to have developed a sensitive eye for them. Spotting them in animated films is always a joy.
I think the weirdest part about this is the fact that the seam is at a spot that's one of the least likely areas for seams to show up on.
I've literally only seen one other model form use seams there, and those are the Daz Genesis bodies.
Never seen it anywhere else. For good reason - because it's a dumb place to put them! They're obvious to spot.
But its the most detailed uv seam I've ever seen!
I'm not convinced that's a UV seam but the pattern on there is relatively complex. So if it is a seam, I think it hides itself well, nobody will see that in movement.
Looks more like texture stretching than a uv seam
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