The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button has not been met with unanimous praise from the punters, despite its success picking up gongs, globes, masks and probably very soon some Oscars.
However, it would be hard to deny that the VFX work within the film is brilliant, and this micro-site allows you to delve deeper into the methods they used to age and reverse-age the actors in this film.
I truly believe that top-flight VFX work (when used appropriately of course!) allows filmmakers to realise their wildest visions on screen, and is constantly knocking down visual barriers and frontiers. Check out the site, and see what you think.
However, it would be hard to deny that the VFX work within the film is brilliant, and this micro-site allows you to delve deeper into the methods they used to age and reverse-age the actors in this film.
I truly believe that top-flight VFX work (when used appropriately of course!) allows filmmakers to realise their wildest visions on screen, and is constantly knocking down visual barriers and frontiers. Check out the site, and see what you think.
3 comments:
Sic and amazing and wrong.
Fincher is tooo cooool for schooool.
How do you even arrive at that?
Calculating eyeline and....
WANT.
The Bi-Curious Case Of Benjamin's Bottom. That's all well and good. I agree that visual effects are an amazing tool for imaginative directors like David Fincher, but to make a film that is basically an age reversal gimmick with no ounce of substance in it is unforgivable of the man. He should stop wasting his time trying to achieve Oscar glory (which he doesn't deserve for this film) and stick to what he's good at. Lets hope some of the rumours are true and that his next project will either be Charles Burns' 'Black Hole' or Arthur C Clarkes "Rendezvous With Rama'. Now those are VFX films.
Someone's teething...
;)
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