Quanzhi Gaoshou
- Série télévisée
- 2019
- 45min
NOTE IMDb
8,1/10
1,8 k
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueYe Xiu (Yang Yang) is a well known top tier player in an online game Glory. After forcefully expelled out of his professional team, he was employed in an Internet Cafe as an odd-job worker.Ye Xiu (Yang Yang) is a well known top tier player in an online game Glory. After forcefully expelled out of his professional team, he was employed in an Internet Cafe as an odd-job worker.Ye Xiu (Yang Yang) is a well known top tier player in an online game Glory. After forcefully expelled out of his professional team, he was employed in an Internet Cafe as an odd-job worker.
- Récompenses
- 17 victoires et 4 nominations au total
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The series use UE4 to demonstrate real-time, full-body motion capture, and get realistic facial expressions by 3D scan in real time. which is better to show the game world. Almost 3A games could not achieve it. It includes more than 300 minutes CG in the total series. It is more creative and amazing than I imagine.
Completely stunned by the gaming scenes! Some of the best mocap combined with CG rendering. In my view even better than some Hollywood productions. The story is fascinating and extremely well told, completed by equally amazing editing and background music. The crown jewel is hands down the lead actor Yang Yang, who convincingly starred the once-famous esports player and effortlessly portrayed his inspiring comeback story. And his face, oh his face! A young Cruise/Reeves!
This series is really one of a kind, no love lines, no violence or fantasy elements, just telling ordinary stories of ordinary people, but the message is delivered in such a powerful and dedicated way. Cinematography is surprisingly good. Stunning CG. Fresh and lively cast acting.
As a reader of the original novel (still in the process of watching the Anime & Donghua) I must start by saying there were parts of this film that I found pretty off-putting. For example, I was disgruntled that Liu Hao (such a key antagonist, IMO) was written out of the story. And don't even get me started on Chen Guo's character! I deducted a whole star just because of her. :( Don't get me wrong, the actress who played her was fine, but I hated the fact that her personality was made so weirdly clingy and airheaded. It was impossible to relate her to the original Chen Guo at all. I also thought the interior of Happy Internet Cafe was completely unrealistic (honestly, who could game properly with all that ambient light glaring off the screens?)
That being said, if I had watched this series before reading the novel, I probably would have loved it. Even with all my nit-picks, it was still great. The cast, script, CG and soundtrack were pretty darn near perfect. Even the added content was surprisingly solid. For example, the flashbacks with Muqiu, and those little philosophical object lessons Ye Xiu used to explain things to people. And I was grateful that the added/altered parts with Ye Xiu's family brought some much needed emotional depth and humanity to the story and Ye Xiu himself (the novel really didn't provide much character development for him as a person).
I will also say that I'm SO glad the writers didn't try to add any romance, and kept the interpersonal dynamics ambiguous, just like in the book. I really hope they'll make a season 2, because there's still tons of story left. I would absolutely watch it in an instant!
That being said, if I had watched this series before reading the novel, I probably would have loved it. Even with all my nit-picks, it was still great. The cast, script, CG and soundtrack were pretty darn near perfect. Even the added content was surprisingly solid. For example, the flashbacks with Muqiu, and those little philosophical object lessons Ye Xiu used to explain things to people. And I was grateful that the added/altered parts with Ye Xiu's family brought some much needed emotional depth and humanity to the story and Ye Xiu himself (the novel really didn't provide much character development for him as a person).
I will also say that I'm SO glad the writers didn't try to add any romance, and kept the interpersonal dynamics ambiguous, just like in the book. I really hope they'll make a season 2, because there's still tons of story left. I would absolutely watch it in an instant!
Fans of the original novel, the donghua (animation) or the manhua (comic/manga) may at first be irritated with some of the changes to characters and story lines, as well as some of the deliberately skipped over bits that developed those characters.
(I know I was at first.)
HOWEVER:
After you get past that and treat it on it's own it's an engaging story and about as good an adaption as you're going to get. (Not to say it's great, but the bar has been set pretty low for live action adaptations of manga/anime) There were some obvious errors in the game side animation in competitions (3 battle mages together, but the icons on the mini-map show 2 battle mages and someone with a gun icon for example) but you can pretty much brush that off. The actors well well chosen and performed their roles well, Story wise a several events that occur later in the story were brought forward, but I am assuming that's because there may not be a 2nd season. (1st season is 40 episodes). On the actor side as I mentioned they matched actors to roles rather well, though I was personally irritated by them writing Chen Guo as a different type of personality in several parts, the actor who was playing her did well. As a westerner watching it was somewhat weird however to see many of the actors in the Live Action actually had their voices dubbed over by the voice actors of the Donghua. (Everyone's favourite mouthy Blade-Master is a good example).
Another change from the originals is the game being in a timed format. I am not sure this was a good choice as I feel it cut them off from some potential options game-side if they go further. They also over-explain some areas and just brush past others, so there are moments when you have to just take a leap of faith on what's happening.
Over-all I'd rate it a good watch, (provided you are taking it as itself, and not an adaptation of the source material) the only real downside. And it's a majour one, is that the official English subtitles are .. well .. complete crap. They are inconsistent, there are actual typos and spelling mistakes throughout. (As in a basic spell-check would have flagged them). They also read, word choice wise, like they were done by Google Translate. I am hoping they re-release it with a better calibre of subtitle. (Having a single native English speaker read through the script once, and run press F7 in word would fix 75% of it) The subtitles were obviously done by someone with English as a distant second language, and no knowledge of the gaming terminology he's translating in parts. My suggestion is either develop some thick skin when watching, wait for a re-release, or find some good fan-subs out there.
As an aside, the music is fantastic, a little over-used of the same music, but it's still beautiful. My hats off to composer/performer.
Hope this helps.
(I know I was at first.)
HOWEVER:
After you get past that and treat it on it's own it's an engaging story and about as good an adaption as you're going to get. (Not to say it's great, but the bar has been set pretty low for live action adaptations of manga/anime) There were some obvious errors in the game side animation in competitions (3 battle mages together, but the icons on the mini-map show 2 battle mages and someone with a gun icon for example) but you can pretty much brush that off. The actors well well chosen and performed their roles well, Story wise a several events that occur later in the story were brought forward, but I am assuming that's because there may not be a 2nd season. (1st season is 40 episodes). On the actor side as I mentioned they matched actors to roles rather well, though I was personally irritated by them writing Chen Guo as a different type of personality in several parts, the actor who was playing her did well. As a westerner watching it was somewhat weird however to see many of the actors in the Live Action actually had their voices dubbed over by the voice actors of the Donghua. (Everyone's favourite mouthy Blade-Master is a good example).
Another change from the originals is the game being in a timed format. I am not sure this was a good choice as I feel it cut them off from some potential options game-side if they go further. They also over-explain some areas and just brush past others, so there are moments when you have to just take a leap of faith on what's happening.
Over-all I'd rate it a good watch, (provided you are taking it as itself, and not an adaptation of the source material) the only real downside. And it's a majour one, is that the official English subtitles are .. well .. complete crap. They are inconsistent, there are actual typos and spelling mistakes throughout. (As in a basic spell-check would have flagged them). They also read, word choice wise, like they were done by Google Translate. I am hoping they re-release it with a better calibre of subtitle. (Having a single native English speaker read through the script once, and run press F7 in word would fix 75% of it) The subtitles were obviously done by someone with English as a distant second language, and no knowledge of the gaming terminology he's translating in parts. My suggestion is either develop some thick skin when watching, wait for a re-release, or find some good fan-subs out there.
As an aside, the music is fantastic, a little over-used of the same music, but it's still beautiful. My hats off to composer/performer.
Hope this helps.
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Détails
- Durée45 minutes
- Couleur
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