Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaAlloy is given the glimpse of the future and the only way for this madness to end is to collapse the universe and began again. Witness the waking, the rebirth, and the future.Alloy is given the glimpse of the future and the only way for this madness to end is to collapse the universe and began again. Witness the waking, the rebirth, and the future.Alloy is given the glimpse of the future and the only way for this madness to end is to collapse the universe and began again. Witness the waking, the rebirth, and the future.
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10fatbelly
I like this film a lot, only discovered it this year, I've Alysa's had the taste of electronic music and the weird visuals which I love, but not supposed to say because you'll have to Watch it yourself. Thomas Dolby is a musical genius as everybody else may have said, the former mad scientist who composed Hyperactive! and that video was funny, strange, but good and May The Cube Be With You which is also great, I like his music, but haven't the other film he composed which was Gothic, got the album, but never played it. This film was forgotten because most people like proper movies rather than musicals, but I liked it.
10hristo-3
I remember short scenes from this movie being aired on TV1000 (or was it CANAL+?) when I was younger. I had just bought a book on ray-tracing and was wondering how did they do that outstanding animation when it took an hour of my puny PC to render just a simple scene. I never knew the name of the movie - they just aired uncredited parts of it on the TV to fill the gaps in the schedule. Some days ago I found it by chance and I'm very happy - it brought me back to my happier childhood :)
Overall - great music and great animation. Very advanced CGI scenes for the time of its making. And the music blends flawlessly with the video. It's definitely not some random 3DS Max video & electronic sound compilation like the ones creeping around nowadays.
Overall - great music and great animation. Very advanced CGI scenes for the time of its making. And the music blends flawlessly with the video. It's definitely not some random 3DS Max video & electronic sound compilation like the ones creeping around nowadays.
For those that remember Thomas Dolby only for "She Blinded Me with Science", you have a real suprise and treat in store. Dolby has moved on and shown how good he really is, doing the score for this movie. Part of the reason I go on about this is I discovered the soundtrack before purchasing the video (and later DVD).
The computer animation for 1994 is very well done. It could probably be done in real time today, but it's certainly very impressive even today at the detail that was done. The journey starts with the end of the world, moving along though the birth of a new world, following evolution and history, with Dolby's brilliant music helping set the tone and the pace.
The blend of music and art makes it a must buy. No extra features, it's not even 5.1, probably one of the first DVDs made. But it's still worth it.
The computer animation for 1994 is very well done. It could probably be done in real time today, but it's certainly very impressive even today at the detail that was done. The journey starts with the end of the world, moving along though the birth of a new world, following evolution and history, with Dolby's brilliant music helping set the tone and the pace.
The blend of music and art makes it a must buy. No extra features, it's not even 5.1, probably one of the first DVDs made. But it's still worth it.
In the early '90s computer animation was beginning to take hold and one-hour films like this would feature this new technology. There is supposed to be a story here, but good luck finding it. The fun is in the visuals which range from good to outstanding. My favorite segment is the music one with the jazz players and Washington-Lincoln.
Speaking of music, not all of it is the standard instrumentals. There are a couple of vocals. There also is some short narration. The whole thing is about 45 minutes with 10 minutes of ending credits tacked on.
This may be over a decade old in a technology that has grown leaps and bounds, but it's still good stuff and worth checking out.
Speaking of music, not all of it is the standard instrumentals. There are a couple of vocals. There also is some short narration. The whole thing is about 45 minutes with 10 minutes of ending credits tacked on.
This may be over a decade old in a technology that has grown leaps and bounds, but it's still good stuff and worth checking out.
It rocks man! Perfect stuff to put on the tv screen with the sound off and play comething on the stereo! The images seem to go with any music! The city scapes look like Blade Runner. It's better than that stuff in Lawnmower Man! Lots of emryo-like images...
Lo sapevi?
- QuizDuring the "Valley of the Mind's Eye" segment, sung by Thomas Dolby, the opera stars shown appear to be, successively:
- Bolshoi Theatre, Moscow: Feodor Chaliapin Sr. as Boris Godunov, composed by Modest Mussorgsky
- Covent Garden Opera House, London: Adelina Patti (1865)
- L'Opéra, Paris: Boris Christoff as Don Carlos (1962), by Giuseppe Verdi
- Metropolitan Opera, New York: Rosa Ponselle as La Gioconda (1924), by Amilcare Ponchielli
- La Scala, Milan: Luciano Pavarotti as Radamès in Aida, by Verdi
- Sydney Opera House: Joan Sutherland as Lucrezia Borgia (1980), by Gaetano Donizetti
- ConnessioniEdited from Mémoires de pierres (1992)
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