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trancintaiwan
golf and trance fanatic

Registered: Aug 2003
Location: from New Jersey, in NEW YORK CITY
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Dec-13-2005 11:37
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partyhopper
NYTA Senior Citizen

Registered: Mar 2004
Location: All the wrong places
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Happy Birthday Hai Lee!
Time to get crunked!
Let the debauchery begin! 
___________________
Cities clubbed in:
North America: NYC, Miami, Boston, LA, San Francisco, Chicago, DC,
Baltimore, Atlanta, Philly, Toronto, Montreal, San Juan, Columbus, Seattle,
Vancouver, New Orleans, Minneapolis, Las Vegas
Rest of world: Ibiza, London, Amsterdam, Berlin, Singapore, Seoul, Tokyo, Taipei,
Zagreb, Bangkok, Rio de Janeiro
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Dec-13-2005 14:35
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Highmay
of the Flying Highmays
Registered: Sep 2002
Location: Studio Cinecitta
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Tron was one of the first movies to use long computer-generated sequences. About thirty minutes of computer-generated animation (blended with the filmed characters) were used. Though the movie has been criticized for woodenness of acting and — perhaps unjustly — incoherence of plot, the movie is celebrated as a milestone of computer animation.
To be able to create the film, Disney turned to Triple I who owned the Super Foonly F-1, the fastest PDP-10 ever made (and the only one of its kind) as well as MAGI and a number of other companies.
The film, however, contains less computer-generated imagery than is generally supposed. Many of the effects that look like computer graphics were created using traditional optical effects. In a technique known as "backlit animation," the live-action scenes inside the computer world were filmed in black-and-white, printed on large-format high-contrast film, then colorized with traditional photographic and rotoscopic techniques to give them a "technological" feel. The process was immensely labor-intensive, and would never be repeated for another feature film; with multiple layers of high-contrast large-format positives and negatives, it required truckloads of sheet film, and a workload greater than even that of a conventional cel-animated feature.
Renowned French comic book artist, Jean Giraud (a.k.a. Moebius), was the main set and costume designer for the movie; most vehicles were created by industrial designer Syd Mead, of Blade Runner fame.
___________________
Toooo beeee geeeeeiiiisha...u mus hav abirity...stop men ded in twak...
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Dec-13-2005 15:00
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