Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Computers in Film
Movie Review of The Mask
One of my favorites movies would have to be The Mask (1994) starring Jim Carrey. Jim Carrey plays a man by the name of Stanley Ipkiss who is a bank clerk who is a pushover and is in love with a lounge singer (Cameron Diaz). “Stanley Ipkiss is a bank clerk that is an incredibly nice man. Unfortunately, he is too nice for his own good and is a pushover when it comes to confrontations. After one of the worst days of his life, he finds a mask that depicts Loki, the Norse night god of mischief. Now, when he puts it on, he becomes his inner, self: a cartoony romantic wild man. However, a small time crime boss, Dorian Tyrel, comes across this character dubbed "The Mask" by the media. After Ipkiss's alter ego indirectly kills his friend in crime, Tyrel now wants this green-faced goon destroyed,” http://imdb.com/title/tt0110475/).
While watching this movie the special effects made the movie good and funny. For example after
The special effects were developed mostly by Christopher Gilman Global Effects Inc. who had the prop masks, Cinelease who had additional production equipment provided, Columbia Records soundtrack published and EFX Systems digital sound and re-recording
The effects of this movie were much better than in the movie called Ace Ventura: Pet Detective which Jim Carrey also stars in. This movie really didn’t have any special effects since Ace Ventura: Pet Detective he man role is to find a stolen dolphin mascot of a football team. The effects of The Mask and another movie called The Number 23 were both good. In this movie Jim Carrey character is going nuts because he realizes that everything adds up to be the number 23. The special effects are shown by scene after another screen is flashbacks.
Three Facts that I learned:
The first fact I learned is how blue screens work. “This technique allows actors and scale models to find themselves in totally imaginary situations,” (http://www.howstuffworks.com/blue-screen.htm). This technique is used so often.
Wednesday, April 2, 2008
Investigation into Urban Legends
Urban legends are stories that are false but have recent events in them. According to American Heritage Dictionary urban legends An apocryphal story involving incidents of the recent past, often including elements of humor and horror, that spreads quickly and is popularly believed to be true,” (education.yahoo.com).
The first legend that I never heard of and that some people might fall for is about a shark leaping out and attacking a helicopter “National Geographic's Web site was deluged with hundreds of queries a day when an e-mail containing a photo of a shark leaping out of the water to attack a helicopter,” (http://news.nationalgeographic.com). People will believe this because of where they are finding this.
The second urban legend that I never heard of and that some people might fall for is The Pregnant Man. People might believe this is because this person was born a female.
“Mr. Beatie -- formerly Ms. Lagondino -- is a transgender person, born female, who had his outward features medically altered to achieve a more masculine appearance but kept his reproductive organs intact. He claims he became pregnant five months ago via artificial insemination,” (http://urbanlegends.about.com). Some people might not believe it because he had a sex operation to become a man.
The second urban legend that I never heard of and that some people might fall for is Chinese hacker riot. “The FBI's
To be honest most of the urban legends that are mentioned I haven’t heard of but there is one that I thought of while reading them. Now this might be one that most people know called “Bloody Mary.” The legend is that if you say her name three times in the mirror she will come out and attack you.
The reason that the Web is so prone to these types of “stories” is that everyone reads something on the Internet no matter where it is and what it is.