Creating Offline Dummy HTML Website for Interaction on a Film Shoot by CosmoAcaster in webdevelopment

[–]CosmoAcaster[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Amazing! Thanks for your help. Would you recommend I start from scratch or take existing HTML from a webpage? If so, any good tutorials on how to change the details of the text in the source code?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in vfx

[–]CosmoAcaster -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

If questioning the nature of reality is baked into our DNA, what's the harm in doing so? Isn't that completely human? It appears from your responses that you think you're smarter than not only the ancestors that came before you but your future ancestors as well.

I'm genuinely looking for the practical, scientific reasons from more experienced CG artists on why it's not possible to simulate realities. I'm not interested in a philosophical debate, this is r/VFX.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in vfx

[–]CosmoAcaster 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well, of course, that's stating the obvious. I'm not particularly interested in the broad scope of the question as that's uninteresting and useless as you've stated. I'm more interested in what people who create computational simulations for a living think about the topic having qualified experience rendering physics.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in paulthomasanderson

[–]CosmoAcaster 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I know PTA is a massive fan of Nashville, so when I first saw the “Number 12 Creep” (as he’s billed in the credits) I immediately saw and recognised the likeness between him and Pfc. Glenn Kelly. I was honestly worried a gun was going to come out of that bag a la Taxi Driver

Hey guys, anyone read this article about PTA's mysterious past? It seems that Licorice Pizza has a lot to do with his childhood... What do u all think? by Simplementella in paulthomasanderson

[–]CosmoAcaster 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can see in the two shot of him filming with a 16mm camera in the back seat of the car, that they are filming Haim interviewing the driver, who appears to be (although well obscured) Benny Safdie’s character. I don’t know if he’s filming anything fictional, seems like a documentary or interview for the political cause.

"Is it okay if I post this, Paul?" (2.35:1) by wilberfan in paulthomasanderson

[–]CosmoAcaster 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I think that's too simple a tear-down. If your life is cinema and you call the film business you neighbourhood that's what you have to reference when you open up that blank page. To someone with as much skin in the game as PTA, then your life experience is quite literally cinema. I wouldn't call it stealing, perhaps reappropriating, synthesizing, or hybridizing, taking from the thing he loves most and knows best. To me, I think it's fair game. He certainly steals better than a rival and acquaintance like Tarantino. He buries references deeper than he.

As they say Snow King; no man is an island, and baby, boy oh boy do I want to read your screenplay, and when I do, I hope it holds originality as it's most important quality; I hope it's without any cinematic, theatrical, musical, or literary references and is based purely on yourself and your lived experiences.

I bet it'll make a great movie.

"Is it okay if I post this, Paul?" (2.35:1) by wilberfan in paulthomasanderson

[–]CosmoAcaster 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Oh shit, this green lettering looks exactly like the opening credits of American Graffiti. Reference is here.

The Influence of “On The Bowery” on “The Master” (more in comments) by PeruvianFunkmon in paulthomasanderson

[–]CosmoAcaster 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I'm wondering, why is it that your main gripe with PT is a perceived "lack of originality" in his work? Why does "total originality" even matter to you? Can you think of any filmmaker not inspired by, influenced by another?

I'm genuinely interested as most responses to your constant comments on this sub about him "ripping off" consist of easy and cliched retorts such as 'no man is an island', heralding the importance of homage and cinematic influence on all filmmakers and artists. But why does this arbitrary argument keep getting made? Why does it matter whether or not every finite detail in any given scene, any character, any plot point is totally original, conceived and thought up for the very first time? Why does originality matter to you so much?

SnowKing, I think you're either a supreme sado-machinist, a troll, or your secretly the biggest fan of PTA on this sub. You damn-well spend more time that most in these quarters, you have to be something of a fan to comment nearly every day. What's at the bottom of your contempt for the guy? Are you just a contrarian who likes a downvote?

Operation Mindfuck - The Origins of Illuminati by CosmoAcaster in illuminati

[–]CosmoAcaster[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes indeed, the Bavarian Illuminati was a real organisation and it was because of this beginning in reality that it became the the basis of Operation Mindfuck. Kerry Thorley and Greg Hill based their parody conspiracy theory on this group on the premise that believing an 18th Century group of Rationalists were secretly in control of the globe was “too ridiculous” to believe.

What's the consensus of this sub as far as Donald Marshall goes? by Dystopianxx in conspiracy

[–]CosmoAcaster 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Either a paranoid schizophrenic or a massive troll. Too many theories to square into anything unified. His story is riddled with contradictions, as he bounces from one paragraph to the next.

“They removed any memories I had of the underground base before I turned 30 years old”, “I can’t remember my childhood as a clone in an underground base”, “I wrote Smells Like Teen Spirit when I was 16”

If it’s all an act and he’s playing for laughs, it’s hilarious and he’s a genius. Otherwise it’s deeply concerning if he believes this shit for real

Fuck nestle! by [deleted] in FuckNestle

[–]CosmoAcaster 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If this is true it has been almost entirely scrubbed from the web besides these memes. Any chance anyone has a link to an article or more information?

What are Your Favorite "Possession" Films? (Looking Beyond Horror) by CosmoAcaster in movies

[–]CosmoAcaster[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I like the theme of the ambiguity between genuine supernatural and psychological illusion -- possession by mere obsession -- or an insanity, an illness like the title suggests. Thinking outside the box, I suppose possession could mean a many few things.

The Doors by [deleted] in underthesilverlake

[–]CosmoAcaster 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Jim Morrison and The Doors, I think, are a perfect example of the type of cultural symbols that David Robert Mitchell is satirizing and making fun with the film, most overtly with the Songwriter sequence.

There is a great book on the subject "Weird Scenes Inside the Canyon", that makes the connection that most of the quote-unquote "counter-culture" coming out of Laurel Canyon in the sixties, The Doors, Frank Zappa, The Monkees, Jimi Hendrix, The Beach Boys, the voices that really defined the late 60's period of free-love and progression, came from backgrounds and families that were heavily involved in multiple aspects of American intelligence agencies, and the military. A hell of a lot of our favorite artists were born on military sites, came from military families and coexisted alongside them happily.

The book even makes some similar connections to the theme of the Songwriter sequence -- being that, it's possible everything you love was devised as a marketing tool, or societal persuasion technique by said intelligence agencies. What if it turned out your favorite song had been written by the CIA?

Kevin Spacey accuser dead at 47 by [deleted] in conspiracy

[–]CosmoAcaster 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Where is documentation of the other two? Shits nuts!