Ah, well your the first person I've met in over a decade that doesn't.Originally posted by Jeff M. Hopper:
You're the first person I've ever read complain about Pink Floyd, so I'll consider that one as personal preference.

I say they're directly related. Couldn't be bothered coming up with a story when he thought a computer could do it for him. Lazy CGI to cover up plot holes, and awfully directed digital vomit at that. The effects were not honed as they were in SW. There was just more of them, and irritating they were too..Originally posted by Jeff M. Hopper:
George Lucas and the problems with The Phantom Menace were due to scripting, not special effects. So that analogy falls a bit flat, even though I agree that TPM was bantha poodoo.
Quite possibly, but I doubt it. He's too shy to direct live action. But you compare like with like. Ghibli films are orders of magnitude superior to anything Disney has done since 1979 (not including Pixar here), with huge teams of animators and full frame rates (ok, notwithstanding Hunchback of Notre Dame, which is pretty damn good). Manga is a case in point. You can hardly get a more limited medium than comic books.Originally posted by Jeff M. Hopper:
I'm a fan of Miyazaki, but wouldn't his talent shine just as well if he made live-action movies? Defining the medium as a limit is a bit soft here becuase Miyazaki has had critical success with manga as well as anime, but I understand what you are saying.
Sorry, but that doesn't make any sense. It doesn't imply that at all. That's just being defensive.Originally posted by Jeff M. Hopper:
While saying that a person may play Traveller however they wish while also saying that Traveller needs to be fixed and that however they are playing Traveller isn't right - it comes off as you inferring that if someone does not play Traveller in the manner which you are advocating is playing Traveller the wrong way. Seems awefully judgemental that inferance.
Sorry, just had to get a response in to those tangental queries...
And that, I guess, is that. Til next time, folks.
