The following contains spoilers for The Flash, in cinemas now.
The Flash used audio clips ripped from YouTube as the basis for some of its biggest legacy DC Universe cameos, according to supervising sound editor, Nancy Nugent.
Nugent confirmed that her team sourced the vocals for cameos by the likes of Christopher Reeve's Superman and Adam West's Batman from YouTube in an interview with Screen Rant. "I'll tell you the truth: a lot of them were pulled from YouTube," she said. "[We were] finding those old clips, and then it was a matter of removing music if there was music tied to it, or just cleaning it up. Because it was such a design-y moment and there was music going on, we could hide a lot of that. Whereas if it was just playing by itself, [it] might require us digging deeper into the archives--if that stuff even existed. Really, it...
The Flash used audio clips ripped from YouTube as the basis for some of its biggest legacy DC Universe cameos, according to supervising sound editor, Nancy Nugent.
Nugent confirmed that her team sourced the vocals for cameos by the likes of Christopher Reeve's Superman and Adam West's Batman from YouTube in an interview with Screen Rant. "I'll tell you the truth: a lot of them were pulled from YouTube," she said. "[We were] finding those old clips, and then it was a matter of removing music if there was music tied to it, or just cleaning it up. Because it was such a design-y moment and there was music going on, we could hide a lot of that. Whereas if it was just playing by itself, [it] might require us digging deeper into the archives--if that stuff even existed. Really, it...
- 6/27/2023
- by Leon Miller
- CBR
The Flash could be an overwhelming failure that proves costly for Warner Bros. Discovery.
Per Twitter user Luis Fernando, The Flash managed to cross the $200 million mark globally in its second weekend at the box office; however, the $200 million budgeted DC Extended Universe film, which saw a 72% drop off at the U.S. box office, could potentially lose that exact amount. With a marketing campaign reportedly costing $150 million and a $190 million production budget, Fernando claims that The Flash may go down as the worst "financial catastrophe" since Justice League in 2017. Additionally, Fernando believes that Warner Bros. Discovery could have lost less money by putting The Flash straight to Max instead of a theatrical release.
Related: The Flash Addresses Fans' Biggest Batman Criticism - In the Wrong Movie
Painful, but needs to be mentioned: if #TheFlash ends up within the projection,since studio just keeps half share from #BoxOffice global grosses,...
Per Twitter user Luis Fernando, The Flash managed to cross the $200 million mark globally in its second weekend at the box office; however, the $200 million budgeted DC Extended Universe film, which saw a 72% drop off at the U.S. box office, could potentially lose that exact amount. With a marketing campaign reportedly costing $150 million and a $190 million production budget, Fernando claims that The Flash may go down as the worst "financial catastrophe" since Justice League in 2017. Additionally, Fernando believes that Warner Bros. Discovery could have lost less money by putting The Flash straight to Max instead of a theatrical release.
Related: The Flash Addresses Fans' Biggest Batman Criticism - In the Wrong Movie
Painful, but needs to be mentioned: if #TheFlash ends up within the projection,since studio just keeps half share from #BoxOffice global grosses,...
- 6/27/2023
- by André Joseph
- CBR
The following contains spoilers for The Flash, in cinemas now.
The Flash visual effects artist Zach Mulligan recently unpacked the real reason that many of the DC Universe blockbuster's CGI shots look so unconvincing.
Mulligan attributed The Flash's "poor" CGI to Hollywood's bidding process in a video shared on TikTok. "[Studios] will approach VFX companies and say, 'Hey, I have 2000 shots I need for this sequence' and the VFX studios will place a bid based on that quantity of shots," he said. "But here's the catch: the amount of work per shot varies dramatically. So one shot could have a wire removal, another shot could have wire removal, smoke [simulation], fire [simulation], face replacement [and] green screen. Despite the difference in workload between those two shots, they both are considered just one shot each."
Related: The Flash Star Sasha Calle Thanks Batgirl’s Leslie Grace For Her Guidance
@no_the_robot The bad...
The Flash visual effects artist Zach Mulligan recently unpacked the real reason that many of the DC Universe blockbuster's CGI shots look so unconvincing.
Mulligan attributed The Flash's "poor" CGI to Hollywood's bidding process in a video shared on TikTok. "[Studios] will approach VFX companies and say, 'Hey, I have 2000 shots I need for this sequence' and the VFX studios will place a bid based on that quantity of shots," he said. "But here's the catch: the amount of work per shot varies dramatically. So one shot could have a wire removal, another shot could have wire removal, smoke [simulation], fire [simulation], face replacement [and] green screen. Despite the difference in workload between those two shots, they both are considered just one shot each."
Related: The Flash Star Sasha Calle Thanks Batgirl’s Leslie Grace For Her Guidance
@no_the_robot The bad...
- 6/23/2023
- by Leon Miller
- CBR
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