#video games
Fellow players of Skyrim, raise your hand! I always find it hilarious how brave the horses are in this game. My horse who I lovingly call Snowflake has ran ahead of me to fight dragons many times.
So I made a GMV, my very first one, and I’ve been going back and forth on whether I should post it to YouTube or not. I’m also not entirely sure how I would do that without a copyright ban for the song? Could someone enlighten me as to how I could do this?
I realise that doing so in any convincing fashion is well outside of a TV show’s budget, but Idesperately want to see What We Do in the Shadows’ take on one of those video game style nine-foot-tall vampire lords (e.g., Lady Dimitrescu, Castlevania Dracula, etc.), purely because I’m curious about what sort of physical comedy they’d be able to wring out of the scenario.
what if it’s just like… a six and a half foot vampire who’s trying to pull a reverse napoleon by surrounding herself with a squad of short kings to just make herself LOOK taller, and buying small furniture and part of the joke is that she tells people she’s eight foot six?
Okay, that’s a completely different sort of comedy than what I was picturing, but honestly it would probably be a better fit for the show.
Today’s aesthetic: open world RPGs where it’s extremely obvious that the writers didn’t actually intend for it to be super gay, they just straight up forgot that it’s possible for the player character to be a girl.
Today’s aesthetic: open world RPGs where it’s extremely obvious that the writers didn’t actually intend for it to be super gay, they just straight up forgot that it’s possible for the player character to be a girl.
I realise that doing so in any convincing fashion is well outside of a TV show’s budget, but Idesperately want to see What We Do in the Shadows’ take on one of those video game style nine-foot-tall vampire lords (e.g., Lady Dimitrescu, Castlevania Dracula, etc.), purely because I’m curious about what sort of physical comedy they’d be able to wring out of the scenario.
Listen if movies like Darby O'gil and The Little People could make special effects standing the test of time then a modern show like/akin to What We Do in the Shadows could as well with a bit of forced perspective, platform boots, and a tall person in a house built for short people
The idea that practical effect are typically cheaper than CGI is a frequent misconception. It’s often precisely the other way ‘round – especially for scenarios like this one, which would require the construction of entire sets that would only be used for one episode; though scaled-down houses do exist, the production couldn’t just rent one as a shooting location, for the obvious reason that there’d be no room for the camera crew to stand.