About: Fight Unscene   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

In animation, cool fight scenes draw an audience -- but are expensive to create. There are two ways to handle this: pour most of your budget into the fight scenes or use lots and lots of tricks. These tricks include tight first-person perspectives, eliminating backgrounds, and making sure there's as little actual contact as possible. There may also be a censorship aspect to it, if the fight would otherwise look brutal. Typically The Movie will ditch these gimmicks entirely due to the amount of money that inevitably gets put into such projects. Examples of Fight Unscene include:

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  • Fight Unscene
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  • In animation, cool fight scenes draw an audience -- but are expensive to create. There are two ways to handle this: pour most of your budget into the fight scenes or use lots and lots of tricks. These tricks include tight first-person perspectives, eliminating backgrounds, and making sure there's as little actual contact as possible. There may also be a censorship aspect to it, if the fight would otherwise look brutal. Typically The Movie will ditch these gimmicks entirely due to the amount of money that inevitably gets put into such projects. Examples of Fight Unscene include:
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  • In animation, cool fight scenes draw an audience -- but are expensive to create. There are two ways to handle this: pour most of your budget into the fight scenes or use lots and lots of tricks. These tricks include tight first-person perspectives, eliminating backgrounds, and making sure there's as little actual contact as possible. There may also be a censorship aspect to it, if the fight would otherwise look brutal. Making a virtue of necessity, characters may "move too fast to be seen!" as one of their in-world powers. Ideally, they move between static poses in a split second and dramatically hold those poses for many frames, with the melee replaced by a Hit Flash. Typically The Movie will ditch these gimmicks entirely due to the amount of money that inevitably gets put into such projects. Can also be Played for Laughs as a kind of Gilligan Cut - Bob threatens to beat Charlie up, and the next thing we see is Bob being wheeled into an ambulance. Compare Relax-O-Vision, Offscreen Moment of Awesome, Coconut Superpowers, and The Hit Flash. See also Bolivian Army Ending, Charge Into Combat Cut, Fight Scene Failure and Take Our Word for It. When a scene is skipped entirely and only described afterwords, it is Second Hand Storytelling instead. Examples of Fight Unscene include:
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