For those interested in learning more about cgi and vfx check out the YouTube channel Corridor Crew those guys do some great breakdowns of special and practical effects.
Also do stunt scenes as well, just a great series in generalOrome said:
For those interested in learning more about cgi and vfx check out the YouTube channel Corridor Crew those guys do some great breakdowns of special and practical effects.
Definitely a bummer, I've watched it every Friday night with my daughter and it's been a fantastic experience for us both. I was blown away how into she was. Andor is too grown up for her at this point, so we're searching out a new Friday night show.redline248 said:
Coming home after taking the kids to school but not having Rings of Power to watch is weak
C@LAg said:
https://www.businessinsider.in/tech/news/does-amazon-have-a-1-billion-flop-on-its-hands-poor-ratings-for-the-rings-of-power-tv-series-are-beginning-to-worry-wall-street-/articleshow/94105848.cms
BI is a legitimate source but damn this has some hyperbole init.
PatAg said:
With prime video being tired to the rest of amazon prime, I imagine just looking at subscriber gain/loss is not as accurate as other streaming sites. Surely they have a way to tell the difference in engagement with the Prime Video portion of the site, and hours watched. There must also be some value in driving engagement with that portion of the site, even if its just something to do with advertising dollars.
PatAg said:
I would say your ignoring whatever value the prestige of having a "top show" represents
So you have almost everything backwards in your postOl Jock 99 said:
Haven't watched the video yet, but it would be interesting legally as the showrunners apparently don't have license for 3rd age stuff, and Gandalf doesn't appear until the 3rd age in all source materials.
Oops. I did say "apparently". So they DON'T have Silmarillion/Unfinished/etc? Only the back of the trilogy?powerbelly said:
They have license to the third age stuff, they don't have license to any second age stuff not in the appendices.
Quote:
So what did Amazon buy? "We have the rights solely to The Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers, The Return of the King, the appendices, and The Hobbit," Payne says. "And that is it. We do not have the rights to The Silmarillion, Unfinished Tales, The History of Middle-earth, or any of those other books."
If we assume each of those estimated 120-150 million viewership hours was smeone buying a month of membership. Using a three hour movie, and a minimum of a month of subscription.Quote:
Look at The Irishman. Widely critically acclaimed and nominated for several Oscars IIRC, but it had a $160 million budget and generated maybe 120-150 million viewership hours. Prestigious, but not really money well spent unless Netflix sees something in viewership data that says it boosted viewership elsewhere.
And if its not him after those scenes, it's just bad storytelling.bobinator said:
This is exactly why it's definitely Gandalf.
whatBrian Earl Spilner said:
Or, they were simple nods for the fans.
M.C. Swag said:
Lol like it would be borderline disrespectful to the people who love the films to lay all that groundwork as nothing but misdirection.
M.C. Swag said:
I haven't watched the video but I swear if the Stranger ISN'T Gandalf...then Idk what tf the show was doing by trolling the audience with all of Gandalf's sayings/mannerisms/etc. Lol like it would be borderline disrespectful to the people who love the films to lay all that groundwork as nothing but misdirection.
TCTTS said:M.C. Swag said:
I haven't watched the video but I swear if the Stranger ISN'T Gandalf...then Idk what tf the show was doing by trolling the audience with all of Gandalf's sayings/mannerisms/etc. Lol like it would be borderline disrespectful to the people who love the films to lay all that groundwork as nothing but misdirection.
Is it possible that if the character is a blue wizard, he and Gandalf eventually meet, and maybe Gandalf gets a saying or two from him? Almost like a mentor of sorts? Not that we'd ever have to see that relationship, but maybe by series' end they hint at it to come?
gggmann said:
Considering Amazon just announced they are sidelining the showrunners and retooling the show, I guess he could turn out to be anyone at this point.
Ol Jock 99 said:gggmann said:
Considering Amazon just announced they are sidelining the showrunners and retooling the show, I guess he could turn out to be anyone at this point.
Seriously??
AgE2theBONE said:M.C. Swag said:
Lol like it would be borderline disrespectful to the people who love the films to lay all that groundwork as nothing but misdirection.
That's an interesting take, because I think it's outright disrespectful to make him Gandalf.
We know Gandalf didn't come to MIddle Earth till the 3rd age. We know Gandalf said specifically that he never traveled to the east, which is *exactly* where this wizard is headed straight for.
Giving him a quote that's something Gandalf said doesn't have to be misdirection, it could be an affectionate nod toward the character, or as the author of the video says, toward the Peter Jackson films themselves.
It's also just a foolish thing to do, narrative wise. They can do just about anything they want with a Blue Wizard, because Tolkien never really elaborated on them. They're an open book.
Making him Gandalf would be lazy and cheap, and displeasing to a ton of Tolkien fans.
M.C. Swag said:AgE2theBONE said:M.C. Swag said:
Lol like it would be borderline disrespectful to the people who love the films to lay all that groundwork as nothing but misdirection.
That's an interesting take, because I think it's outright disrespectful to make him Gandalf.
We know Gandalf didn't come to MIddle Earth till the 3rd age. We know Gandalf said specifically that he never traveled to the east, which is *exactly* where this wizard is headed straight for.
Giving him a quote that's something Gandalf said doesn't have to be misdirection, it could be an affectionate nod toward the character, or as the author of the video says, toward the Peter Jackson films themselves.
It's also just a foolish thing to do, narrative wise. They can do just about anything they want with a Blue Wizard, because Tolkien never really elaborated on them. They're an open book.
Making him Gandalf would be lazy and cheap, and displeasing to a ton of Tolkien fans.
A nod is one thing, but they've already copy+pasted multiple Gandalf traits (from the films). Off the top of my head:
- the sky darkens, wind swirls, when he gets mad
A wizard thing, not a Gandalf thing. We see very similar powers from Saruman.
- talking to flying bugs; specifically cupped in his hand
Same as above; we see the same from Radagast.
- gray robes, gray beard, long hair
Need I say it?
- "when in doubt, follow your nose" < most damning
Affectionate nod is not the same as confirmation.
Like, that's effing Gandalf. He even takes an affinity to hobbits who like adventure. I'm sorry but a nod is one thing, but that's outright subversion for the sake of trolling if it's not Gandalf.
To be clear, I don't care if he's a blue wizard. That's fine, but don't prop up his character as something he's not for the sake of popularity. Lazy is piggybacking off the most iconic fictional character in literature to curry some sort of "click"/viewership metric.