Never even heard of it!

2 Likes

Never even heard of it!

2 Likes

worked at a cinema but left just before they brought them chairs in

look ridiculously like a huge waste of moneu

{looks at original poster, googles it, picks hat off hatstand, walks away}

1 Like

Alright Farage.

wait is this people going to watch star wars on vibrating chairs and that?

not getting much love from you today!

Because I still never even heard of it!

I always prey on the weak, man!

fucking £10 million for a ticket for a shoogly chair? no thanks pal

cheeky fucker

no that’s dbox

cinema 4d is a graphics package right, @chris-budget??

kidding bro. you’re defo in my top 18% on here

yes! that’s right - there is a light version bundled with aftereffects now which i am starting to play around with - but the proper version is between £500 and £3000!

crazy money!

Couple of my content guys use it

I’m glad office morale has improved.

3 Likes

Nice :slight_smile:

Basically you sit on a chair and an usher shakes your bum whenever something goes bang

All of those 3d animation & effects programs cost a small fortune. It’s supposed to be a bit nicer to use than Maya or 3ds Max though.

I worked for a few weeks at an animation studio helping with some production stuff- being one of the lower level artists is a pretty tedious job. They don’t really get to do much creative, someone else creates the models of the characters and they just spend hours painstakingly setting them up and moving or modifying them to match the story board, hit render, then 20 minutes later or (actually often overnight once you start getting multiple characters, textures, lighting etc) discover that something’s a bit wrong and have to do it all over again. One of the people who worked there pretty much spent all day every day putting snow and rain on things.

While I was there they were making a tv ad for some phone company in Canada. They’d given us some pre-made models of animals like racoons and bears, and the script. Whoever had made the animals hadn’t quite done it right though, because their eyes went weird sometimes when you moved the heads. So lots of frustrated animators swearing at “that fucking cross-eyed racoon” all day. Then when they got it looking good, the company said they liked it, but would like some more cheerful lighting to make it look more like a sunny winter day. There was a whole day of fiddling with the lighting that made it accidentally look more and more tropical before they hit on the right lighting colours and arrangement.

I spent that time having to make an animation of a fake golf game that would appear on one of the phone screens, because apparently they weren’t allowed to use footage from the real golf game they’d planned any more.