(via geek-art)
The Adventures of Tintin: Secret of the Unicorn trailer recut with footage from the original cartoon.
-
They rode out for the parlay, but there was little to discuss. There was the question of when the killing would start - but all else was mere formality.
“No knights at your side. How bold.” Tiffany spoke in a brash voice. Quick - and to the point. Her steel armor spoke for her. Inlaid…
A new comedic essay with ORIGINAL ARTWORK by Phils Adventures artist, Stephen Winchell. Check it out.
Hey check this out!!!!
Or the U.S.S Enterprise will set course to your house.
Holy vulcan fuck. This is the coolest thing ever. Especially the caption about the enterprise :p
Yup.
(Source: umabrasamohra, via fuckyeahstartrek)
A small part of me would like to think this was the more important John in George’s life
Most of these apply to improv & sketch & anything else you want to tell.
(via jamandearlgrey:andrewsteven)
Pixar’s rules of story
- Empathize with your main character, even if you don’t like all of his/her motivations or qualities. (For example, Woody in Toy Story initially masked his selfish desires as being selfless.)
- Unity of opposites. Each character must have clear goals that oppose each other. You should have something to say. Not a message, per se, but some perspective, some experiential truth.
- Have a key image, almost like a visual logline, to encapsulate the essence of the story; that represents the emotional core on which everything hangs. (For example, Marlin in Finding Nemo, looking over the last remaining fish egg in the nest.)
- Cast actors with an appealing voice, and whom the microphone loves. Test their voice performance with animation to see if it fits.
- Know your world and the rules of it. (Such as in Monsters, Inc.)
- The crux of the story should be on inner, not outer, conflicts.
- Developing the story is like an archeological dig. Pick a site where you think the story is buried, and keep digging to find it.
- Animation should be interpretive, not realistic.
- “Just say no” to flashbacks. Only tell what’s vital, and tell it linearly. Consider music as a character to anchor the film. Music is a keeper of the emotional truth.
- One universal guideline that Pixar follows is to make the story organic… no jokes that require outside information that isn’t supplied by the film itself.
Fantastic!
(via paulbriganti)
-
Flystar [13 of 151]

Often mistaken for a shooting star, the Flystar can’t actually fly at all. It simply glides from tree to tree, but its...
-
-
-
Dinosaur Freeway Found in Colorado
A bustling thoroughfare 98 million years ago was a coastal plain full of waterways.
-
-
Submitted by: spinmeoutofcontrol
-
Lionfish, 2010
(copyright is mine)
-
My new writing corner.
(Special thanks to Dan Spenser for the Party Down poster. He sells them on his site. Check it out.)

