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#13 | |||||
Frequent Poster
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 111
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Re: Why do film makers not do any homework on practical makeup or social structure
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Proprietor of the Male Transformations Blog. |
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#14 |
Process Fan
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 64
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Re: Why do film makers not do any homework on practical makeup or social structure
Some movies seem to have a better grasp on the idea, stuff like skinwalkers, wolves, Bitten Tv series putting actual time into developing the characters, even that old movie Wolf with jack nicholson was good
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#15 |
Process Fan
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 64
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Re: Why do film makers not do any homework on practical makeup or social structure
But as Blackjack said my point was its not that we have to nail down a perfect werewolf form as a standard, have a movie with a full wolf, the wolfman or something like wolfsbayne from the comics , we each have our own idea what a werewolf is. But its that the artists creating the monster puts some effort into it. Like that Wolves movie that came out like a year or two ago did the manwolf look with both female and male characters and they looked lupine but also with human traits and it worked, Bitten or Blood and Chocolate (apart from the wavy mist tf into the wolf) had full wolves and the characters as humans had a wolfish/predatory way of thinking than lended itself to the story. But take a movie like the underworld series, there are no female werewolves cause the director wants all the women to be beautiful so all the werewolves are these greasy unkempt men most with about 75IQ points and the vampires are sexy women and a few filler men. The werewolves in the film are just underdeveloped bullet magnets for Seline
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#16 | ||||
The Semi-Great Slayer
Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 940
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Re: Why do film makers not do any homework on practical makeup or social structure
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#17 | ||||
Frequent Poster
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 111
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Re: Why do film makers not do any homework on practical makeup or social structure
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Granted, I don't think Bitten or Blood and Chocolate are imaginative when it comes to the look of the wolves, but they are slightly more "realistic" about the social lives and mental attitudes of the werewolves, which was the other part of his original complaint. I wouldn't want the werewolf to stop being a dangerous, murderous creature of horror (no new age crap for me!), but I think the mindless killing machine cliche is exhausted, and ditto for the visual image of the werewolves, which haven't advanced much beyond AWIL or The Howling (though Wolves did a good job in modernizing the Lon Chaney look, though it was an otherwise dull movie). I think filmmakers would do a better job if they challenged themselves to create werewolves that was both a horror-movie creature and one that also looked and thought more like a human/wolf hybrid. This would require more thought and research than the usual approach to werewolves in horror films.
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Proprietor of the Male Transformations Blog. Last edited by blackjack60; 04-12-2017 at 05:39 PM. |
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#18 |
StoreCrew
Join Date: Aug 2013
Posts: 167
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Re: Why do film makers not do any homework on practical makeup or social structure
Laurel K. Hamilton writes a series of books that eventually turns pretty kinky and features the pack dynamic of werewolves in major plot points. Vampires play major parts as well.
Lots of sex and action. Very good read and those of you with heavy werewolf interests might find it appealing. Although there is very little were-porn, so to speak. |
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#19 |
Process Fan
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 64
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Re: Why do film makers not do any homework on practical makeup or social structure
I have read through a lot of the posts and there does always seem to be that thing that humans are primates and wolves are canines and completly different things but we are all mammals and the difference in dna between human and dog is not as much as we think, compared to most other mammals in the animal kingdom we share a suprising number of genetic sequences. Humans and cats share 90% of the same code and canines are 82-87%. Apes are the closest at 96-98% but you have to think at one point apes and canines evolved from some earlier mammal simply branching off. Being a werewolf wouldn't make someone like this Ape wolf hybrid like a hairy gorilla with fangs and claws....the genetics to create wolflike traits already exist in our dna but are just inactive, I would imaging a "lycanthropic" person would simply have those traits activated in the transformation
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#20 |
Instigator
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Earth, mostly
Posts: 5,874
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Re: Why do film makers not do any homework on practical makeup or social structure
I think the problem is that if you mix an attractive movie star with a healthy realistic wolf, you are going to get something too cute. More like Furries the movie then a horror film.
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#21 |
Process Master
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 589
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Re: Why do film makers not do any homework on practical makeup or social structure
the "monster" aspect is the over exaggeration of features. A realistic blending of lupine and simian features might be off putting to most but it's not really terrifying.
Further as always with Werewolves being a fantasy creature there isn't actually a real creature to compare too so you can only say "this is what I THINK werewolves SHOULD look like" not "this is what I KNOW werewolves DO look like." Being a furry one of the oddest debates is "Do female werewolves have breasts?" It's easy to say Bipedal Humanoid Wolves would have them but is that what werewolves are? Would they have them or would they be super muscled savage killing machines who's gender wasn't visibly determinable? Maybe werewolves have 4 different forms? A human, a wolf, and athromorphic wolf and a hyper muscled "savage" form. Maybe they don't have a transitionary form. It's easy to say "I think the effects look bad" but the statement "the effect isn't correct" is a objective thing. |
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