AmigaMan wrote:I showed support by buying the BluRay from Germany as it stated it had English subtitles...it doesn't! It was still great to see and I've earned my right to download it I guess
Can you give the site where you bought it ? Something is very wrong with that distribution you are the second person who had that problem !!
I bought it from Amazon in Germany. I may have seen the description on another German site stating it had English subtitles and ordered from Amazon.de obviously assuming it'd be the same? Either that or Amazon have changed the description as I don't think it mentions English subtitles now.
Is there a version with English track or subtitles?
shufle wrote:... And after all, the movie itself as a project was very pioneer...for Serbia that's was our first animated movie (if we don't count Yugoslavia period)...
But you MUST count the Yugoslavia period. The animation produced at that time was world class. When I was a student, we eagerly watched as much Yugoslavian animation as we could find. The Zagreb festival alternated with Annecy at that time too. I never made it over, but I wish I had.
^ Usually, when remarks like "if we don`t count Yugoslavia period" comes from people from former Yugoslavia it is not denial of that time but more likely determination of period after 90`s toward present time.
As much as I know, Technotise was indeed pioneering project - both technically and esthetically for that time being.
Well, I watched the film last night, and enjoyed it a lot. I love the design, concept and the script. It's a difficult style of animation to bring off convincingly, as the characters are so naturalistic, and the scenes vary a lot in their degree of success, but it says a lot for the film that even when faces went a bit skew it didn't get in the way of the narrative. It certainly builds well, and kept me completely hooked till the end.
Whoops, i should check with this site more often, but i was busy launching an animation Studio with my father. Potential Anime Studio Project is ahead
OT - shufle- I would be interested, if in hindsight you think AS has really shortened the production time as a more traditional workflow with lets say Toon Boom Software and classical animation. After all, it takes Disney about the same amount of time to chew out one of their features as it took you to complete Technotise. Or was that more because of budgetary reasons?
I like the movie very much by the way and kudos to your work