![]() If you’re having some trouble with getting answers to questions, some reasons could be that it might be an obscure problem that not many people know, or it could require a long response and people don’t want to have to take the time to write it all out. The reason you might be getting such negative reactions is because of the way you come off–many professionals that are very good at 3D would not say they’ve mastered something Or if you want to go with something cheaper try Modo which is becoming a good game development tool. I wouldn’t consider the Maya to be something like “this is amazing! I need to spend thousands of dollars on this right now!” but you’d be much better off using Maya or 3ds Max if you want to work in the industry, at the very least you’d have difficulty working into a pipeline if you only know Blender. It’s likely you are just used to Blender since that’s the first program you’ve used, people in general don’t like change. Vray is also a really excellent renderer, easier to use than some others like Mental Ray, and it’s been improving speed and features over the years and continues to be improved regularly. Program performance is probably faster too. Another thing, is that Maya includes many features that Blender doesn’t. The majority of people consider the UI of Blender to be very poor, and I agree with that, when you compare how it does things to some of the more popular programs you wonder why Blender does them in such a way. ![]() While I do think the Autodesk software is expensive, and Blender is amazing for what you get for free. I didn’t watch any video tutorials for blender (except the ones on navigation) So I haven’t watched any on Maya either. But I’ve been modeling for a few years, so its not that i don’t know what I’m doing. I went to the Autodesk forums, but got a basic “HA HA your a noob and lost HA HA” response. I went to the Unity forums, and got the usual high pitched whine. **1: Why is Maya, a overpriced, out of date UI, and slow program the “Industry Standard”? I’m not saying Blender should, its just the standard seems low ATM.Ģ:Is Maya bad (or just not what its hailed as) or have I just gotten used to blender?ģ:Or is there a problem with the “UI language” being to different between the two. But seriously here are some questions I need answers to , I could talk specifics on the UI for Hours. My art instructor hailed Maya as the next coming of Christ, and then it turns out Christ is a fat, ******* with only 3 fingers who spelt Chris wrong online. ![]() But these points haven’t been fully answered, or justified. I’ve almost mastered the Game Art side of Blender and have a few statements about Maya I need to get out of the way.ġ:Why is a absolutely free program’s (i:e Blender) UI so much better then a (oddly priced) 3,495$ program.Ģ:How can the community be filled with, basically “Professionals” that give very vague and odd advice, and seem to give up on you if you ask to many questions (I asked 4 questions and got abandoned)ģ:Why is it so much money for a unstable program.Ĥ:Sure the Xray is a great rendering system, but its clumsy and slow. I’ve been using Maya, for a few months (I think 5 months)
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Raimi eventually passed on a fourth installment due to the excess of characters causing an inability to get together a satisfactory story.Īfter the fourth film was cancelled, Sony went forward with a new director and cast to reboot the series. Through these films, Peter Parker (Tobey Maguire) developed a relationship with his high school crush Mary Jane Watson (Kirsten Dunst), and fought with villains Green Goblin (Willem Dafoe), Doctor Octopus (Alfred Molina), New Goblin (James Franco), Sandman (Thomas Haden Church), and Venom (Topher Grace). Sony hired comic book fan Sam Raimi to direct the first three films. The rights to a motion picture based on Spider-Man were purchased in 1985 and moved through various production companies and studios, at one point having James Cameron to direct, before being secured by Sony Pictures Entertainment. ![]() Where to watch it: Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse is available to rent or buy from Amazon Prime Video.The Spider-Man film series consists of superhero films based on the Marvel Comics character of the same name. It doesn't hurt that it's the only Spider-Man film brave enough to let Peter Parker grow up and move on, either. This Spider-Man is saving us from the mediocrity of another by-the-numbers animated film. That being said, Into the Spider-Verse is so much more than just the best superhero movie - it's an animated feature that experiments with visual aesthetics, variable frame rates and groundbreaking techniques to present us with something completely unlike any other piece of feature animation on the market. It's as unforgettable on its 10th viewing as it was on the first. Into The Spider-Verse sidesteps tropes and creates a world so dense with details it rewards multiple, multiple viewings. The rapid-fire pace, the visual flourishes, the razor-tight script, the pitch-perfect characterization. Into the Spider-Verse isn't just the best Spider-Man movie ever made, it's the best superhero movie ever made, period. Into the Spider-Verse is so good, we have two entries on the point. It's also available to stream on Hulu, which starts at $8 per month. Where to watch it: Spider-Man is available to rent or buy from Amazon Prime Video. It's not all solemn faces and punching! All in all, it's worth it just for the performances from JK Simmons and Willem Dafoe alone. Sam Raimi balanced the silly with the serious - something more modern superhero flicks should take inspiration from. Sure, watching it back now has me cringing at some of the memes, but it's a genuinely great starting point with some impressive action and exactly the right amount of ridiculousness for a superhero movie. From the overwhelmingly theatrical portrayal of Green Goblin through to some genuinely moving moments (Uncle Ben, I'm lookin' at you), the whole thing was a ride from start to finish. Where to watch it: The Amazing Spider-Man is available to rent or buy on Amazon Prime Video, and also available to stream on Starz.Īs someone who is deathly afraid of spiders, I held out on watching this for the longest time, but despite some moments where the arachnophobia got its fangs into me, it's well worth the watch. Garfield is underrated, and I'm glad he got another chance via the Marvel Cinematic Multiverse. If only there weren't so many depressing deaths. ![]() If only its comedy wasn't so cringe and forced. Andrew Garfield's stutter, jazz hands and general endearing weirdness. Then there are Peter's Spider-Man movements actually mirroring skateboarding moves, as well as being more spider-like than his counterparts. 'Til Kingdom Come, originally written by Coldplay to be performed with Johnny Cash, playing over the skateboard scene. Peter goggling at Gwen from across the classroom. The fittingly named Marc Webb, who directed (500) Days of Summer, made the whole first third of this movie feel like a small independent film. ![]() I'm here to tell you this movie's rap for being a fairly mediocre film is, well, only somewhat fair. ![]() Drawing History feature to view previous iterations of project.Enhanced Blocks capabilities, and version control.Allows you to take your designs to the next level. ![]()
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