You are right. One day CGI will be able to produce anything. But the question isn't the power of te CGI system...the question is should we rely on it? Take Lord of the Rings. Lord of the Rings I think had such a sense of realism to it that other films don't have because huge portions of their sets and environments were either real or models. I can compare it also to the whole 'digital' experience that people get when they go to a digital theater. They get an experience with no grain on the film and no pops in the audio.darthzew said:One day, CGI will be able to produce anything. I'd put my money on it.
I don't want that.
Digital film doesn't have...character. Part of the whole experience of going to a movie is hearing those little chinks in the sound or having a little sploch on screen every now and then. Same goes for CGI environments. If something is hand made, it seems to have more 'character.' A person made it in a real environment. Maybe their crafting tools slip every now and then and left just a remnant of an impression where there shouldn't have been. These features give life to a film.
Eh, oh well. People said the same thing about vinyl and look where we are now. People of the new generation have rarely listened to a record, if they have even seen one. Even when they do, they just call it poor quality. My guess is that within 30 or 40 years everything will be digital.
And no one will care.