Creating the Futurescape for the Fifth Element [2019]
34 points
2 hours ago
| 6 comments
| theasc.com
| HN
Sam6late
10 minutes ago
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I was in Paris years ago and took these photos of the actual cab models that were on display. Enjoy https://imgur.com/a/txIHpJT
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sschueller
1 hour ago
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Off topic but Milla Jovovich just released an AI memory called mempalace:

https://github.com/milla-jovovich/mempalace

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dmos62
1 hour ago
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Interesting to see programming and acting worlds cross-pollinate.
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electroglyph
47 minutes ago
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nah, a crypto grifter released one with cooked benchmarks
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grenoire
1 hour ago
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I love this movie so much it's _unreal_. What an experience, every single time.

And each time I see an article like this, I simply marvel at the immense love for art and life it has. What an incredibly talented crew, what product of mastery and care.

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sixtyj
1 hour ago
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He continued with Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets.

The Fifth Element has similar cinematic feeling as the first Blade Runner.

And now it is clear. There is the same person behind it :)

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metalman
52 minutes ago
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waterworld
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Joel_Mckay
25 minutes ago
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Adam Savage covered the Mondoshawan props on his channel last year:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pf5dPrmBvwE

It was a fun film, but Chris Tucker broke the pacing too many times for a general audience. Even now on rottentomatoes his role still distracts focus from the character arcs.

https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/fifth_element

Was a cult classic for sure, but nowhere near Blade Runner as a film. =3

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ModernMech
7 minutes ago
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The article is missing one of the best futurescape shots in the whole movie!

http://i.imgur.com/6W5InkH.jpg

That image is only on screen for like 2 seconds, but it tells a whole story and really pulled me into the film. The first half you're deep in the city, and then finally when you get to see it from afar, it seems like a whole real city instead of the few locales they shot. Also makes it feel like a continuity of our future instead of some random alien drama.

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tomaytotomato
15 minutes ago
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I have fond memories of the Fifth Element, as one of my first PG-13 movies at the cinema that I was allowed to see as a 9-10 year old.

Looking back, the whole story gives a different futuristic feel to the usual gloomy polluted dystopian earths, and feels a bit, "near-future".

Seeing hover cars getting drive through McDonalds will forever be a future hope for me (my inner 10 year old self)

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WalterGR
2 hours ago
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(2019)
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