• @[email protected]
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    2411 months ago

    Fun fact: When I briefly worked in a funeral home, I learned that dead people just chilling on a table will sometimes look like they’re breathing. I’m not talking about actual movement, like fluids settling in the body or anything like that. It’s a sort of optical illusion. I guess the brain is used to seeing people breathing so it fills in the blanks. I experienced this illusion myself and so did others working there.

    • @Demdaru
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      1911 months ago

      I experienced this illusion myself and so did others working there.

      …how many whacks with shovel it took to make sure it was an illusion?

  • idunnololz
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    1811 months ago

    I’ve also been focusing on characters who aren’t talking during a scene but are part of the scene. It gets extra awkward when there is a large group. Eg. 8 main cast members on screen, one guy talking for 5 minutes without interruption and all 7 other members just stare at them. Those scenes start to feel really artificial when you look at the other characters who just stare and listen. It gets even worse if one or most of those characters is portrayed as an asshole. I’m here thinking like no fking way at least one person doesn’t cut into someone else’s dialog IRL.

    • @Katana314
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      411 months ago

      It’s not quite the same thing, but I feel like not enough directors value the attention viewers give to the background.

      Let’s say you have an animation, and plan a silly bit of slapstick where someone’s chasing a butterfly. Put it on shot, and it’s kind of over-focused on something rudimentary. But have two characters in the foreground, using 80% of the frame, conducting a boring conversation, and put that person with the butterfly in the background, and it’s ten times funnier because viewers feel a sense of ownership in being the one to “notice” it - even if the director knew fully well no one was focused on the conversation.

    • @anewbeginning
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      1411 months ago

      Modern art’s lack of commitment to the art.

      • @EatYouWell
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        411 months ago

        With the editing tools we have today, I feel like it would be simple to edit that out, but I guess it’s not worth the cost.

  • BlitzFitz
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    1311 months ago

    My new favorite is looking for a pulse. Some movie I watched recently panned to the dead guy, clear pulse on neck, but checks pulse says no pulse he’s dead then it cuts back to him with his jugular still pulsing. Pretty funny to see

    • @wunami
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      811 months ago

      Jugular is a vein. Pulse visible on the neck would be from the carotid artery. Unless the dead guy actor has visible JVP. Which would be a serious medical problem and not pretty funny to see.

  • IninewCrow
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    11 months ago

    Or sitting on the couch with a laptop and searching up wikis, Google, fan forums or social media to read about the movie you think you are watching but are actually ruining for yourself because you’re so distracted that you can’t actively read the laptop nor enjoy the movie at the same time … two hours go by and you can’t remember much about the movie or the little bits of information you read the whole time.

  • @Ejh3k
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    311 months ago

    That and always watching for background actors making weird faces or just doing strange things.