Board Thread:Movies/@comment-4651179-20140124221431/@comment-61022-20140830014013

I don't see why you people don't refrain from judgement until the movie actually comes out, instead of complaining about what a blurry production photo looks like.

The green screen should make it obvious to all of you that these costumes and set pieces are merely stand-ins for the digital effects and backgrounds that will be inserted in the film in post-production. You're commentating on these photos like you've never seen behind-the-scene footage of a big budget super-hero movie. You know, kind of like what they did with EVERY super-hero movie to date? A practice that has been a special effects standard since CGI has become a commonplace in film (You know, nearly 20 years?) I don't expect everyone here to be professional filmmakers or anything, but use some common sense.

The costumes the actors are wearing are stand ins so the computer animators know where to place the CGI models and how to manipulate them in relation to the action that has been filmed.

Guardians of the Galaxy they had a guy in a blue outfit and a Groot mask stand in for what was in the original movie: http://static3.businessinsider.com/image/53c2f643ecad042f7ce9e1f9-1200-924/vin-diesel-groot.png

Not a single complaint, but hey a similar production photo for Fantastic Four comes out and we all got to complain about what it looks like. Is it because Fantastic Four is being made by Fox and not Marvel Studios that people have this tendency to crap all over every little minute detail? Yes, the previous Fantastic Four films were not that great (hence the reboot), and yes other studios have released movies based on Marvel owner properties that were not great. But why does that mean everything else has to be painted with the same brush even though the movie isn't (a) completed and (b) released yet.

Such negativity is not really healthy, and I think there are more constructive things you can all be doing with your time that is much more positive.

You people seriously need to suspend your disbelief until the movie comes out and give it a fair chance instead of complaining about a blurry cell phone photo that was taken during production. You know, calm down and stop worrying over trifling detail and wait until the movie comes out, you might surprise yourself and actually like it.