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1-35 of 35
- Planet of the Humans takes a harsh look at how the environmental movement has lost the battle through well-meaning but disastrous choices.
- Meet Jeff. He used to be your average automotive assembly device, but he ditched the factories for his true calling: Hollywood. Watch and see if the small-town robot can make it big in L.A. with the help of his pal and co-star Summer Glau.
- Bringing characters like Spider-Man and Captain Marvel to life on screen requires some real-life superheroes off-screen. Specialized teams and experts carefully plan and carry out the stunts, costumes, and special effects that make iconic films like the Avengers the impressive spectacle audiences love. From actual bus crashes in "Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings" (2021) to detailed makeup and training in "Black Panther" (2018), here's what Marvel movies look like behind the scenes.
- An in-depth British breakdown of how NASA never had the technology to overcome putting a man on on the moon or anywhere further than low orbit from the Apollo moon missions even today with the Space Shuttle designed to go nowhere but lower orbit
- What is a "space junkyard?"
- Jon M. Chu shot the film-a view into dancer Luigi Rosado's rehearsal space, titled Somewhere-in 4K using the iPhone XS Max and it's native camera app. The dancer is a giant in the B-Boy scene. Luigi turns his little garage into a hub. Every night, that garage is open and there are dancers in there working out, some of the best B-Boys in the world come there to train.
- TV Movie
- Hollywood has always been keen on disaster flicks. The genre is unique in the sheer size of the spectacles that must be created, with special effects teams building entire cities or worlds only to level them. Movies Insider breaks down the diverse techniques used to create extreme weather phenomena on the big screen, from miniature effects to shaky deck sets to a massive light and rain rig, and show you exactly what these effects looked like behind the scenes.
- Pixar broke new ground when it created "Toy Story" in 1995, but from there it still had a long way to go to perfect 3D animated characters. Over the years, Pixar's animators would figure out everything from proper human movement to skin to hair. They figured out how to smooth out skin in "Geri's Game." Then, when "The Incredibles" rolled around, they created new simulations to help control Mr. Incredible's muscle movements and Violet's long hair while also finding more accurate ways to light human skin. Violet's hair would later pave the way for long-haired characters like Colette in "Ratatouille" and the curly-haired heroine Merida of "Brave." Meanwhile, Pixar's shading tools would allow the animators to add even more striking details to their human characters' faces, while innovative new methods of animating crowd scenes came about in "Incredibles 2" and "Toy Story 4."
- Gideon Lichfield and Senior Writer Lauren Goode speak with the top technologists, thinkers, and creators who are shaping this future they're racing into.
- 2007–TV Episode
- Why is there a giant garbage patch in the middle of the North Pacific?
- How does science keep America's pasttime honest?
- Can organs be built in a lab?
- How can you win $10 million?
- How is Hollywood creating "perfect water?"