![]() Played straight at the end of Airplane! - until the end, when the romantic background chorus sings so high they injure their voices.The second version of Kotaro Terauchi's Boys Love ends with the former teacher and student kissing while the camera spins around them.Such a kiss, set to This Year's Love by David Grey, takes place in The Girl Next Door as the party drunkenly spins around the kissers.They definitely kiss at the end of Three Idiots, and it's definitely an Orbital Kiss.Except the characters in question don't even kiss, they just hug very dramatically. Having learned his lesson from the Romeo + Juliet example, this time the actors were placed on a turntable in front of a static camera to make it easier to film. ![]() ![]() Baz Luhrmann's Moulin Rouge! also features the equivalent, at the end of the Elephant Love Medley.There were a lot of breathless grips running around the outside of the tiny lift set, removing and replacing panels to allow the steadicam to move freely around the couple. In Baz Luhrmann's William Shakespeare's Romeo + Juliet, our eponymous star-struck and Star-Crossed Lovers share a kiss in an elevator - which was actually too small to fit cast and crew inside.Greg Pilkington and Graham in Priest, complete with sweeping orchestral music on the beach.Three Poplars in Plyuschikha: In the opening scene, right before the scene cuts to Nyura waking up from her dream, revealing that instead of being kissed by a handsome man in the forest she's actually living in drudgery as a housewife.Jimbo and Cindy have one, but Jimbo's got Motaba virus and passes out in Cindy's arms when the orbit comes full circle. A particularly disturbing one takes place in Outbreak.Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End has this happen at Will and Elizabeth's wedding.The lips of the two kissers are obscured by shoulders and heads during the rotation at regular intervals, due to rules at the time that forbade showing a kiss for more than a few seconds. Vertigo has a long one between Scottie and a made-up Judy.The geeky guy and girl get one at the end of Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle.As per his tendency to imitate what he sees on TV, he furiously embraces and kisses her, and when the scene goes orbital, he spins their embraced bodies around and around to match it. Chance is watching the buildup to the moment in question when Eve enters the room in tears, out of desire for him. This is the basis for a gag in Being There.It comes to show how much love, imagination and care these people poured into Code Lyoko, rather than just making money. Definitely a lot of the money went through the CGI parts since it improved so much throughout the seasons.ĭespite these setbacks, the show came out with four seasons of content and ended on its own terms, which despite constant restrictions and animation (along narrative inconsistencies), aren’t half bad all things considered. What lead to this has no source just speculation so take it a grain of salt. We don’t know the official budget for the show however, looking through old Reddit posts regarding this, the most popular guess is that each episode might’ve cost about 100k-1M euro or less. Not to mention that they enlist TWO animation departments (2D and 3D), so paying for both is expensive, and then, of course, there were complications with the networks (mostly Cartoon Network) which screwed over this show near the climax and… yeah lol And this is where Antefilms Studio (and later Moonscoop) comes into the picture of shaping Code Lyoko.īoth Antefilms and Moonscoop were small studios throughout their lifespans, so the budget was pretty much limited and that they reused a lot of animation cels to save up money in order for this show to survive airing lol. There, the project was noticed, and Tania Palumbo and Thomas Romain started to receive offers from audiovisual creators. They made “Les enfants font leur cinéma.” for their final school project and was presented at the International Film Festival of Annecy of 2000, an event attracting professionals in the world of animation. Back in 2000, a group of animation students at Gobelins (school for visual communication and arts), composed primarily Tania Palumbo and Thomas Romain. While I do agree that reused animation are off-putting, you gotta keep in mind that this was originally a college animation project turned show.
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