@@adamcummings20 it’s an old recurring joke that Simon used to make like a decade ago. Usually he’d say something like “my daughter watches the yogscast and you SWORE and now she’s DEAD!!” pretending to be the outraged parent of a kid who watches them. I don’t remember the context at all, but it always made Lewis laugh (and me too)
I like how one of the defining characteristics of _Jurassic Park_ was that it was the first time we'd really seen dinosaurs in the more horizontal, bird-like posture, and here Briony makes the most 1950s dragging-tails version of dinosaurs ever!
Someone who isn't participating pulls everyone aside individually before the episode and tells them to submit the battle for helm's deep as their prompt, so they all end up with the same prompt
I was promised giant mouse. Blues brothers was instantly recognisable, nobody could question lion king, congratts to ben getting moana so quickly, but without giant mouse battles 4 green woerms I'm not leaving the house to go to the cinema, I'll wait for the home release. Meme's aside they all did really good.
NTSC is 30 frames per second (well, 29.95Hz, technically, but it's close enough to round to 30) and PAL is 25 frames per second. NTSC had more fps, but lower resolution. PAL is higher resolution, but lower fps. The interesting thing to note is that, in America, their electricity is standardised to 60HZ 110V AC, while in Europe electricity is standardised to 50Hz 230 / 240V AC. Note that 30 fps is half 60Hz, and 25fps is half 50Hz. Because when they made TV sets, you need precise timing for guiding the electron gun to draw the frame to the screen (that's how old cathode ray tube TVs worked - firing electrons at phosphor, which excites the phosphor and makes it glow). But to save money, when mass-producing TV sets, rather than put in expensive timing circuitry, they took their timings directly from the AC electricity supply. Like the AC supply already has a 60Hz (American) / 50Hz (Europe) "pulse" within the electricity itself, so the TV sets would sync to the electricity supply. It was a clever solution - to use what's already there in the power supply itself - which made mass-produced TV sets cheaper that everyone could afford them. Although, yeah, 60 fps (NTSC) or 50fps (PAL) was a bit overkill at the time - and, remember, if you were recording programmes to video tape, you'd need twice as much. So it takes its timings from the AC supply, but the actual number of frames per second is half that (well, old TV was "interlaced", so it drew half the picture - odd lines - on one refresh, then the even lines on the next, so the TV is actually going 60Hz / 50Hz but only produces one frame for two "fields", as they were called). This used to be the fundamental difference between a TV set and a computer monitor. TV sets used the fixed timing from the power supply, so could only show NTSC or PAL images to the standards. But as computers could generate images of different resolutions and refresh rates, computer monitors actually had the more expensive timing circuitry in them - so they could independently work out their own timings, to show a wider variety of resolutions and refresh rates. These days, of course, since the technology changed to LCDs / LEDs / OLEDs and we have flat screen HD TVs, then there's really no longer a technology difference between TV sets and computer monitors anymore - they all have their own timing circuitry now, so HDTV is its own international standard (we all use the same 1080p / 4K around the world).
But, interestingly, films use 24 frames per second. Why 24 fps? Well, I used the word "film" rather than "movie" purposefully there, to remind you that they were recorded on reels of celluloid film. And celluloid film was - frankly, still is - quite an expensive material. So movies were balancing enough frames per second to give the illusion of "smooth motion" BUT using as little celluloid as possible. Both because celluloid was expensive, but also because you're spooling the film onto reels. And then, playing the movie on cinema projectors, you've got to think about how big the reels can physically be, how many reels a movie comes on and how often does the projectionist in the cinema's projection room have to physically swap the reels while the movie's playing. So, yeah, with film, they basically went for the lowest refresh rate you could get away with. Save money on film, and ship films on fewer reels (so for the average 90 minute film, it's just two reels - and that's also kind of why films did used to average about that length). But now we have to switch to human perception. Because, after all, what is the minimum frames per second you can get away with, where humans still see the images as "smooth motion"? It's roughly 20 frames per second. The brain actually seems to process visual information at around 10Hz. Yeah, ten times a second. And a 10Hz "pulse" is what you should absolutely avoid, if you don't want to cause people to have an epileptic seizure. Okay, if it's 10Hz then why am I saying 20 frames a second? Because the human eye is always open - continuous exposure - so within that 1/10th of a second, the eye sees two frames, blended together. At 20 frames per second, "motion blur" begins to happen and your brain is trained to look for motion blur from the real world. We "read" motion from the motion blur, which convinces the brain that something is in motion. That's why you need at least 20 frames per second to create the illusion of "smooth motion". But film is 24 fps. Well, you want a little "margin of error" there - go a little faster than the bare minimum to ensure that the illusion of smooth motion really is happening for all viewers (there are, as with all things biological, variations between us humans). But another reason is mathematical. 24 is twice 12. And 12 divides neatly by 1, 2, 3, 4 and 6 (common factors) and 8, 9, 10 are "semi-factors" (being multiples of common factors, they don't divide neatly, but they do have a nice clean relationship anyway). Why do we care about this? For speeding up and slowing down the frame rate. Time lapses and slow motion. When it's divisible by 12 and all its many common factors, it makes it much easier to calculate things, when it's whole numbers and not fractions. As the human eye has continuous exposure, there really is no maximum frame rate. BUT it is diminishing returns. At 20fps, you're showing the brain two frames motion blurred together. At 30 fps, three frames. At 60fps, six frames. This all improves the quality of that "motion blur" that the brain "reads" to interpret motion, so it looks smoother. But there's a limit - more and more frames makes the "motion blur" more accurate (so the brain sees it as being closer and closer to the "infinity fps" it sees from real life), but how precisely your brain picks this up has its limits. (And it is, to some extent, a trainable thing. Some people can see the 60 / 120 Hz difference, others just don't notice. 120 / 240 Hz difference? Even fewer people can tell the difference. 240 / 480Hz? Can even those with a professional trained eye even see the difference anymore? That's what I mean about diminishing returns. More FPS is more good, but the limit is you... once we're up at 120Hz, can you tell the difference anymore? Probably not.)
There you go, everything you never wanted to know about refresh rates but were too afraid to ask a nerd like me about, because I was totally going to go on about it for far too long. Enjoy and spread the knowledge! p.s. this also explains why, when you play games, most people want to turn off the "motion blur" effect. Whilst, in reality, motion blur is actually good - that's what the brain uses to "read" motion - the "motion blur" effect in games is faking it. It's not really drawing, say, 10 frames and then blurring them altogether, it's a trick to fake motion blur and it's not 100% accurate. Some people are sensitive to this, their brains can tell it's fake and, sorry, they have to turn off the "motion blur" effect because it's scrambling their brains to see fake motion blur. It doesn't "read" right to their brains.
@@klaxoncow Lol I found this all quite interesting. It's fascinating how technology evolves around whatever tools are at hand, and standards can be set for good reasons but then persist long after those reasons are obsolete. And I'm definitely one of those people that can see the fake "motion blur" effect. Makes the whole image look unnaturally smeared, and doesn't translate into a more immersive feeling of movement.
@@klaxoncow Yeah my understanding was the human eye can see in 60fps (I guess on average as like you said SOME can do better but most don't) so basically anything above that is just reducing potential frame skips, as in if you have a game running 120 fps and all of a sudden it loses 50% for some reason you wont be able to tell compared to if you have a game running at 60 and it loses half. So as much as all the extra frames are kinda wasted it just means there is a much bigger margin of acceptable lost frames. Moba's are a great example of this as if you are doing say 120 frames early game with 1 ability and not much happening on screen as everyone is in their own lanes then later on when everyone is in 1 lane or around an objective you can afford to lose 60 frames without a drop in performance whereas if you are 60 frames early then the late game fights have a very noticeable performance drop if you lose frames. That's basically the only benefit of having higher then 60 fps, it gives you a safety net for frame drop
After the box conversation up to 20:00, I realized that a *great* prompt would be "What's in the Pulp Fiction briefcase" - because it'll be really different for every builder
Iconic movie scenes. Ben: "Blues Brothers get shot in the back." Must have missed that version of the movie. And then I find out there's no giant mouse in this video. Dear Yogscast.....
And we have done studies to try and measure the number of FPS that humans can track. It changes over your lifetime. When you’re younger it’s higher, and settles down to between 30 and 60 as adults. But some research suggests that we have momentary flashes of eye movement that allow us to see up to 200 fps for fractions of a second, and these flashes contribute to motion sickness on digital interfaces like VR.
While on movies I can't help but recommend The Grand Budapest Hotel, I feel like nobody I have ever spoken to know it aside from me and the people who I watched it with.
35:55 I really wanted them to give a speech bubble that said "Texas bitches". but as I write this comment I changed it to the old SpongeBob insults about texas*, or really just anything to reference that whole scene edit texas not taxes, but thats funny too. just randomly make it about taxes
ive been watching these gartic videos the last few days and realised watching this one that this group (boba, briony, kirsty, osie, duncan, nilesy, ben) have a particularly good chemistry. At least in this setting, they have such lively conversations and it's really fun to watch and listen to ^^
7:20 I actually watched Morbius during the re-release with my sister. Honestly, considering the plot and content, that movie needs to be renamed Milo. XD Honestly, it wasn't that bad (it was far from a masterpiece, though). The primary issue is that they put way too much focus on special effects to attempt to detract from the writing and inconsistent pacing. Honestly, it's an issue that all the sony live-action superhero + villian movies have.
“When are they gonna stop making terrible movies!?” Ben, hate to break it to ya… but bad movies have been around as long as cinema, and they will continue to exist as long as cinema does
6:08 That's quittin' talk! As a massive Jurassic park nerd you have no idea how pissed I am that the t. Rex is *freakin' grey* instead of brown in Briony's build and facing the camera instead of off to the side (and also how moderately disappointed I am there's 4 raptors instead of 2)
yall happy feet was a childhood favourite of mine and i rewatched it recently and its so fucking harrowing in some ways. so many great songs. so much fun. also so much fucking dread and tears.
A lot of these episodes I enjoy because it's funny when people mess up, but this one was fun to watch as a genuinely impressive episode. Great work, everyone!
im going to be honest im disappointed that in none of the moana builds did they actually use the minecraft item "heart of the sea", but for the second build for moana when i saw it fully built i just couldn't not think it was moses splitting the red sea to fight the balrog xD
I believe for Sony to keep the rights to Spider-man they have to make movies with him in it. So his short appearance as a baby at the end counts enough for them to keep the rights a little longer. I haven't seen it but they talked about it on MBMBAM. Not sure how true that is but it kinda makes sense 7:22
No joke, I like to play along with these and see what I would come up with for the prompt, and the first thing in my mind was Blues Brothers mall chase.
That entire final act of Bone Tomahawk remains to this day the only film sequence to ever make me feel queasy and deeply unsettled. Between the bisection and the quadriplegic "breeders" I was so upset.
😢 omg, my brain completely repressed the Zoo scene, I thought Ben was talking about the shrimp that was in the Ocean under Happy Feet talking about life 😳 I forgot most of that like 5minute speech
Good children's film like Pixar films often have grim scenes just not gruesome ones. But they're always grim for a reason, not just for the sake of being grim. It doesn't "destroy children", it teaches them. I don't see how Happy Feet actually having social commentary and a point suddenly convinced them they don't want to watch it because it isn't just happy dancing penguin without depth.
they seem to be more concerned with keeping the prompt all the way through than it seeing all the weird ways it can go wrong, which is actually the point of the telephone game
29.97 FPS is the American (and Japanese) TV signal called NTSC (also jokingly called "Never The Same Color" because the color accuracy was really shit) - it used to be 30 FPS, but then they had to fit the color signal somewhere so they had to make it very slightly slower to fit the color information. 25 FPS is PAL, typically what is used for European/Australian TV. 23.976 (and sometimes 24) FPS is what they use for film and most modern TV shows (which is still used today, even in the digital era).
How are you going to choose the Matrix and not have it be the dodging bullets scene? XD I definitely would have failed here-I haven’t seen three of the movies, and had never even heard of two of them.
That happy feet chat unlocked some fucking memories. That stuff with the prophet being chocked by i think it was some kind of plastic and the halucinations freaked 7 year old me out to the point i had to leave the cinema and didn't watch past that. i had completely forgotten about that until then
For some reason, the gods only know why, I rewatched Happy Feet on a continuous loop while writing my dissertation. I'd seen it before so it wasn't distracting and it had music, so that was good to work to. But good god that film is depressing. Definitely recommend it though!
actually in the stewart little book, the kid's mom goes to hospital pregnant, she gave birth to that rat. personally I think this is so much worse then the parents adopting.
My daughter watched the Yogscast and there was no big mouse and now she’s DEAD!
I could hear Simon’s voice in my head as I read that
Wow, that's an old one
@@shanadir ...but it checks out.
Where is that reference is from?
@@adamcummings20 it’s an old recurring joke that Simon used to make like a decade ago. Usually he’d say something like “my daughter watches the yogscast and you SWORE and now she’s DEAD!!” pretending to be the outraged parent of a kid who watches them. I don’t remember the context at all, but it always made Lewis laugh (and me too)
~ 10:00 "the bit in brokeback mountain where he breaks his back"!!!!! Just so good
*where he breaks his Jack, even… 😢
I demand big mouse! Where is the big mouse I was promised? My family actually all died in a car crash because there was no big mouse
I crashed my car into oncoming traffic because there was no big mouse
I like how one of the defining characteristics of _Jurassic Park_ was that it was the first time we'd really seen dinosaurs in the more horizontal, bird-like posture, and here Briony makes the most 1950s dragging-tails version of dinosaurs ever!
9:57 "The bit in brokeback where he breaks his back" hahahaa
At this point, if feels like there should just be an all Lord of the Rings prompts episode so that they can get it out of their system.
Think that they might need more than one episode 😂
Someone who isn't participating pulls everyone aside individually before the episode and tells them to submit the battle for helm's deep as their prompt, so they all end up with the same prompt
I was promised giant mouse. Blues brothers was instantly recognisable, nobody could question lion king, congratts to ben getting moana so quickly, but without giant mouse battles 4 green woerms I'm not leaving the house to go to the cinema, I'll wait for the home release. Meme's aside they all did really good.
NTSC is 30 frames per second (well, 29.95Hz, technically, but it's close enough to round to 30) and PAL is 25 frames per second.
NTSC had more fps, but lower resolution. PAL is higher resolution, but lower fps.
The interesting thing to note is that, in America, their electricity is standardised to 60HZ 110V AC, while in Europe electricity is standardised to 50Hz 230 / 240V AC. Note that 30 fps is half 60Hz, and 25fps is half 50Hz.
Because when they made TV sets, you need precise timing for guiding the electron gun to draw the frame to the screen (that's how old cathode ray tube TVs worked - firing electrons at phosphor, which excites the phosphor and makes it glow).
But to save money, when mass-producing TV sets, rather than put in expensive timing circuitry, they took their timings directly from the AC electricity supply.
Like the AC supply already has a 60Hz (American) / 50Hz (Europe) "pulse" within the electricity itself, so the TV sets would sync to the electricity supply.
It was a clever solution - to use what's already there in the power supply itself - which made mass-produced TV sets cheaper that everyone could afford them.
Although, yeah, 60 fps (NTSC) or 50fps (PAL) was a bit overkill at the time - and, remember, if you were recording programmes to video tape, you'd need twice as much.
So it takes its timings from the AC supply, but the actual number of frames per second is half that (well, old TV was "interlaced", so it drew half the picture - odd lines - on one refresh, then the even lines on the next, so the TV is actually going 60Hz / 50Hz but only produces one frame for two "fields", as they were called).
This used to be the fundamental difference between a TV set and a computer monitor. TV sets used the fixed timing from the power supply, so could only show NTSC or PAL images to the standards. But as computers could generate images of different resolutions and refresh rates, computer monitors actually had the more expensive timing circuitry in them - so they could independently work out their own timings, to show a wider variety of resolutions and refresh rates.
These days, of course, since the technology changed to LCDs / LEDs / OLEDs and we have flat screen HD TVs, then there's really no longer a technology difference between TV sets and computer monitors anymore - they all have their own timing circuitry now, so HDTV is its own international standard (we all use the same 1080p / 4K around the world).
But, interestingly, films use 24 frames per second.
Why 24 fps? Well, I used the word "film" rather than "movie" purposefully there, to remind you that they were recorded on reels of celluloid film.
And celluloid film was - frankly, still is - quite an expensive material. So movies were balancing enough frames per second to give the illusion of "smooth motion" BUT using as little celluloid as possible.
Both because celluloid was expensive, but also because you're spooling the film onto reels. And then, playing the movie on cinema projectors, you've got to think about how big the reels can physically be, how many reels a movie comes on and how often does the projectionist in the cinema's projection room have to physically swap the reels while the movie's playing.
So, yeah, with film, they basically went for the lowest refresh rate you could get away with. Save money on film, and ship films on fewer reels (so for the average 90 minute film, it's just two reels - and that's also kind of why films did used to average about that length).
But now we have to switch to human perception. Because, after all, what is the minimum frames per second you can get away with, where humans still see the images as "smooth motion"?
It's roughly 20 frames per second.
The brain actually seems to process visual information at around 10Hz. Yeah, ten times a second. And a 10Hz "pulse" is what you should absolutely avoid, if you don't want to cause people to have an epileptic seizure.
Okay, if it's 10Hz then why am I saying 20 frames a second?
Because the human eye is always open - continuous exposure - so within that 1/10th of a second, the eye sees two frames, blended together.
At 20 frames per second, "motion blur" begins to happen and your brain is trained to look for motion blur from the real world. We "read" motion from the motion blur, which convinces the brain that something is in motion. That's why you need at least 20 frames per second to create the illusion of "smooth motion".
But film is 24 fps. Well, you want a little "margin of error" there - go a little faster than the bare minimum to ensure that the illusion of smooth motion really is happening for all viewers (there are, as with all things biological, variations between us humans).
But another reason is mathematical. 24 is twice 12. And 12 divides neatly by 1, 2, 3, 4 and 6 (common factors) and 8, 9, 10 are "semi-factors" (being multiples of common factors, they don't divide neatly, but they do have a nice clean relationship anyway).
Why do we care about this? For speeding up and slowing down the frame rate. Time lapses and slow motion. When it's divisible by 12 and all its many common factors, it makes it much easier to calculate things, when it's whole numbers and not fractions.
As the human eye has continuous exposure, there really is no maximum frame rate. BUT it is diminishing returns.
At 20fps, you're showing the brain two frames motion blurred together. At 30 fps, three frames. At 60fps, six frames.
This all improves the quality of that "motion blur" that the brain "reads" to interpret motion, so it looks smoother. But there's a limit - more and more frames makes the "motion blur" more accurate (so the brain sees it as being closer and closer to the "infinity fps" it sees from real life), but how precisely your brain picks this up has its limits.
(And it is, to some extent, a trainable thing. Some people can see the 60 / 120 Hz difference, others just don't notice. 120 / 240 Hz difference? Even fewer people can tell the difference. 240 / 480Hz? Can even those with a professional trained eye even see the difference anymore? That's what I mean about diminishing returns. More FPS is more good, but the limit is you... once we're up at 120Hz, can you tell the difference anymore? Probably not.)
There you go, everything you never wanted to know about refresh rates but were too afraid to ask a nerd like me about, because I was totally going to go on about it for far too long.
Enjoy and spread the knowledge!
p.s. this also explains why, when you play games, most people want to turn off the "motion blur" effect. Whilst, in reality, motion blur is actually good - that's what the brain uses to "read" motion - the "motion blur" effect in games is faking it. It's not really drawing, say, 10 frames and then blurring them altogether, it's a trick to fake motion blur and it's not 100% accurate. Some people are sensitive to this, their brains can tell it's fake and, sorry, they have to turn off the "motion blur" effect because it's scrambling their brains to see fake motion blur. It doesn't "read" right to their brains.
@@klaxoncow Lol I found this all quite interesting. It's fascinating how technology evolves around whatever tools are at hand, and standards can be set for good reasons but then persist long after those reasons are obsolete.
And I'm definitely one of those people that can see the fake "motion blur" effect. Makes the whole image look unnaturally smeared, and doesn't translate into a more immersive feeling of movement.
@@klaxoncow Yeah my understanding was the human eye can see in 60fps (I guess on average as like you said SOME can do better but most don't) so basically anything above that is just reducing potential frame skips, as in if you have a game running 120 fps and all of a sudden it loses 50% for some reason you wont be able to tell compared to if you have a game running at 60 and it loses half.
So as much as all the extra frames are kinda wasted it just means there is a much bigger margin of acceptable lost frames.
Moba's are a great example of this as if you are doing say 120 frames early game with 1 ability and not much happening on screen as everyone is in their own lanes then later on when everyone is in 1 lane or around an objective you can afford to lose 60 frames without a drop in performance whereas if you are 60 frames early then the late game fights have a very noticeable performance drop if you lose frames.
That's basically the only benefit of having higher then 60 fps, it gives you a safety net for frame drop
10:26 Duncan's "I don't know", like he's shrivelled into a skeleton
With all the lava builds, I'm surprised nobody guessed the late 90s classic Dante's Peak.
oh my god, i love that all the prompts are chil cool fun stuff then duncan's is just outrageously hardcore xD
37:50
I'm irrationally annoyed that they used an enderpearl as the heart of the sea and not the actually heart of the sea item.
After the box conversation up to 20:00, I realized that a *great* prompt would be "What's in the Pulp Fiction briefcase" - because it'll be really different for every builder
Happy Feet absolutely traumatized me when I was a little kid because of the pop can plastic thingy. I've cut them up ever since because of that movie
Nilesy's Leatherface looks like Mankind from WWF and it's awesome.
I came to say the exact same thing lol
That great moment in TCM when Sally threw Leatherface off the house and he fell 16ft through a cameraman's equipment.
14:35 Was just reminded of how Duncan likes his women and coffee. "Full of bullets."
32:18
Started making it.
Had a breakdown.
Bon Appetit!
That last Moana was Dora the Explorer. Like straight up.
25:45 CLASSIC Rythian
still cant believe he's in the yogscast still after executing the blues brothers
I'm surprised none of them used the minecraft item literally called "Heart of the Sea" for the moana builds
Iconic movie scenes. Ben: "Blues Brothers get shot in the back." Must have missed that version of the movie. And then I find out there's no giant mouse in this video. Dear Yogscast.....
Great builds, some really cute ones and some nightmare fuel. A healthy mix from the Yogscast as always.
I would die for Brionys raptors and defend them against anything that would cause them harm
If they’d had fence-gate feet I feel like they would’ve been perfect
Good luck fighting the mouse-t. Rex
You'd have to since they don't look like they can defend themselves
All that time worrying over Rafiki and he's hidden by Simba's butt.
NTSC is 29.97, PAL is 25, film is 24
And we have done studies to try and measure the number of FPS that humans can track. It changes over your lifetime. When you’re younger it’s higher, and settles down to between 30 and 60 as adults. But some research suggests that we have momentary flashes of eye movement that allow us to see up to 200 fps for fractions of a second, and these flashes contribute to motion sickness on digital interfaces like VR.
I was laughing crying at “that bit in brokeback mountain”😂
Man, it's really clear how good they've gotten at this! These builds are amazing!
Kirsty's build of Toothless and Hiccup was just adorable.
And now that I think about it please tell me her new TTT model is Toothless.
Nilesy's Leatherface was so good! His best build yet.
While on movies I can't help but recommend The Grand Budapest Hotel, I feel like nobody I have ever spoken to know it aside from me and the people who I watched it with.
Its a great movie, though some people ive shown it to find it a bit strange. I think they lack a mind for symbolism and storytelling in general
My favorite Wes Anderson movie
It's a movie I've certainly heard of, but never seen, but I also don't watch a lot of movies.
Omg Briony's raptors 🥺💚💚💚
35:55 I really wanted them to give a speech bubble that said "Texas bitches". but as I write this comment I changed it to the old SpongeBob insults about texas*, or really just anything to reference that whole scene
edit texas not taxes, but thats funny too. just randomly make it about taxes
ive been watching these gartic videos the last few days and realised watching this one that this group (boba, briony, kirsty, osie, duncan, nilesy, ben) have a particularly good chemistry. At least in this setting, they have such lively conversations and it's really fun to watch and listen to ^^
7:20 I actually watched Morbius during the re-release with my sister. Honestly, considering the plot and content, that movie needs to be renamed Milo. XD
Honestly, it wasn't that bad (it was far from a masterpiece, though). The primary issue is that they put way too much focus on special effects to attempt to detract from the writing and inconsistent pacing.
Honestly, it's an issue that all the sony live-action superhero + villian movies have.
“When are they gonna stop making terrible movies!?”
Ben, hate to break it to ya… but bad movies have been around as long as cinema, and they will continue to exist as long as cinema does
Whoa was happy feet really from the VHS ages
I'm getting too old, I just wanna go back to playing wind waker as a teenager with no cares in the world
6:36 What a delightful noise!
Briony knowing HYCYB? just made my night.
Everyone should know Tom Cardy.
OMG, Ben's prompt. Duncan is diabolical.
"oh. that's a fun movie. oh. i like that one too. oh! that will be good. Bone Tomahawk... i pray for them"
6:08 That's quittin' talk!
As a massive Jurassic park nerd you have no idea how pissed I am that the t. Rex is *freakin' grey* instead of brown in Briony's build and facing the camera instead of off to the side (and also how moderately disappointed I am there's 4 raptors instead of 2)
yall happy feet was a childhood favourite of mine and i rewatched it recently and its so fucking harrowing in some ways. so many great songs. so much fun. also so much fucking dread and tears.
Moana in the last one looks like Dora lmao "come se dece lava god no rampage"
Wow, I totally forgot about the scene where Phoenix Wright shot Elwood in the back 😂
If the tails of the raptors were 1 block up instead of on the ground, then perhaps they wouldn't look like snakes with arms.
Only ones to not make it were Jurassic Park and Bone Tomahawk.
The former cos of a scuffed build and the latter cos nobody has heard of that film.
A lot of these episodes I enjoy because it's funny when people mess up, but this one was fun to watch as a genuinely impressive episode. Great work, everyone!
Bone Tomahawk is a phenomenal western and I highly recommend it
Found the troll, guys.
Nilesy said the Nazi painting was found and bought back, and "they got it back"?? Who did, Nilesy? Who got their painting back?!
Yogs need to watch the Blues Brothers.
Love these videos. Keep em coming!
Think the jurassic park needed the banner and the skeleton. I would hsve zero idea how to build a raptor though
im going to be honest im disappointed that in none of the moana builds did they actually use the minecraft item "heart of the sea", but for the second build for moana when i saw it fully built i just couldn't not think it was moses splitting the red sea to fight the balrog xD
36:50 Mankind [aka Mick Foley] making a cameo XD
Nilsey has improved his building skills tremendously! tell him hes doing great ^.^
Why were the Littles even adopting at all?
They could've just MADE another kid unless Mrs Little didn't want to get pregnant again.
36:31 I wonder if we're going to see any hidden flesh rooms in the future
6:33 that noise that Briony made... lmao what the heck
Osie's Texas Chainsaw build was so good! Once Osie learns banners she'll become unstoppable.
"I speak fluent penguin..."
My only memory of Happy Feet
I want them to do this topic again, once for purely live action and then for animation.
Maybe even an anime one idk
I believe for Sony to keep the rights to Spider-man they have to make movies with him in it. So his short appearance as a baby at the end counts enough for them to keep the rights a little longer. I haven't seen it but they talked about it on MBMBAM. Not sure how true that is but it kinda makes sense 7:22
They're all getting too good lol it's a different show now - still love it
No joke, I like to play along with these and see what I would come up with for the prompt, and the first thing in my mind was Blues Brothers mall chase.
These were so good!
Can't believe there was no giant mouse though!
Nilesy has gotten so good at this massive improvement
Four girls and only 3 guys, rare to have a primarily female group
The Discord push-to-talk sounds are a bit distracting. Wonder who they're coming from.
"found it in a thrift shop"
Sure. Right.
Where was Stuart during WWII?
poor ben, what the hell is bone tomahawk
Poor Duncan, what the hell is The Matrix?
That entire final act of Bone Tomahawk remains to this day the only film sequence to ever make me feel queasy and deeply unsettled. Between the bisection and the quadriplegic "breeders" I was so upset.
Great episode! :D
Perhaps the building rooms should have a roof over them to build sky things, background or whatever
Word of warning, that bone tomahawk scene is &%#@ed up
The entire final 15-20 minutes of the film is fucked. And such a stark contrast to everything that came before.
Bit disappointed no one gave Mick Foley a shoutout!
😢 omg, my brain completely repressed the Zoo scene, I thought Ben was talking about the shrimp that was in the Ocean under Happy Feet talking about life 😳 I forgot most of that like 5minute speech
the look of that last leatherface made me want to replay Party Hard
Good children's film like Pixar films often have grim scenes just not gruesome ones. But they're always grim for a reason, not just for the sake of being grim. It doesn't "destroy children", it teaches them. I don't see how Happy Feet actually having social commentary and a point suddenly convinced them they don't want to watch it because it isn't just happy dancing penguin without depth.
Im a bit worried half the people in this haven’t seen Jurassic park….
they seem to be more concerned with keeping the prompt all the way through than it seeing all the weird ways it can go wrong, which is actually the point of the telephone game
Duncan using Bone fucking Tomahawk is quite the wild card
Caked up leatherface!! My beloved! 💖
I'm with Duncan. No way would i have guessed Boba's build. Maybe if the code was green at least.
Ben and a full party of Yoggirls!
9:57 briony should have left her original guess
Oosie is getting sooo good!
The answer to the question, "Is Nilesy full of shit?", is basically always, "Yes." But it's never been more true than during the first build.
Nilesy's painting story actually true, though not worth millions.
29.97 FPS is the American (and Japanese) TV signal called NTSC (also jokingly called "Never The Same Color" because the color accuracy was really shit) - it used to be 30 FPS, but then they had to fit the color signal somewhere so they had to make it very slightly slower to fit the color information.
25 FPS is PAL, typically what is used for European/Australian TV.
23.976 (and sometimes 24) FPS is what they use for film and most modern TV shows (which is still used today, even in the digital era).
As sad as it is that the Jurassic Park prompt didn't make, I'm glad we got httyd out of it! They were so cute!!
How are you going to choose the Matrix and not have it be the dodging bullets scene? XD
I definitely would have failed here-I haven’t seen three of the movies, and had never even heard of two of them.
That happy feet chat unlocked some fucking memories. That stuff with the prophet being chocked by i think it was some kind of plastic and the halucinations freaked 7 year old me out to the point i had to leave the cinema and didn't watch past that. i had completely forgotten about that until then
For some reason, the gods only know why, I rewatched Happy Feet on a continuous loop while writing my dissertation. I'd seen it before so it wasn't distracting and it had music, so that was good to work to. But good god that film is depressing. Definitely recommend it though!
They need another guy to work as an assistant helping out each builder a little bit
Am I losing it, or are there some push-to-talk activation/deactivation sounds throughout this video?
I like genz simba being shown a brick wall
actually in the stewart little book, the kid's mom goes to hospital pregnant, she gave birth to that rat. personally I think this is so much worse then the parents adopting.
I've never heard of Bone Tomahawk.
But Rafiki doesn't have a red bum, they literally call him Mr. Blue Behind at some point~
This series needs a building wands or building gadgets mod.