Two Asian chicks playing table tennis with a live grenade. Never mind the fact that the handle would fly off once the pin was pulled. This video from The Glue Society is an awesome example of how to dynamically build up a climax.
By brownkidd on October 28th, 2009 in LOL, TV + Film
Not much to say other than this is both amazingly awesome and kind of annoying, but still a little funny at the same time. Also, I’m reminded of Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey.
As awesome as this is, it kinda’ pisses me off. I’ve been wanting to make my own short video game and/or video game movie featuring things like Dunnys and classic games and graffiti. I made a few sprites and they were based on the sprites from the game River City Ransom. Looks likeANO beat me to the punch and even had my same idea for a crazy shmup level and the Mega Man 2 start screen. Oh well…
Turbo is a short film by Jarett Lee Conaway and it stars some dude from Twilight. It’s about these kids in the future who play this Dance Dance Revolution/Street Fighter hybrid game, and they take it waaayyyy to seriously. The idea sounds kind of stupid until you see it action.
Here’s the latest installment of Monty Oum’s Dead Fantasy. When compared to the first two, this one’s totally toned down, only showing a fight between Tifa from Final Fantasy VII and Hitomi from Dead or Alive. I highly recommend that you check out Dead Fantasy I and Dead Fantasy II after the jump. They’re way more insane.
If the above trailer for Treevenge moved you as deeply as I think it did, you’ll most likely be touched by the entire movie which is embedded after the break.
Back in 1946, Salvidor Dali and Walt Disney teamed up to create the short cartoon Destino. Dali worked with a Disney artist named John Hench, doing a lot of story boards, but they only ever got around to shooting 18 seconds of test footage before the project was abandoned.
Back in 1999 while Walt Disney’s nephew Roy Edward Disney was working on Phantasia 2000, he decided to finish the Destino project based on the original storyboards along with some input from John Hench himself. Unfortunately it never made it into Phantasia 2000, but luckily we have a little thing called YouTube. The final result is a mix of traditional hand drawn and computer animation. This is probably the weirdest Disney cartoon you’ll ever see, so you should definitely check it out before Disney’s lawyers take it down.
Found this over at I Heart Cool Stuff and it’s totally worth a watch. It reminds me of the random short clips that Nickelodeon would play in between commercials.