Post by Squeeze Pimmel on Feb 16, 2011 14:22:16 GMT -5
I won the RiffTrax Remix 2011 Contest!
All the writers at RiffTrax judged that my entry in the RiffTrax Remix 2011 contest was THE BEST! I feel really happy and honored to be recognized in this manner.
www.rifftrax.com/remix
In case the web page disappears, here is a link to the YouTube playlist:
www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=091C929FE6C9BA81
And here's a thread dedicated to it over at the RiffTrax forum:
forum.rifftrax.com/index.php/topic,20437.0.html
Beware! The full video is 45 minutes long and is split up into five clips because of YouTube's video length limit. But taken as a whole, it reads like a complete movie.
For those with ADD, here is a short 15-minute version:
During the month of January, RiffTrax.com held a RiffTrax "remix" contest. I worked long and hard on my entry. I had fun doing it. I recently built a powerful new computer and this was an opportunity to put it to the test. I took an old made-for-TV movie featuring the Six Million Dollar Man, Bionic Woman, and a young Sandra Bullock as the Bionic Girl. It sucks! But I made it entertaining by remixing it with RiffTrax jokes and commentaries. And I cut out everything except for Sandra's subplot. I also processed the video to make it look like an old, worn-out film. Watching it kind of feels like watching an old Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode.
"Background:" I found these reels amongst the junk left behind in Deep 13, hidden within an old Polybius arcade videogame cabinet. I'm guessing that these reels belonged to TV's Frank, judging from the fact that they were edited down to the love story subplot of the original movie. Frank probably kept these reels a secret. And there they remained in the Polybius cabinet, long after he was assumed into Second Banana Heaven. The film was unusually worn out. Because some reels are in such bad shape, it appears that Frank watched some reels more than others. Combined with the choice of editing, a curious insight of our beloved TV's Frank becomes apparent. It took a little while for me to jury rig Dr. Forrester's old interocitor into a makeshift telecine. I had fun remixing it with Rifftrax commentary. Enjoy!
All the writers at RiffTrax judged that my entry in the RiffTrax Remix 2011 contest was THE BEST! I feel really happy and honored to be recognized in this manner.
www.rifftrax.com/remix
In case the web page disappears, here is a link to the YouTube playlist:
www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=091C929FE6C9BA81
And here's a thread dedicated to it over at the RiffTrax forum:
forum.rifftrax.com/index.php/topic,20437.0.html
Beware! The full video is 45 minutes long and is split up into five clips because of YouTube's video length limit. But taken as a whole, it reads like a complete movie.
For those with ADD, here is a short 15-minute version:
During the month of January, RiffTrax.com held a RiffTrax "remix" contest. I worked long and hard on my entry. I had fun doing it. I recently built a powerful new computer and this was an opportunity to put it to the test. I took an old made-for-TV movie featuring the Six Million Dollar Man, Bionic Woman, and a young Sandra Bullock as the Bionic Girl. It sucks! But I made it entertaining by remixing it with RiffTrax jokes and commentaries. And I cut out everything except for Sandra's subplot. I also processed the video to make it look like an old, worn-out film. Watching it kind of feels like watching an old Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode.
"Background:" I found these reels amongst the junk left behind in Deep 13, hidden within an old Polybius arcade videogame cabinet. I'm guessing that these reels belonged to TV's Frank, judging from the fact that they were edited down to the love story subplot of the original movie. Frank probably kept these reels a secret. And there they remained in the Polybius cabinet, long after he was assumed into Second Banana Heaven. The film was unusually worn out. Because some reels are in such bad shape, it appears that Frank watched some reels more than others. Combined with the choice of editing, a curious insight of our beloved TV's Frank becomes apparent. It took a little while for me to jury rig Dr. Forrester's old interocitor into a makeshift telecine. I had fun remixing it with Rifftrax commentary. Enjoy!