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12 memorable sci-fi movie moments was posted by Blastr just a day or two ago, and the animated GIFs there inspired this article.

Blastr used some elegant animated Sci-Fi GIFs in this one. When I use the phrase elegant while speaking of computers I am referring to using minimal coding to achieve maximum effect. In this instance, the GIF images are fairly high rez, but only a small number of pixels per frame are actually changing state. So, for example, the Moon GIF is 500 pixels wide by 222 pixels tall, weighing in as a very crisp image of 184KB. How can the file size be that small? Around 150KB is the base image, which never changes; a slice of the image 80 pixels wide by 140 pixels tall is the man jogging for 8 to 10 frames which loop back to the beginning.

Just like the MPG video that makes up your broadcast TV or cable signal, they give you the basic image (referred to as a Key Frame) and then only have to give you the pixels that are different in the next frame, and the frame after that, etc., until they come to the next key frame. In that way they have to send you a complete new hi-rez image every half second, or second and a half, and not the 24 to 29 times a second that online and TV video requires. The in between times they only have to update the pixels that are different from the last image, leaving you with a lot less bandwidth to transfer the same amount of visual information.

This particular page of animated GIF images is the best collection I have ever seen for demonstrating these principles. They use several different techniques to achieve these effects as well. The small slice of screen trick that the Moon GIF uses can also be seen in the Dr. Strangelove, 2001: A Space Odyssey, and Young Frankenstein animations. The Vertigo and Clockwork Orange animations cover a much larger area of their respective pictures, but use a trick involving the boundaries of an image segment. In both cases the shirt of each character supplies the material to be manipulated (it can be any other object with a border to be flexed), and any given pixel along the edges between the light and dark parts of the picture is set to cycle between 4 to 6 values of brightness and color. The end result is that the difference between one frame and the next is just as small in terms of number of pixels changed (information density), but the visual effect you observe takes on a whole different aspect.

Another technique demonstrated there can be seen in the two different Blade Runner GIF’s, distributed changes. In the Cityscape image, they are distributing 5 different areas of the image as tiny little animation segments, each much smaller than the single area that Moon or Dr. Strangelove gave us, but working on the exact same principles of an upper left and lower right corner for each animated area, with its own defined pixel changes. In the second Blade Runner animation the distributed change is a variation on the Boundary animation style, where this time the boundary is between raindrops and air. Any given onscreen atmospheric pixel only has to cycle between 6 separate values in sequence, and that 6 value range only needs to be defined once for all of them, to be used over and over for each.

There are many more ways to refine your animation (or any other streaming video you are building) for maximum visual effect with minimum bandwidth burned, but these are a few of my basic favorites. Thanks for taking the time to read through this set.

This week we have a particularly silly title: Gnomeo and Juliet. It takes the classic Shakespeare tale and applies it to garden gnomes, by way of some of the folks involved with the Shrek series of feature length films. This one comes in 3D and is silly fun of the family friendly variety. If you want something a bit more gritty and adventurous, The Eagle takes place in the 2nd century British islands, an environment so alien to the modern world it might as well be on another planet. The 9th Legion of the Roman Empire had disappeared several years before the story opens, with a son of the expeditions leader out to figure out what happened to them.

For newly released movies we have Let Me In, the American remake of the award winning masterpiece Let The Right One In, for the fantasy/horror crowd with an addiction to vampires. I can not imagine how the US version can be a quarter as good as the original Swedish film with all its layered complexity, beyond the fact that you don’t have to know how to read to follow the story. But I will watch it, probably on a Netflix equivalent so I at least don’t have to pay extra money to find out if it is any good. The next movie this week is Monsters, the next in the series of alien invasion tales for this century, this Brit entry to the field winning all sorts of awards on the Film Fest circuits before it finally made it to theaters and DVD. And finally we have Quantum Apocalypse, which may be the only end-of-the-world movie set in Lafayette, Louisiana. I don’t have anything to recommend it beyond that, since it is a made-for-Syfy Channel movie (usually a demotion all by itself).

Classic animation is represented this week by the 60th anniversary of Alice In Wonderland, the Disney version. Not the modern Disney version with Johnny Depp, but the old one from 1951. Aldous Huxley worked with Walt Disney on early scripts for this project in late 1945, which gets even twisty-er when you realize Huxley’s mother, Julia Arnold, was one of the little girls that Carroll photographed and told the Alice stories to.

There is one quality new Anime title this week: You’re Under Arrest! Fast & Furious – Season 2. If you are not already a fan of this franchise, get ready for some serious belly laughs as car crazy Miyuki and insanely strong Natsumi get everyone in their cross hairs. The quality re-release anime this week is Chobits; a Persacomp (Personal Computer) that looks just like a life size naked girl ends up at our protagonists place and proceeds to turn his life inside out. I know it isn’t obvious from that perfectly accurate description, but this is a Shojo story, with the plot line and action implications all resolving for the (robot) girls benefit. Any computer geek of either gender will love this classic animated tale.

Every year in the UK there is a great little film festival that comes along, the Sci-Fi London Film Festival, happening next from April 23nd to May 2nd. It actually turns up twice every year, because besides the April event they also run an Oktoberfest. Part of the festival focus is to support new film makers, with panels, workshops, and a 48 hour film challenge which usually funds the winner to make a feature length version of the winning entry. Well, it seems they put a number of the shorts, features, documentaries, and interviews online to check out at Sci-Fi London Web TV. You will find all the 2010 48 Hour entries there (with the tag line These films were made for zero budget in 2 days!), lots of the shorts from the previous Oktoberfest, a behind-the-scenes look at Paul, feature films including The Brain That Wouldn’t Die and Planet Outlaws, and a whole lot more. To see their entire collection you can also hit the Daily Motion SFLondon site. And if you don’t watch anything else, be sure to take the time for The Hunt For Gollum. If you happen to be in the UK, The Sci-Fi London team will be part of the SFX Weekender event on the 4th and 5th of February, where, surprise, a lot of science fiction will be screened.

There are a couple of excellent movies coming out on disk this week, although their genre status is debatable. RED, or Retired, Extremely Dangerous, was my favorite action comedy not based on a comic book for 2010. Nothing deep or surprising, just good silly fun. The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest completes the Millennium trilogy by author Stieg Larsson, a rather gritty and brutal tale of government corruption and the brilliant hacker girl who fought for her life against them, and the dogged investigative reporter who helped her. And Nowhere Boy is the story of the young John Lennon. All good movies, but where is the science fiction, you ask? Here it is: Enter the Void is the story of a murdered Tokyo drug dealer who’s ghost watches over his little sister.

TV shows didn’t do as well this week, with no real live action choices available. In western animation, Shaun the Sheep: Spring Shena-a-anigans out of the UK is a good silly choice.

There are a number of new Anime titles this week. Ghost Sweeper Mikami – Collection 2 continues the story of a beautiful but greedy ghost hunter out to get rich off the misfortune of others, and her perverted (therefor easily controllable) sidekick. Pandora Hearts – Premium Edition (Sub.DVD box 2) likewise continues its storyline, about an heir to the throne who is tossed into prison on his 15th birthday for no apparent reason. The series has some resemblance to Alice in Wonderland on several different levels, and is worth following.

The Sacred Blacksmith – Complete Series gives you the entire package with no waiting, unlike the previously mentioned programs. The Sacred Blacksmith has the power to forge powerful swords capable of defeating the demons who threaten his world, and teach people like Knight Guard Cecily Campbell how to use them. If you are not sure if this is for you, you can watch it online before you make your decision. Vampire Knight – Complete Series also has that instant gratification thing going for it, the whole story at once. In this one, Yuki Cross has grown up and become a guardian of the vampire race, in a twisty tale where nothing is what you thought it was, and again you can watch it online before you choose whether to bring it home with you.

Naruto Shippuden: Box Set 5 is not the kind of series you are going to be able to bring home in a single box, no matter how much you want to. There are already a boatload of episodes, with another handful of seasons available in Japan beyond what we have access to here. Disgaea has similar problems…

There are also a few classic anime’s being re-released this week. The reason for the Gantz reissue are obvious; the feature length live action film makes its US debut last Thursday. Not so obvious is the reason for the Armitage: Movie re-release, but I don’t really care; this story is a total classic with world class animation that everyone should see. The robot revolution on Earth didn’t go so well and they were all destroyed. But many survive on Mars, living amongst humans just fine, often undetected. Armitage is one of them, a tough cop who’s partner has been shot up so many times he is now more machine than flesh with computer controlled prostheses. Behind the police procedural, murder mystery, and government conspiracy, this one is a love story; and it works on every level.