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Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Video Round-Up: January 28, 2015


"John Carter is based on a beloved novel, had a huge budget, and was directed by one of Pixar's best. And yet it's still surprisingly sinful given those facts."

Welcome to The Geek Art Gallery's daily Video Round-Up, in which we collect the geekiest videos from around the web each day for your enjoyment. Why slog through page after page of kitten and baby videos to find what you're looking for on video aggregators when you can cut straight to the chase here? Comedy sketches, countdowns, movie parodies, nerdy music, science in action, and supercuts - we've got it all!




"You demanded it, so we revisited the latest YA trilogy (quadrilogy?) in the making, The Maze Runner!!"



"Just in time for Blizzard 2015, Head of School Matt Glendinning has a special snow day message for you."






"The evolution of video games! Pong, Space Invaders, Super Mario Brothers, Street Fighter, Minecraft, Battlefield 3, then Grand Theft Auto 5."



""It's like we've forgotten who we are at home. Explorers. Pioneers. Not caretakers."

Fan trailer cut to a mashup of different JFK speeches regarding the Apollo space program.

Inspired by the boundless optimism of the US Space Program of the 1960's while lamenting this generations marginalization of space exploration, I felt compelled after seeing Interstellar to edit this piece. We were once explorers. We were once willing to sacrifice. The United States was once the vanguard as mankind pushed off this small rock we call home into the vastness of the unknown."




Musician John D. Boswell, aka Melodysheep, pays tribute to the golden age of the Internet with this catchy musical remix of clips and sounds from 1990s Internet advertisements.
"A musical tribute to the internet's golden age: the 1990s."




Thug savant Sparky Sweets (comedian Greg Edwards) gives you the low-down on Charles Dickens' classic 1859 novel A Tale of Two Cities.




Youtuber popocaVFX based himself of Owl Turd’s massively popular “We Go Forward” tale to create this animated version of the comic.




CineFix takes us deep inside the classic chestburster sequence from Ridley Scott’s classic Alien. The short documentary is part of their new series Art of the Scene, which tears apart classic movie scenes, looking at the creative minds, techniques and stories behind them. - See more at: http://mightymega.com/2015/01/28/alien-chestburster-art-of-the-scene/#sthash.1SJJWSeN.dpuf
"A newborn Xenomorph bursting violently from John Hurt’s chest is one of the most iconic, and important, scenes in science fiction or horror movie history. A lot went on before and after Ridley Scott shouted “Action” - we’ll tell you the whole story.

Ridley Scott's Alien is still one of the most terrifying horror films and interesting science fiction films in American Cinema history. From the humanizing, lived-in environment of the Nostromo ship, to the genius creature design, to the genuine surprise on the faces of the cast when the Alien chestburster bursted out, we’ll take you though all the elements that made this scene.

What did you think? Did we teach you something you didn’t know about the Alien Chestburster scene? About production design or creature creation? About Ridley Scott’s tendency to play mean tricks on his cast? What other iconic movie scenes would you like to see us dissect in future episodes of Art of the Scene?"



"Every other Monday, our team of blacksmiths and craftsman will be building some of your favorite weapons, and some weapons that you've never seen before. This week, we're recreating Ryuko Matoi's Scissor Blade from Kill la Kill!"





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