 There's a four-letter word that reminds me of you and you know what it is. Poop. Hey, welcome back to our Stupid Reacts. Indeed, it's I'm Corbin. I'm Rick. You can follow us on Instagram. Yep. And Twitter. You know it. More. Juicy Count and Baby. And childish behavior, where we talk about things like poop. Hey, what's up, it's I'm Patron. And follow us on Twitter account. Ring the bell to be notified when the notification is quartered. Subscribe. Today we're reacting to a, it's this, I don't know if you've ever heard of them. Nope. I don't know what you're talking about. This video is called VFX Artist React to Bollywood Bad and Great CGI. Bad and great. Yes. Well, who are these supposed VFX specialists? Do they work for Industrial Light and Magic? No, they're their own company. Oh, well. Coriander Crew. Well, they're actually a really good YouTube channel. Okay. You know how people like Marines will break down. Yes, yes, yes. And say how good it's done. These are VFX artists who worked professionally. Got it, got it, got it. And they have their own share. Where are they from? Are they Indian? No, they're American. They're American. Okay, cool. They're here in LA. But they're actually really good. I watch them often when they come out with videos. Cool. I like them a lot. And this is what they do? Yeah. Okay. And so of the Bollywood. And so. I hope it's some of the things we've seen. We'll see. Yeah. Here we go. I am still having trouble wrapping my hair on this one. Dude, he's just chilling so hard. We just discovered a hidden secret visual effect shop. Hey, what's up? Welcome to another episode of... Oh, God. What happened to the couch? Where's Clint? What's up, everybody? Welcome to another wonderful episode of Visual Effects Artist React. This time we are back with Bollywood, Tollywood, Jollywood. There's a million names for it. We're calling it Bollywood because it sums it up nicely. I'm very excited for this Bollywood episode because, I mean, honestly, I truly love Bollywood. I love the accent behind it all. When Bollywood is good, it's like just any American actor, but on, like, full steroids. Because it's got this crazy, like, over-the-top visual effect. And when it's bad, it's kind of, like, really awesome. If you like those, I love it. I want to see that scene. Dude, I love how they just try to kill this guy. Like, let's crank him up so high. Somehow got more velocity. Yeah, commercials? Yeah, it's basically a Pepsi commercial. Some hardcore product placement. This looks like South Indian. So how do they do it? They just did it for real, I guess, probably. This looks like the most classic Bollywood type of effect. Wire removal. Wire removal. Wire removal. That's an intense shot. So how do they do that? Oh, yeah, good point. So if it's on the wires, the wires would be... I guess they'd have to, like, hide it between the wires, the camera? He might be on some sort of, like, hip thing. He looks like he's on a hip thing. You can even see it in his shirt a little bit. It looks like he's not that high up the ground, and also the RAM disappeared, and the, like, hold thing disappeared. Everything disappeared, yeah, basically. And maybe that bar is CG. The bar is probably CG, because the wires would have clipped it, yeah. Also, there's, like, no definition in that bar, so it's like... Or a red solid? I'm colorblind. Oh. How are your VFX cards? Sometimes it's hard, you know? Wait a second, all the signs are fake. Yeah! Every single sign is fake. Every single sign is fake. EFX is probably the visual effects test that you find on this movie. So this movie is about a guy who's got, like, mythological and sensory empowers, which is why he's basically a superhero in the box. Oh my God, yeah. So he's not doing sweet jumps, he's fighting bad guys. Yes, basically. He's got the whole line of an ancient swordsman in it. Man, look how giddy he is to stop this guy. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Wait, who's this? Who's this? His portly buddy. Oh! I don't know how this is. Good vibes, kids. He's stuck there. My first reaction was like, oh, it's miniatures. No, they really put a truck into it. No, it's not miniatures. No, it's like an actual set with a green screen. It's legit. I mean, it could be, it certainly could be a miniature. I think they just did it. It looks legit, yeah. I think they just took a thing like that and threw it on a ramp and just, like, put it in a slingshot of it. Well, look at the, like, the helicopter actually moves after it's being hit. It flexes in a way a miniature can't flex. Yeah. Isn't that fire coming out of it? Like... The power of anger is like... Look how tiny the jump is in that angle. That was a tiny jump. Oh! Yeah, that's real. That was a truck and a helicopter. So, they're manually rotoscoping that fire. Do you see that? Yeah. Oh my God, there's so many errors. Look at the mask. Look at the feather on the right side, too. Funny how they could pick that up and just spoon it. Uh-oh. What's the plan? Dude. Dude, that hot dog. You're freaking right. Once again, just the impact is the transition point. He's actually holding on. And you'll see right around there. See, click. In motion, you don't see that little glitch. Overall, other than the fact that the CG arm was kind of like a hot dog, you know, the actual execution of doing that shot is really good. Agreed. Oh, and also notice how he's actually specifically turning so that his arm that just got chopped is away from camera. How do you rotate it the other way? You'd have to use effects to track in a stump. Yeah, it'd be a lot harder to paint out the arm, too. Oh, absolutely. It's easy to paint out an arm of this, but once it's over your body, if you paint it out, now suddenly you have an arm-sized gap. You have to now fill in with custom elements. Speaking of arm-sized gaps, I actually got a clip for you guys to watch. What a segway. Zero. That's okay. This is Bob. What? I can tell you right now, I know this actor, and he's a normal science guy. This is a movie about a little person who is very well off and they're trying to find themselves. He's actually 5'7", and in the movie, he's 4'8". The effects in this movie are so flawless, it hurts my brain. That's a full-on camera move. It was tracking backwards and also panning to the right. Is this like Lord of the Rings stuff? Right. Because it's easy enough to do a camera move and have regular-sized people and small-sized people. They did that on Lord of the Rings, we wrote that down in a previous episode, but they're holding hands here. I'm very confused. Doesn't this hurt your head, dude? It does. Let me break this down for you guys. Every shot in this movie, which had this actor shrunken down to 4'8", they had to shoot five takes for one take, and they piece everything together in post. When we did Boss Time Dynamics, we shot six, maybe seven-step process. This is a 28-step process to get this guy to look like a little person. Wow. So the first take that they did was just the actors walking together with the floor removed. All of their sets were kind of like Legos, so all the floors could be moved around and taken out. So he's shrunken down, and they're holding hands, they're both in the shot, but they're still holding hands. So the hand-holding is real. The hand-holding is real. Oh, okay. The next take they do, that actor on the right doing his motion with no people in the background, no extras, holding his hand out without being an actor. The next take is a clean plate, no extras, just the background. They do another take, extras only. And then the final take is the main actor holding his hand. It's just him, no extras, walking down, holding his hand, because he's a arm-sized gap. When you're painting something out and you have a hand-sized hole and you need to replace, you need that information. So the actor by himself is the information that he would need to shrink him down and fill in the gaps with. But that doesn't make sense though. Like what, but how is he, like it's not just him being shorter, he's like scaled. Right, exactly. I think they're using all the takes and different pieces of it, so it's like they're able to merge different parts of each take together. That's what it seems like to me. Yes, they had some pretty intense technology to shoot this movie. Because if that was the case, then that crazy camera move they do at the end isn't all that crazy. This is repeatable. So I guess the body double is like the reference. Yeah, look at that, okay. The very next shot after this where it's just kind of a medium shot on both of them. They still shrink him. Like his shoulders aren't as wide. There's less distance between his shoulders. If it was just lower, it would look janky. Yeah, exactly. I see what you're saying. Like this is some tricky compositing. You guys are going to see something that's... Dude, that hurts my head. Like she's interacting with him. Wow. I'm still having trouble wrapping my head around this. I see the elements here, but I can't tell how it looks. How do they look so naturally locked and synced together? I don't know, if you guys have any insight on some zero visual effects besides the one behind the scenes video leave a comment below. Let us know how this is done. We're going to crack the case on this one, man. This one is intense. There's a lot of guys. What are you going to do when they come for you? When they come for you. Oh, watch out, we're good though. Because we got this guy. Yeah. Look at that. Look at that. Look at that. Look at that. It's all explosion bombs. Fire Dean. Oh, we got a car coming at me. No problem. I'm just going to stop it. All right, so this is Ambala 2015. One of my favorite Bollywood action scenes here. Let's go back to that Jeep jump. This one actually for once looked like it wasn't done in the original shot. Oh, dude, so this is like Photoshop? Yes, nephew Photoshop effects. It goes from frame right to frame left. But they did put a reflection on the van. Yeah. I was about to say wire work for this stuff that now I'm watching it and it's like, oh, wow. But stay tuned because the very next shot is the wire work stuff. Okay, that's definitely a at least a wire shot because the perspective of the car is changing. I feel bad for the stuntman on the Jeep and that shot looked like he was just like crunch. Yeah. And the snapshot freeze frames are honestly the best part about this and I can tell you how they did them. So they took the camera from three different angles and the onset still photographer was like, all right, first Jeep time. Damn, those matrix bullets. They're acting. Never been touched by a human hand, but perfectly, perfectly pristine. So this is probably the effect shot because they're rotoing out the ramps the cars are hitting. It looks like the base of the explosion is fake. Yeah. Because I think they're like reworking it to paint out the ramps. Was he waving at the camera or the ladies? The ladies. You can see the ladies in his glasses. Oh, you're right. You literally see the ladies in the reflection of his. And the reflection is actually tracked onto his glasses. That's visible facts. We just discovered a hidden secret visual effect shot. Yeah, you see how the people are moving with his glasses as opposed to like... I see that question as a joke, but you're totally right. They literally tracked the ladies into the reflection. See, they should be in one spot and his glasses revealed them. And then when he moves away, they stay in place as it wipes away. But in the shot here, the ladies actually move with those glasses. That means he has eyes only for these ladies. No matter where he looks. I had no idea until just now. I think it's a detail of the shot, but no one noticed. Bravo. Yes. If you guys have any sort of Bollywood scenes that feature a dude cooler than this, I will not believe you, but maybe leave it in the comments down below. Hey guys, Jake here. You might know me as the producer around here. Okay, it's over. Yeah, I like them a lot. But also, I know I'm sure people gave them crap in this one because I'm pretty sure only one Bollywood film Yeah, they were just categorizing it all as Bollywood. Which we've done before. Because when we do laugh challenges, it's easier to say Bollywood compilation. Even though they have a bunch, it's not going to read correct if you say Bollywood, Tollywood, Colliewood, South Indian, Malolium, compilation. Right. So they kind of just did that. Also, they're probably like most Americans that I know they know now because they got told in the first one. But prior, they assumed most Americans they only know Bollywood. We thought that same thing. We did not know there was anything else. So you got to forgive certain people for certain things, but they're really talented in breaking down stuff like that. Stuff a normal I wouldn't see. It's like it was a musician. My ears won't hear what a musician is. And so I like that. We know that there's a bunch of and there's even a lot of this with South Indian and people don't realize that the characters in those films are like gods. And so that's kind of why they can do what they do. And there's a bad CGI there, but there was some bad CGI in Tang Jugi or what was that one? Yeah, with a J. Deben. Yeah. There was bad CGI in that. A few spots, yeah. So it's not one industry or the other. They don't spend a hundred million dollars like they do on Avengers here. They're not going to do it. It's not fiscally responsible, obviously, for anybody but Disney to tickle them. Disney knows that they'll make a billion dollars so they can spend a quarter billion. They made like on like five of their films like this year, this past year, like a billion dollars. That's why they're going to... It's true, it's unbelievable. Yeah, but I like these guys a lot. Let us know what other videos we should record down in comment section below. And... Can we do any like visual effects? You end this? Explode. Mind the bubbling.