logo Sign In

Dek Rollins

User Group
Members
Join date
6-Apr-2015
Last activity
12-Jul-2025
Posts
3,300

Post History

Post
#1115637
Topic
The Phantom Menace on 35mm (* unfinished project *)
Time

poita said:

Dek Rollins said:

Poita, I think the donation thing is actually a very good way to tell who cares enough, but I also want to point out the other side of that. I actually want to donate to this, as I grew up watching the theatrical version on VHS, but I’m that outlier case that maybe can’t donate to something I really want to see happen. I’m a highschool senior currently without a job. I have no income and no money whatsoever. I donated ten bucks to the THX scan out of my Mom’s pocket, haha. I could do that for this as well, but that’s only going to happen if she’s feeling generous enough.

I just wanted to say that there is genuine interest even from those who don’t have the money to donate. I actually think this film is terrible, but I still enjoy watching the version that I grew up watching every single day on my CRT television, and having the complete widescreen theatrical cut from 35mm would probably be the most enjoyable way to rewatch it now. I also want to respect you and your time and money input, so of course there are more important films to get to, but I thought I should voice my interest in this. I’ll see what I can do about donating a bit.

Heya Dek,
No one is under any obligation to put anything towards any project, and there are certainly more important things out there to donate to. The THX donation is certainly appreciated by everyone working on it.
Please don’t feel under any obligation to donate to this project.
Generally though, I feel that if someone is passionate about a project getting done, nearly anyone could find $2 if they have the means to have internet access, a device to watch a digital file on, and time to hang out on forums etc.
I remember being 8 years old so and mowing nearly every lawn in our street, and washing neighbours cars to buy 8mm film stock to make short films on a wind up film camera (an old revere8) that I received from my Grandfather when he passed away.
I was really passionate about making films, and it was the only means I had to do so. I sold some of my action figures to other kids at school (not my Star Wars ones, I needed those for the films!) and once I scraped together the $30 or so required of 1979 money, I’d go buy my film, shoot the few minutes of it that you got for that money and would then post it off to Kodak and wait a few weeks for it to return to me in the post.
Once it came back, I’d breathlessly open the envelope, run inside and watch my (awful) creation, and then start finding ways to afford the next one.
One time the film came back blank, something went wrong with processing and I’d blown my dough, but another 3 months later I afforded another reel and made another short film.
However I would never have lifted a finger to get money to buy a chocolate bar, or somtehing like a radio control car, which my brother would have done nearly anyhting short of selling a kidney to get. (It took him six months to save up to get a Tamiya Hornet)
I thought RC cars were cool, but I never would have expended much energy, or sacrificed much to get one. I kinda wanted one, but I wasn’t passionate about it.

If one is passionate about something they really want, finding a dollar or two can usually be done, my 4 year old daughter gets a dollar a week pocket money if she cleans her room and makes her bed anbd waters the vege garden (her weekly chores) and she is currently saving up for a toy she wants really badly that costs $6. The 6 weeks feels interminably long to her, but she is now four weeks in and is excited that it is only 14 more sleeps.

That’s actually some great talk about passion. I’m also passionate about film, but I grew up kind of the opposite of you in that I’ve never been the kind of person who easily expresses my passion with action. I’ve always had the pessimistic mindset that I’ll never be able to afford the means of following my dreams of filmmaking. It was always a matter of “I’ll be a big director… when I’m an adult with money and experience.” But there was a change last year’s Autumn when I watched the Evil Dead films and read about Sam Raimi’s filmmaking origins, from Super8 to professional features. I was greatly inspired and finally shot a shortfilm. I kind of wish I had the kind of passion you described growing up, but maybe that just has to do with the different environments created by different time-periods.

That is kind of what I was waffling on about when I said it is an easy measure for me as to whether it is worth investing the large amounts of time into a project for me, if a solid amount of others are passionate about a film, willing to make a very small sacrifice for it to be preserved, then it feels worth it to me to go ahead with it.
If there aren’t a bunch of people passionate about the film, then it makes more sense to me to find one that people are really keen to have done.

I completely understand that. Considering the film we’re talking about, I’m surprised there’s as much interest as there seems to be, and I’m glad it’s there. There’s a thread on here where some members are getting a Jurassic Park III print scanned, and I wouldn’t spend a dime to care about preserving any of the JP sequels, and this is coming from someone who saw JP3 first. I can imagine that’s how you sometimes feel with a project like this. You don’t care much, but someone out there does, so it just might be worth it for them.

I’ve been overwhelmed at times at the amount of work, sacrifice and support that strangers put into seeing films preserved both here and on other forums. Every one of you has my eternal respect and it warms my heart in these often selfish and divisive times to see people come together from all walks of life to share their love of film with each other. Amazing things have been achieved, if it wasn’t for everyone here, a laserdisc would still be the only way to watch the original Star Wars films for example.

Anyway, thanks again for the donation to THX, there will be news on that front soon 😃

I think you deserve the eternal respect of everyone on this forum. You seem to sacrifice so much just to see the films we love preserved. I give my utmost thanks to you for your contributions to this community and to the history of film.

Post
#1115385
Topic
The Phantom Menace on 35mm (* unfinished project *)
Time

Poita, I think the donation thing is actually a very good way to tell who cares enough, but I also want to point out the other side of that. I actually want to donate to this, as I grew up watching the theatrical version on VHS, but I’m that outlier case that maybe can’t donate to something I really want to see happen. I’m a highschool senior currently without a job. I have no income and no money whatsoever. I donated ten bucks to the THX scan out of my Mom’s pocket, haha. I could do that for this as well, but that’s only going to happen if she’s feeling generous enough.

I just wanted to say that there is genuine interest even from those who don’t have the money to donate. I actually think this film is terrible, but I still enjoy watching the version that I grew up watching every single day on my CRT television, and having the complete widescreen theatrical cut from 35mm would probably be the most enjoyable way to rewatch it now. I also want to respect you and your time and money input, so of course there are more important films to get to, but I thought I should voice my interest in this. I’ll see what I can do about donating a bit.

Post
#1115317
Topic
Last movie seen
Time

Possessed said:

Dek Rollins said:

Possessed said:

You watched it growing up? So, like, yesterday? Just kidding Mr Rollins.

You’re what, six or seven years older than me? Eight maybe? I don’t mind people making fun of me for only becoming an adult later this month, but I expect that from older members like Frink, not ones who are most likely younger than my oldest brother. 😛

EDIT: and I get that it’s just a joke. If this came off sounding like I’m annoyed, don’t worry. I just think the situation is funny. 😄

Old enough to work full time as a supervisor of over 30 people many of which are older than your parents and live by myself with no financial support from anybody. But you’re almost 18 and out of high school so we’re practically the same!

Not what I said. I was just saying that I found the situation funny because it’s usually older members who are the ones making jokes about younger members, and since you’re young enough to be my older brother, I found it more funny (see the EDIT).

Btw, being 18 doesn’t make you an adult in any sense other than fine print,

When I mentioned being an adult later this month I was referring to how young I am, not how old I am. I never intended to brag about what a mature adult I am.

and accepting that will make developing alot smoother for you and your parents. Honest, unsarcastic (and unsolicited I’m sure) advice. Living on your own (or with a roommate or two also counts) without any financial assistance from your parents or guardians makes you an adult.

This is something that I don’t even have to actively accept. What I mean is that it’s something that I’m well aware of and I’ve never had any previous preconceptions to the contrary, so I’ve never had to “come to terms” with the fact that turning 18 actually changes nothing.

If I ever came off as insulting to you or your manhood it was never intended. No hard feelings.

Post
#1115260
Topic
Last movie seen
Time

Possessed said:

You watched it growing up? So, like, yesterday? Just kidding Mr Rollins.

You’re what, six or seven years older than me? Eight maybe? I don’t mind people making fun of me for only becoming an adult later this month, but I expect that from older members like Frink, not ones who are most likely younger than my oldest brother. 😛

EDIT: and I get that it’s just a joke. If this came off sounding like I’m annoyed, don’t worry. I just think the situation is funny. 😄

Post
#1115121
Topic
Last movie seen
Time

RocketMan (1997) – ★★1/2 (of ☆☆☆☆)

I feel kind of bad giving this film under three stars (Ebert even gave it three), but I can’t help but also be bothered by giving it all three stars. It’s a movie I watched on VHS a lot growing up (and that’s how I just watched it again, because there’s no BD or even a widescreen DVD to look forward to getting), and I’ve always enjoyed its dumb, goofy, childish antics. I’m convinced that my current enjoyment of it is mostly nostalgia goggles, especially because many aspects of the film felt annoying to me now rather than humourous, but I don’t think the enjoyment I still have is a bad thing necessarily.

I would definitely change the film’s constant “throwing crap at the wall” style of making jokes (as in, the films story progression is never given a chance to breathe because every frame or second of sound is filled up with jokes of varying effectiveness and maturity), but for the most part I think this is a fine children’s film that adults can also enjoy (somewhat) with a bit of forgiveness for its more annoying moments.

Post
#1114281
Topic
Politics 2: Electric Boogaloo
Time

Possessed said:

Dek Rollins said:

just because he happened to voice a differeing opinion than some of you had.

No. It was that his personal experience meant more than anything else, including cold facts or your personal opinion, possibly could. Disagreement has nothing to do with it. It’s how you present yourself. He wasn’t nearly as bad about this sort of things as others that are still around though.

I think I remember some of the personal experiences being referred to, and they seem like pretty important and concrete personal experiences to base an opinion off of. And I don’t remember him ever disregarding “cold facts.” His personal experience can’t possibly be entirely different from reality in the first place, because they really happened, in reality. They (in his mind and memory) are “cold facts.”

Post
#1114265
Topic
Politics 2: Electric Boogaloo
Time

^Yeah, Ferris is a good member. I’m not too fond of bad vibes being thrown at him just because he happened to voice a differeing opinion than some of you had. I’m not saying he’s never had his bad days (haven’t we all?), but I’ve never seen him be entirely unreasonable or insulting beyold belief in any given discussion. I happen to have agreed with him on many subjects in the past, so I may be biased; if that be so, let it be.

Post
#1108096
Topic
Video Games - a general discussion thread
Time

Sonic Mania is fine. After all the hype died down and I got to play the game (two weeks late because of some apparently unnecessary PC implimentations), it felt rather mediocre by the time I finished playing. The original content is fun (I’m very fond of the special stage), though some of that even is annoying to me. Then of course is the fact that 70% of the game is “remixed” classic levels, which ultimately is the only thing that really keeps this game from being able to sit alongside the originals. It isn’t a game of its own, and that makes it difficult to return to rather than just play Sonic 2 again.

Overall, I don’t like a lot of the stylistic descisions that were made, I don’t like the Hardboiled Heavies, and I don’t like that various things in it don’t feel like things that would be in a real Sonic sequel circa-1995.

On the other hand, I think this is a very well made game, made with lots of love from the developing teams involved, Tee Lopes’ music is great (I was a fan of him before he was announced for Mania), and I’m fond of the general Sonic CD-ish feel that was heavily prevelent.

No doubt Sega will commission the creation of more “classic” Sonic games in the future to make more money, and I’m hoping Christian Whitehead and co. will be able to bring out something that I can appreciate more sometime.

Post
#1108078
Topic
Movies generally considered "bad" that you like.
Time

TV’s Frink said:

Possessed said:

That is what it means.

Well that’s really dumb. Calling the Speed Racer cartoon the Original Gangster cartoon is just silly.

I like how you call it a “cartoon” even though it’s a Japanese cartoon based on a Japanese comic. I’m glad you’ve finally come to the realisation that “anime” and “manga” are just cartoons and comics.

/still getting salty over someone’s meaningless opinion about Japanese comic art styles.

Post
#1106826
Topic
Random Thoughts
Time

Handman said:

People should stop saying “I bought the VHS”. It’s a tape, or a video, or a VHS tape, it’s not “a VHS”. Likewise, it is a VCR, not a “VHS player”. This seems to be a new trend.

Regarding this subject, I don’t think it’s a “new trend”. I grew up using VHS tapes a lot in the early 2000s with parents who would have used tapes in the format’s prime, and when I was little people called them whatever they felt like. Everyone said “a VHS” and “VHS player” at one time or another.

I’m not saying that my experience is any more valid than your own (it’s most definitely not), but I think it’s a non-issue.