Have you ever found yourself watching Full House and thinking, "I wonder what this would be like without Michelle?" If the answers is yes, well, apparently you are not alone.
Filmmaker Andrew Austin has spent his free time editing Michelle Tanner, the adorable tot played by Mary-Kate Olsen and Ashley Olsen, out of footage from the beloved sitcom.
The results are fairly freaky, as any vestigial trace of the exuberant child is removed from the show. In the opening sequence, as the family heads over the Golden Gate Bridge, her car seat sits empty. Michelle is also replaced by a...
Filmmaker Andrew Austin has spent his free time editing Michelle Tanner, the adorable tot played by Mary-Kate Olsen and Ashley Olsen, out of footage from the beloved sitcom.
The results are fairly freaky, as any vestigial trace of the exuberant child is removed from the show. In the opening sequence, as the family heads over the Golden Gate Bridge, her car seat sits empty. Michelle is also replaced by a...
- 2/19/2014
- by Melissa Locker
- People.com - TV Watch
Recently there’s been a huge upswell in documentaries that take a look at 1980s pop culture – be it VHS, toys, video games, anything! And now comes a new documentary based on the Nintendo Nes’s most famous accessory…The Power Glove!
Released in 1989, the Power Glove was The first gesture-based controller, way before the likes of the Wii, Kinect and Ps Move. It even made an appearance in the Fred Savage flick The Wizard.
Filmmakers Adam Ward, Andrew Austin, and Paula Kosowski are set to bring us the history of the Power Glove, from both a fan and developer perspective, featuring interviews with the Power Glove’s developers in its hardware, firmware, game design, and marketing departments; as well as the legion of fans, including artists and hackers who have culturally re-purposed and reinvented the device, refusing to let the Power Glove die.
1989. In an era of Nintendo-mania, toymaker...
Released in 1989, the Power Glove was The first gesture-based controller, way before the likes of the Wii, Kinect and Ps Move. It even made an appearance in the Fred Savage flick The Wizard.
Filmmakers Adam Ward, Andrew Austin, and Paula Kosowski are set to bring us the history of the Power Glove, from both a fan and developer perspective, featuring interviews with the Power Glove’s developers in its hardware, firmware, game design, and marketing departments; as well as the legion of fans, including artists and hackers who have culturally re-purposed and reinvented the device, refusing to let the Power Glove die.
1989. In an era of Nintendo-mania, toymaker...
- 8/17/2013
- by Phil Wheat
- Nerdly
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