I made a Live-action movie poster of Dragon Ball Z using AI-generated images and Photoshop.
This is a fan art. I also hope this legendary manga to be made into a live-action movie. Rather than filming an actor's acting, I think we need CG that cannot be distinguished from the actual situation. Like Avatar and Alita : Battle Angel, for example.
I think Bulma has shown a versatile and capable woman image in Dragon Ball series. The technologies she uses, such as miniature capsules (Hoi Poi Capsules) and Dragon Ball Tracker, were extraordinary, and it was a great pleasure to see them work in animation.
And Bulma was one of the first characters to introduce me to the concept of "pretty woman" at the time. Let's stop discussing whether this is okay. We'll find out about this one day anyway and find it ourselves. Animation just moved it up a few months to a year. Ha Ha.
I made a live-action film poster for Naoki Urasawa's original manga <MONSTER>.
I was quite young when I saw this manga, so I didn't fully understand what it was trying to say besides the overall story. Rather, after I grew up, I was able to recall what this manga was about. Naoki Urasawa draws manga in a very realistic style, but at the same time it is exquisitely streamlined. As for what his painting style will look like when it is composed of realistic images, I think someone could still have gotten better results.
Kenzo was portrayed as a good-natured person, and I thought he represented the general public. Peaceful times, the masses who usually live a normal life just trying to look good for their boss, but when they find out someone is plotting an evil plan, they go out of their way to smash it.
Kenzo enlists the help of other populace around him, and he works to crush the great evil he is unable to counter. He is supported by the public like himself, and at the same time chased by the public like himself. All the while, Absolute Evil controls them all and quietly grows in power. Actually, I'm not sure if I understood it well. :D...;
I created a simple image with stable diffusion and then composited it in Photoshop. It was a fun job.
original ai image
I've been trying to create several interesting images of Roswell aliens for a while. I'm going to reveal a few images here.
Aliens are usually depicted naked. But if they're intelligent, they'll wear clothes. In that sense, I also tried to dress them in clothes that reflect their own culture.
If aliens are physical beings, they may also be powerless individuals like us after being isolated from their advanced technology. What if the aliens that crashed into Roswell in 1974 were some kind of bored millionaires who were traveling in space, and the UAPs that are coming now are search teams to find them?
How does it feel when you meet aliens? We don't know what they're going to do after landing or crashing, but it's going to be a very strange feeling when you first encounter them.
If aliens were within Area 51, they would have wandered there in their own way. Are there any lucky people who would have witnessed such a sight?
Aliens may look like us, or they may be very different. Could they breathe in the Earth's atmosphere? In many parts of the outer world, will each intelligent creature reach a similar form through some sort of convergent evolution? Or did it evolve into something completely different in a completely different environment?
I want to move on to a different topic for a while after this work. I think many people were surprised by the recent disclosure of the hearing that alien bodies are being kept in the United States. I'm really curious about what the truth is.
I made a live-action movie poster for DOOM.
It was thought that the process of coordinating the description between the symbolic form of the original DoomGuy in the game and the details suitable for realistic movies would be quite difficult. But I was able to finish this work easily, because I found a good LoRA that someone had made.
The image resource of DoomGuy in the game seems to have quite short arms, which continued to apply to the results. I tried to offset this with a few prompts, but when I lowered the weight, I had a problem moving away from DoomGuy shape. I just decided to supplement this in Photoshop.
I made a Live-action movie poster of Dragon Ball Z using AI-generated images and Photoshop.
This is a fan art. I also hope this legendary manga to be made into a live-action movie. Rather than filming an actor's acting, I think we need CG that cannot be distinguished from the actual situation. Like Avatar and Alita : Battle Angel, for example.
Frieza remains one of the most terrifying villain in my memory. I rarely saw Dragon Ball Z on the air to attend the academy on time, but I don't know if this Frieza, who appeared in his spare time, was a man or a woman, and I was really scared to see a huge force coming out of his fingers.
And as we'll find out later, Frieza is obviously a villain, but he's quite gentle and funny. Decades later, many people were reevaluating Frieza (such as using honorifics for subordinates and enemies) It is hoped that in order for today's growing children to be able to see Dragon Ball again, one day they will have to expand to other media or remake it.
I used Stable Diffusion to produce a comedy horror movie poster about ai home tutor robot.
In this fictional movie, a boy named Thomas gets into trouble until EDU-BOT is broken.
I didn't imagine the details. As individual human rights begin to be respected, on the contrary, teachers' rights are falling. We need to discuss this issue.
Original image
I made a live-action film poster for Naoki Urasawa's original manga <MONSTER>.
I was quite young when I saw this manga, so I didn't fully understand what it was trying to say besides the overall story. Rather, after I grew up, I was able to recall what this manga was about.
Naoki Urasawa draws manga in a very realistic style, but at the same time it is exquisitely streamlined. As for what his painting style will look like when it is composed of realistic images, I think someone could still have gotten better results.
Johan was a very unique character. I felt creepy and pity for his actions at the same time. Is evil made or is it born? It's easy to blame those who create evil. But if someone is born as evil, who is to blame for it? he was a character that made us ask these questions.
It was a fun to make these images. For Kenzo, getting a similar feel wasn't easy.
He was strange whether he was portrayed as old or young. Now he is younger than in my imaginary image, but he looks closer to his actual age in his actual work. I don't know if it reproduces Naoki Urasawa's realistic yet unique drawing style well.
In Johan's case, I thought his lips were too red and it was important that his hairstyle was very symmetrical, but I stopped adjusting here.
I also tried to depict their characters, situations, and symbols in the background of the poster.
This photograph, captured in September 1995, depicts a rural scene in northern Europe. Visible in the distance are several farm buildings. A small forest is present closer to the viewer, while mountains appear on either side of the scene. The picture was taken using a Kodak Ektar 100 film. What distinguishes this image from a typical landscape photograph is the presence of an unidentified aerial phenomenon (UAP) in the sky above the scene. The UAP appears stationary and is of a discernible, aerodynamic shape. It is set against a clear sky, with an array of light rays extending from or towards it. Some observers have speculated that the rays could be the result of a trick of the light or some form of photographic manipulation, such as the use of glass plates or paint. However, these theories are questionable given the properties of the photograph. The Kodak Ektar 100 film used is renowned for its fine grain and high-resolution output. Any form of manipulation would likely have caused inconsistencies in resolution, which are not evident in the image. Therefore, based on the evidence in the photograph, it appears that neither the UAP nor the mysterious light rays are the result of photographic trickery. This adds a level of mystery and intrigue to the photograph and invites further examination and interpretation.