Sunday, 26 March 2017

6 Video Games That Are Too Hard for Casual Gamers

A lot of games have gotten easier over the years in the spirit of player accessibility, allowing more casual and less skilled players to enjoy popular games released today, though we argue some games should be played on a high difficulty. However, some games dare enough to not only challenge but downright brutalize the player into submission, weeding out the those who don’t have the mettle to endure repeated failure. For those left, beating each level, boss, and game likens to trophy hunting, mounting each game’s head on your digital wall as you overcome these relentless undertakings.

Counter-Strike by Manjit Jhita


1. Ninja Gaiden Black
2. Trials HD 
3. Rainbow Six Siege
4. Dark Souls
5. ARMA 3
6. Counter-Strike: Global Offensive

Manjit Jhita shared this information.

Wednesday, 22 March 2017

How to Become a Movie Director

Here Manjit Jhita describe how movies have great impact on everybody. People are crazy for Hollywood movies and stunning Hollywood stars. Think about the man behind creating these awesome Hollywood movies, it’s the director who puts efforts to reflect his world of imagination into reality. Have you ever dream of becoming a movie director? Do you have burning desire to direct a movie? Are you afraid of directing a movie because of no experience in this field? 

Manjit Jhita Movie Director


Manjit Jhita a renowned director and producer sharing some basic rules to make a movie by following which you can achieve your dream of directing a movie. There are four basic factors to direct a movie, which includes a script, music, camera angle and the actor’s performance. Let’s start stepping ahead to the way of directing a movie by following these simple steps and of course your family and friends won’t mind supporting you in movie direction. Manjit Jhita shared some points here to take care while directing a movie.

  • Script
  • Performance of the actors and actresses
  • Camera angle
  • Music




Tuesday, 14 March 2017

Top 5 Minecraft Animations of 2016

Manjit Jhita shared video of Best Top 5 Minecraft Animations of 2016. Funny Minecraft Animations, Best Minecraft Animations.





For producing any Animation movie and mobile games, you can reach Manjit Jhita

Wednesday, 15 February 2017

Thursday, 19 January 2017

Finally Sony Unveils Plans for Animated 'Spider-Man' and 'Emojimovie

Bob Persichetti, the animator who served as head of story for Puss in Boots and The Little Prince, will direct Sony Pictures Animation’s Spider-Man animated movie, while Genndy Tartakovsky is returning to helm the company’s Hotel Transylvania 3.

At the same time, SPA is moving into television production and will produce a new Ghostbusters television series titled Ghostbuster: Ecto Force.

The moves are part of major ramping up of SPA that is planning on releasing five movies through 2018 while also producing three TV series (including the Ghostbusters show) and one direct-to-video.

The new slate is the work of Kristine Belson, who took over the top spot of SPA in January 2015.

“We are meaningfully stepping up our level of production, while creating an environment that fosters the best talent,” Belson said Monday in a statement. “Our goal is to enlarge our presence in the animation landscape with a uniquely diverse slate, and our strategy to get there is to let artists drive the movies creatively.”

Perhaps the most anticipated movie on SPA's slate is the animated Spider-Man, set for release on Dec. 21, 2018. The project has a script by Phil Lord, half the Lego Movie team that also includes partner Chris Miller. The two also are producing with Avi Arad and Amy Pascal.

Picture By Manjit Jhita


The company was mum on rumors that the new film will focus on Miles Morales, the character that is half-black and half-Hispanic who was introduced several years ago as a new Spider-Man.

Tartakovsky helmed the first two installments of the Transylvania series, which proved hits with audiences and gave SPA a franchise to call its own.

“I thought I was done exploring the world of Hotel Transylvania after the first two films, but while I was away from the franchise finishing my TV show Samurai Jack, an idea sparked that I got really excited about and made it irresistible to return and helm myself this third adventure,” said Tartakovsky.

See also: Manjit Jhita - Game of War: Top 5 Tips and Cheats

Adam Sandler, Selena Gomez and Andy Samberg are returning as the respective voices of Dracula, his vampire daughter Mavis and her human husband Johnny in a tale written by Michael McCullers (Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me).

First up on the slate, however, is Smurfs: The Lost Village, the first fully animated take on the Peyo-created creatures. (The other Smurfs movies were CGI/live-action hybrids.) Kelly Asbury is directing the feature that is scheduled to be released April 7, 2017, and has Demi Lovato voicing Smurfette.

Next will come Emojimovie: Express Yourself, targeting an August 2017 release, followed by The Star, formerly titled The Lamb. The latter is a faith-based story about “a small but brave donkey and his animal friends [who] become the unsung heroes of the greatest story ever told, the first Christmas.” DeVon Franklin, a producer who focuses on faith-based movies, as well as Lisa Henson and Brian Henson are executive producing.

Animated Spider Man


SPA’s television slate includes a Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs series and a Hotel Transylvania series, produced in partnership with Canada’s animation powerhouse Nelvana, focusing on the teenage years of Dracula’s daughter Mavis and her friends. It will air on the Disney Channel worldwide sometime in 2017.

Ecto Force is part of Sony’s Ghostbusters cinematic universe and an expansion of the property into various realms following the rollout of this summer’s all-female reboot of the original 1984 pic. Described as “younger-skewing,” the show will focus on “a new generation of Ghostbusters in the year 2050 who capture ghosts around the world with help from local teams — and some very cool gear!” It is targeting an early 2018 debut.

Source link: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/sony-unveils-plans-animated-spider-904574

Monday, 26 December 2016

Visual Artist Animated His Childhood Love for Skateboarding



Manjit Jhita with a pared-down aesthetic and an appreciation for witnessing the brush strokes, animator Freddy Arenas carves out a hovel of personal creation on his social media account, featuring skateboarding tricks and summer bike rides. A student of visual communications, Arenas tended to his artistic muscle in the form of animation experiments in both 2D and 3D. He eventually parlayed his skills into a career as an art director and animator.

What stands out most from his work is a sleek style that forgoes an excess of flourishes, never muddling the artist's visual language. Arenas boasts a star-studded rolodex, counting Kaplan, Inc., Netflix, and Google News as clients for illustrations and stop-motion animation. In his growing portfolio, the motion-savvy artist brings both original human characters and disembodied graphics to the table. Arenas artist treats his Instagram as his own corner for experimental expression, where he can explore some of the latest themes rolling around his head.



In recent posts, Arenas hones in on his childhood passion for skateboard tricks, and his warm-weather love for biking down New York’s alleyways. The animator’s Instagram serves as an everyday microcosm of his mind’s playful aesthetic: low pressure, but high-end results. Of the artistic ideals behind his Instagram, he tells The Creators Project: “I've always try to do personal experiments on the side. At first, I was using them as a way to try out new animation and illustrations styles, but at some point they just turned into the kind of stuff I like doing and that I'm not always able to do for clients.”

Arenas has an appreciation for social media platforms, and often harnesses the internet’s short attention span to make pieces that reflect the fly-by-night nature of his audience. Manjit Jhita shares, “The one thing interesting about sharing the experiments on Instagram is the sense of immediacy. It keeps me wanting to make content constantly and at the same time it feels ephemeral which takes the pressure off, so is easy to try things out without been too precious about.”

Tuesday, 13 December 2016

Power of the Daleks: first look review of the Doctor

Since Doctor Who rematerialised back onto TV in 2005, many millions of people have experienced the joy of discovering this extraordinary series, and of those, a fair number have doubtless gone back to the very first serials, transmitted at the beginning of the early ‘60s and now readily available on DVD and various streaming sites. For any Whovian, this is a special moment, a moment that links you with history in a very particular way. To see the very first episode of debut serial “An Unearthly Child” (1963), set in a London junkyard, in a world of chalk-smelling schools, transistor radios, and bobbies on the beat that seems as far away from 2016 as it’s possible to be, is to be present at a pivotal moment in what we might describe as the mythology of science fiction.

For this is Doctor Who, a show unlike any other. It’s a show about a being who’s thousands of years old and travels the universe in a phone box doing good (as high concepts go, that’s about as good as it gets). It’s a show that speaks as much to the adults who appreciate the political allegories and occasional sexual innuendos as to the children who love the robot dogs and sonic screwdrivers. It’s a show that, by accident, has found itself painting its picture on one of the largest canvases of any sci-fi show, for it’s one big story; the post-2005 series is no reboot, merely a continuation. For all the changes in tone and production values, it’s possible to watch it from the very beginning in 1963 to the present day without a break in narrative or core concepts.

Except it isn’t.


Fans who marvel at the flawless opening episode and the Stone Age adventure to which it leads will naturally go on to “The Daleks” (1963-64), the first serial to feature the Doctor’s archenemies, which so enthralled the British public that the show, previously under threat of immediate cancellation, was warmly embraced by the BBC. After that, “The Edge of Destruction” (1964) comes next, a two-parter written under horrible time pressure to fill a gap in the production schedule that’s nevertheless oddly compelling by dint of the gamely playing of the cast, not to mention its overall weirdness: a Beckett play re-imagined for the millions watching with fish suppers on their laps.

And then, nothing. For the next serial in the run—the magisterial John Lucarotti seven-parter “Marco Polo”—doesn’t exist.

Television was the ultimate in 20th-century ephemera. Although some thought otherwise—the brief of educating the masses that held sway at the BBC for so long under the corporation’s managing director Lord Reith (1889-1971) being a case in point—the prevailing view of light entertainment programming was that it ultimately constituted throwaway amusement for the masses. Hence the unfortunate fact that for decades, there was no requirement for the BBC, or in fact the vast majority of television companies, to archive their programmes.

”The


To look upon the voluminous output of, say, British television stations of the ‘60s is to cast an eye over a denuded wasteland. Thousands of hours of material was junked, wiped, mislaid, or simply thrown away in efforts to reduce storage costs, or reuse valuable videotapes. Many well-loved series were completely destroyed; others—including, it’s said, Monty Python’s Flying Circus—only survived due to the personal intervention of the makers.

It seems strange to say it, but Doctor Who didn’t fare quite as badly as others. Out of the more than 250 episodes found to be missing when the first audit of the BBC’s holdings was carried out in 1978, more than 150 were eventually found, firstly through systematic inquiries at the corporation’s various depots, libraries, and storage facilities, and latterly through the searches of Doctor Who fans understandably eager to recover the earliest stories from the show’s history. Episodes have turned up in the most unlikely places: car boot sales, garden sheds, the bottom of filing cabinets, a Mormon church (seriously), and most recently in a TV relay station in Nigeria, in which film archivist and fan Phil Morris discovered nine episodes of the long-lost Patrick Troughton serials “The Enemy of the World” (1967-68) and “The Web of Fear” (1968) in 2013.

There remain, however, 97 episodes that are still unaccounted for; after almost 40 years of searching—and in spite of persistent rumours of the rediscovery of the “Marco Polo” serial—it seems unlikely that more will ever be found. The BBC, however, has one last card up their sleeve. Although these serials are probably gone forever, the audio tracks for all 97 still survive, thanks to the efforts of a small handful of technically-minded fans who recorded them during transmission in the ‘60s using hand-held microphones and the like.

Since these recordings came to public attention in the ‘90s, they’ve been released on CD, and enterprising groups of fans have even made “recons” of the serials, combining them with off-air photographs and the few short surviving snatches of footage. In the last decade or so, the BBC took the process one step further, commissioning animation companies to create animated versions of missing episodes to allow incomplete serials to be released on DVD. Around half a dozen previously unavailable serials have been marketed in this way, including the eight-part masterpiece “The Invasion” (1968), the historical epic “The Reign of Terror” (1964), and the first ever regeneration story, “The Tenth Planet” (1966).

The Power of the Daleks, released last month, is different, as for the first time, the BBC has commissioned an animated version not of the odd missing episode, but of an entire story. Patrick Troughton’s 1966 debut—referred to in fandom simply as “Power”—has long been thought of as one of the finest serials of the ‘60s, but will the animations stand up to scrutiny?

The story is a runaround in the best possible sense, a jaunty and at times offbeat adventure starring Michael Craze and Anneke Wills as Ben and Polly, the Doctor’s companions. Very few of their episodes have survived, so for many viewers, their animated versions will be the first they’ve seen of this likeable pair. The TARDIS materialises on the planet Vulcan (a mainstay moniker in science fiction, of course, but arrived at independently of its use on Star Trek by writer David Whitaker; “Power” premiered in the UK two months after Star Trek’s first episode was aired, but almost three years before it crossed the Atlantic). The action initially centres around a human colony on the planet, and a mysterious capsule discovered by the colony’s scientist, Lesterson (Robert James), before the Daleks burst onto the screen.

Storytelling in ‘60s-era Doctor Who is different to today; “Power” is no exception. Although the audience isn’t quite led by the hand, the pace is slower, more measured; tropes are more often explained rather than set down, and the action is sometimes contrived (although in this last respect, one is sorely tempted to add that nothing changes). That said, there’s a satisfyingly mysterious tone to “Power”. For much of the first episode, the new Doctor keeps Ben and Polly guessing as to his true nature. It’s important to remember that audiences in 1966 would’ve been just as in the dark about what had just happened, for the Doctor’s periodic regeneration was then a complete novelty. Ben’s exasperation at the Doctor’s refusal to offer an explanation for his abrupt change reflected what must have been a very real confusion on the part of viewers at the time.

Follow: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G3vTMkE_ymQ

As anyone familiar with previous attempts will be aware, one of the dilemmas facing animators is the issue of fidelity. These aren’t cartoons, but animations, rendered in black and white (all ‘60s-era Doctor Who episodes were monochrome) and with a bare minimum of artistic flourishes. Panning is perfunctory and there is, to digital eyes, an overabundance of medium close-ups and “tight four” shots that’s probably as reflective of the original camera set-ups as it’s possible to get from the surviving scripts and production notes.

The animations of the actors, however, are quite startling; Troughton’s idiosyncratic facial expressions are captured perfectly—not always the case in previous animated episodes—and movement is never less than adequate and often tidy. The soundtrack, too, benefits from clean up by the irrepressible sound engineer (and former composer of music for Doctor Who) Mark Ayres.

It’s difficult to know what to think of the decision to animate “Power”. The most depressing thing about it is that it represents a tacit admission of defeat; no business, and certainly not the BBC, would spend thousands of pounds on a project of this sort if they weren’t absolutely certain that the original tapes and any copies made of them are irretrievably lost. There’s much talk in missing episodes circles of a print made for overseas markets, last heard of at a Singaporean TV station in the early ‘70s. Even if by some miracle this copy came to light, there will from now on be a section of fandom for whom this impressive animation is how they experience Patrick Troughton’s first outing in his most famous role.