: These fully CG characters, voiced by Michael Clarke Duncan and Geoffrey Rush , allowed the film to experiment with varied alien physiology.
Particular attention must be paid to the alien designs. High-resolution images of Kilowog (voiced by Michael Clarke Duncan) and Tomar-Re (voiced by Geoffrey Rush) hold up remarkably well. The texturing of Kilowog’s porcine skin and the avian features of Tomar-Re demonstrate that the visual effects team had the talent; they were perhaps just overstretched by the sheer volume of the lead character’s screen time. Green Lantern 2011 Screencaps
If you are building a collection of Green Lantern screencaps, you need to target specific sequences that offer the highest visual return. : These fully CG characters, voiced by Michael
Let me know if you need a specific character, ring construct, or Lantern symbol capped—I may already have an album saved. The texturing of Kilowog’s porcine skin and the
This creates a dissonance in the imagery. When viewing a screencap of Ryan Reynolds in the cockpit of a fighter jet (a practical set), the lighting is natural and gritty. Contrast that with a screencap of him in the suit on Oa, and the lighting dynamics shift jarringly. The green glow of the chest logo often reflects imperfectly off his skin, a detail that visual effects artists worked tirelessly to perfect, but which remains a point of contention for purists analyzing the film's gallery.
: Provides a massive collection of 8,272 images in 1920x800 resolution from the Blu-ray release, available as a direct gallery or a bulk 897MB ZIP file.
In the vast pantheon of superhero cinema, few films occupy a space as peculiar as Green Lantern (2011). Released at a pivotal moment when the genre was shifting from grounded grit (Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight ) to the dawn of a shared cinematic universe (Marvel’s The Avengers ), Ryan Reynolds’ debut as Hal Jordan was intended to be DC Comics’ answer to Iron Man. It was meant to launch a franchise. Instead, it became a cautionary tale.