===== From uwezi@geocities.com: again... the planet of apes... but ok, if you want, the widescreen idea is clever ===== From archangel@wxs.nl: I really like this one... Especially those monkeys in front of the sun (if they aren't monkeys: Sorry ;-)) ) But I just can't find out what the raisins are doing next to the statue. (or is it monkey shit? LOL) The reason I didn't rate you higher, is because the statue is most of the work, but you didn't make it yourself... ===== From tglover@nettally.com: I actually like the widescreen. You need more stones or scatter them into background some more --seem to be only around statue. Shadows seem to be too short for position of the sun. ===== From Alain.Culos@bigfoot.com: The sand is not too convincing. It looks like it is seen from very close, when it actually is supposedly in the distance. ===== From gmccarter@hotmail.com: The statue doesn't seem to be casting any shadow on the ground. ===== From mark.wagner17@gte.net: "As everybody can see" -- This somewhat insulting phrase implies that if you have not seen the movie, you are obviously nobody. Also, it would be better if the centerpiece of the image, the Statue of Liberty, had been modeled by you. ===== From clem@dhol.com: If you had to cripple the image by squeezing it into this cramped, looking-through-a-closed-shutter, screen wasting format you at least had the sense to lay it out with a horizontal motif. In doing so, however, you sacrificed all potential for drama. With so much of the statue buried and laid out flat, the meaning of the scene is diluted to nothingness. The figures in the sun are a nice touch and the sand isn't bad. The little rocks add nothing. If used, they should be widely scattered and not clustered for no reason around the statue. ===== From file: Notable for lighting