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For what its worth, I think Brian Coopers Bandolero was my favourite right
from the start. The story was lost a little on me since I dont hardly speak a
word of Spanish. I am grateful for the recently posted unedited shots of the
finished mech. That thing is amazing! It seems to mee that every single stud
and plate is placed deliberately and with a purpose.
Bring on the next competition! (Ill be sure to name mine next time, it might
gain me a couple of points.)
Nathan
p.s. Now I would really like to see what Mark Neumanns interpretation of the
inspiration art would be. Come on Mark, its your turn.
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In lugnet.build.mecha, Nathan Proudlove wrote:
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For what its worth, I think Brian Coopers Bandolero was my favourite right
from the start. The story was lost a little on me since I dont hardly speak
a word of Spanish. I am grateful for the recently posted unedited shots of
the finished mech. That thing is amazing! It seems to mee that every single
stud and plate is placed deliberately and with a purpose.
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Thanks. I had some requests to see the unaltered pics of the Vore Del Mecha,
though thats sort of like seeing a picture of a guy in an Alien suit sipping
coffee before the camera rolls. ;-) Its just not scary without the flashing
strobes and smoke that obscure the Alien as the Nostromo computer counts down to
self destruction.
Maybe I should have done a mockumentary, The Making of Bandolero!, without
making the actual horror movie... the model would be revealed to be a facade
containing puppeteers/animatronics operators. :-)
K
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