However, her latest concept language has a uniquely human origin, contrary to the work she has done on films like "Man of Steel" and "Power Rangers." Schreyer started by exploring the research on phonetic sounds of several protolanguages to determine how her new language should sound. Alan Markfield/Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc. Keda (Kodi Smit-McPhee) with his wolf Alpha in Columbia Pictures and Studio 8's "Alpha." Christine Schreyer, creator of movie language Beama"They're able to access details on films they were very rarely able to access before," she said. Schreyer said some films, including the Star Wars movie franchise, use inconsistent patterns interspersed with gibberish for language-like sounds.
Source: Huffington Post September 02, 2018 16:18 UTC