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The History of Special Effects

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Special effects were always the province of science fiction or monster movies. ... (mainly through piracy), Le Voyage dans la lune was an enormous popular success. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The History of Special Effects


1
The History of Special Effects
2
  • Of all the areas of film production, special
    effects and CGI have see the most dramatic
    developments in technology over the last 25 to 30
    years.

3
  • Special effects were always the province of
    science fiction or monster movies.
  • Today CGI, Time-slice and the vast range of
    digital effects open to the filmmaker has meant
    that special effects appear in a huge range of
    films in all genres.

4
  • The French filmmaker Georges Méliès, a
    professional magician, is often credited as being
    the father of special effects in cinema.
  • He had become interested in the illusionist
    possibilities of the Cinématographe in the mid
    1890s.

5
  • When the Lumières refused to sell him one, he
    bought an Animatograph projector from in 1896 and
    reversed its mechanical principles to design his
    own camera.
  • He was one of the first film-makers to recognise
    the power of film to convey limitless fantasy
    worlds by exploring all the capabilities of the
    technical apparatus of film-making.

6
  • The following year he organized the Star Film
    company and constructed a small glass-enclosed
    studio on the grounds of his house.
  • He produced, directed, photographed, and acted in
    more than 500 films between 1896 and 1913.

7
  • Initially,Méliès used stop-motion photography to
    make one-shot "trick" films in which objects
    disappeared and reappeared, or transformed
    themselves into other objects entirely.

8
  • By 1902 he had produced the influential 30-scene
    narrative Le Voyage dans la lune (A Trip to the
    Moon).
  • Adapted from a novel by Jules Verne, it was
    nearly one reel in length (about 825 feet, or 14
    minutes).

9
  • The first film to achieve international
    distribution (mainly through piracy), Le Voyage
    dans la lune was an enormous popular success.
  • It helped to make Star Film one of the world's
    largest producers (an American branch was opened
    in 1903) and to establish the fiction film as the
    cinema's mainstream product.

10
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11
  • Melies used the theatrical tradition of painted
    backgrounds in his films.
  • Many examples of this technique can be seen in
    early Hollywood films where actors are filmed
    directly in front of a painted landscape to
    create a sense of a location.

12
  • This then developed in the technique of matte
    painting.
  • A form of image compositing whereby a physical
    set is composited with a 2-D painting, enhancing
    the set or adding to the space what's not
    physically there.

13
  • The painting is painted by a matte artist onto
    glass and then the glass is either placed in
    front of the camera lined up to the set and
    filmed, or through optical printing.

14
  • Famous examples of matte paintings are the final
    scene from Planet of the Apes, where Charlton
    Heston is shot in front of the fallen statue of
    liberty.
  • Or perhaps best of all the final scene from
    Hitchcocks The Birds.

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16
  • Matte painting was often then combined with other
    special effects such as stop motion to produce
    some dramatic pre-digital cinema.

17
  • The technique of stop motion that Melies
    developed, was to be used for the next 90 years
    as the basis of creating fantasy and monster film
    effects.

18
  • Defined as the way in which a static model is
    moved every few frames of film which when played
    back at normal speed creates the illusion of
    movement.
  • It is however incredibly time consuming and
    laborious.

19
  • The Lost World (1925), for instance, needed 960
    separate movements of one or more creatures - a
    ten hour working day that, at best, might result
    in 13 seconds of moving dinosaur.

20
  • Classic (?) films like Valley of the Gwangi
    became huge hits and put the monster movie at the
    forefront of popular cinema.

21
  • This film was one of the many created by the
    great Ray Harryhausen, the man responsible for
    such classics as The Golden Voyage of Sinbad,
    Jason and the Argonauts and many others.

22
  • Despite success in early movies such as King
    Kong, the technique had its weaknesses. The
    miniature sets were expensive to construct and it
    was very difficult to combine live action in the
    same frame as the stop-motion creatures.

23
  • While working on a low-budget film called The
    Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, Harryhausen came up
    with a technique he later named "dynamation" that
    eased both of these problems.

24
  • The technique used a split screen, with rear
    projection. Split screen had been around as a
    special effect from almost the beginning of film
    itself. One early clip from France shows a
    bicycle rider sailing over the city of Paris.

25
  • The photographer had shot it by covering the
    bottom half of the lens of the camera with black
    tape, then filming the bicycle rider through the
    top half. The mask was then reversed and the film
    rewound inside the camera.

26
  • The film was exposed again, this time
    photographing the city of Paris through the
    bottom half of the lens.
  • When the film was developed, the rider appeared
    to be sailing across the Paris skyline.
    Harryhausen's dynamation used the same basic idea
    with some additional twists.

27
  • The first step in dynamation was to film the
    background image. For this example let's say the
    scene is to show a dinosaur in a big city
    emerging from behind a building into an
    intersection.

28
  • The camera would be set on a real street and the
    actors would be filmed running towards the
    camera.
  • The camera is locked so it does not change
    position at all while filming the background. The
    background film is then developed and loaded into
    a projector back at the studio.

29
  • The projector then projects the first frame onto
    a back projection screen. The back projection
    screen is a thin piece of plastic stretched
    tightly across a frame.
  • Unlike a regular screen, the image appears on the
    front when illuminated by a projector from
    behind.

30
  • A motion picture camera is loaded with film and
    locked into position in front of the screen so it
    can rephotograph the film clip as it is projected
    onto the screen.
  • This camera will be used to capture the new
    action.

31
  • A piece of glass is then put between the camera
    and the screen.
  • The glass is painted with black paint so that
    portions of the image on the screen that are to
    be in front of the dinosaur (the foreground) are
    blacked out when seen by the camera

32
  • In between the glass and the screen a table is
    set up on which the miniature dinosaur is placed.
  • The dinosaur is carefully positioned so that it
    is matched for size and position with the image
    on the screen as seen through the camera.

33
  • The film in the projector is advanced one frame
    at a time. With each frame the dinosaur is moved
    to simulate walking out from behind the building.
  • After the position of the dinosaur is correct,
    the camera captures one frame.

34
  • After the entire scene has been filmed both the
    projector and the camera are rewound back to the
    beginning. The glass is removed and another sheet
    of glass is inserted.

35
  • The new glass is the reverse of the first one,
    though, as the portions of the glass that were
    clear now have been painted over and the sections
    that were blacked out are now clear.

36
  • The model dinosaur and the table are cleared
    away. The film is re-shot again, this time
    exposing the foreground part of the image which
    had before been blacked out.

37
  • When the film from the camera is developed and
    viewed it will show the dinosaur apparently
    moving out from behind the building.

38
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40
  • Because the model was animated directly in front
    of the screen that was showing the human actors,
    it was possible for Harryhausen to synchronize
    the movements of the models with the
    previously-filmed action.

41
  • This allowed sword fights between humans and
    skeletons, where each could parry and thrust
    convincingly.

42
  • Harryhausens films had and continue to have a
    major impact of special effects artists today.
    The makers of Jurassic Park were so impressed by
    the dinosaur fight sequence in Valley of the
    Gwangi that it was studied in order to
    authenticate the dinosaurs' movements on that
    movie.

43
  • Many important SPFX creators were inspired and
    influenced by Ray Harryhausen.
  • One of his proteges, Phil Tippett, joined George
    Lucas newly formed Industrial Light and Magic
    where he animated the alien chess pieces in Star
    Wars

44
  • Further involvement in the Star Wars series came
    when he was asked to animate the Walkers, huge,
    four-legged war machines from The Empire Strikes
    Back (1980).

45
  • The creation of the Walkers marked a new phase in
    FX animation. This was ILM's 'motion control'
    process.
  • Pioneered on Star Wars and also known as
    'go-motion', the process utilises puppets
    (attached to rods) which are, in turn, connected
    to computer-controlled stepper motors.

46
  • In the case of virtual elements, the movement of
    the camera must be reproduced in the graphics
    environment to achieve the correct shift of
    perspective.

47
  • Motion control is now providing the solution to
    these difficulties.   The positional accuracy
    offered by todays systems enables any camera
    movement to be defined as a series of
    co-ordinates, which in turn can be used in a
    virtual environment to animate any virtual
    object.

48
  • In the long run, this means that movements can be
    stored in the computer's memory and, with
    modifications, repeated each time an effect is
    required.

49
  • The best Motion Control rigs are "frame
    accurate". 
  • This means that on multiple passes, at any given
    film frame on a camera pass, the camera will be
    in an identical position to that of previous
    passes, regardless of the physical speed of
    movement of the camera. 

50
  • This means that matching up passes in the
    post-production phase to produce the composite
    image becomes very fast and painless, and
    consequently cheaper.

51
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52
  • Motion control systems are often used in
    conjunction with blue-screen or chroma-key
    techniques.
  • Since it was first used in films in the 1950's
    chroma key is a production process that has
    remained largely unchanged.

53
  • Creating a blue screen composite image starts
    with a subject that has been photographed in
    front of an evenly lit, bright, pure blue
    background.

54
  • The compositing process, whether photographic or
    electronic, replaces all the blue in the picture
    with another image, known as the background
    plate.

55
  • Blue screen composites can be made optically for
    still photos or movies, electronically for live
    video, and digitally to computer images.
  • Until very recently all blue screen compositing
    for films was done optically and all television
    composites were done using analog real time
    circuits.

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57
  • Blue or green screen techniques have become
    widespread in cinema over the last 40 to 50 years
    and although the process is basically the same,
    the accuracy and quality of the effect has
    increased dramatically.

58
  • Most recently, blue screen has been used with
    another recent development in special effects
    known as time-slice, or as in the case of the
    creators of The Matrix Bullet Time.

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60
  • Still cameras along a spline results in a much
    smoother motion than if you place them
    individually.
  • Note the tighter camera placement at the
    beginning and end of the spline this speeds up
    and slows down the end motion

61
  • Ideally two cinematic camera (one at the start
    and another at the end) should also be used, but
    depending on the requirements, this isn't all
    that necessary.
  • In Keanu's 'rooftop bullet dodge' sequence, 120
    cameras and two motion picture cameras were used.

62
  • www.mrmoco.co.uk
  • www.howstuffworks.com
  • www.geocities.com/pixel_x_1000
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