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Implementation of Live Action and Animation in Feature Films

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Title: Implementation of Live Action and Animation in Feature Films


1
Implementation of Live Action and Animation in
Feature Films
using the examples Mary Poppins (1964) and Who
Framed Roger Rabbit (1988)
2
History of Live Action/Animated movies
  • First example of this combination was in 1914
    with Winsor McCays, Gertie the Dinosaur
  • McCay drew out his animation and projected it on
    a white screen
  • He then stood in front of the projection screen
    and told Gertie to do different things like one
    would command a dog
  • You would then see Gertie act out the various
    commands
  • The live action and the animation are two
    completely different parts of the film and are
    not connected on one reel.

3
History of Live Action/Animated movies
  • Examples of interaction between Gertie and McCay
  • He called her out from her cave to start the act
  • He would command her to bow to the audience and
    she would obey
  • He would ask her to raise her right leg, then her
    left
  • One of the better acts was he would have an
    orange in his and hand and he would throw it to
    her to catch. He would palm it as he throw it and
    an animate version would appear on the screen
    where she would then catch it
  • For the finally he would hide back stage and an
    animated version of himself would be picked up by
    Gertie and carried away

4
Gertie the Dinosaur
5
History of Live Action/Animated movies
  • Some examples of this style of film making since
    then
  • 1945 The Three Caballeros
  • 1946 Song of the South
  • 1971 Bedknobs and Broomsticks
  • 1977 Petes Dragon

6
Techniques
  • Double printing two negatives onto the same
    release print
  • Optical printers
  • Aerial image animation cameras
  • Rotoscoping

7
Double Printing Negatives
  • Director would film the live action and the
    animation on two completely separate reels
  • They would then combine the two reels in the
    final edit to create one final release print that
    is then sent to the theaters to be viewed

8
Optical Printers
  • A devise consisting of one or more film
    projectors mechanically linked to a movie camera
  • This allows filmmakers to re-photograph one of
    more strips of film
  • In this case they could photograph the live
    action and the animation to create the one
    combined reel

9
Aerial Image and Animation Cameras
  • An aerial image is one that is basically floating
    in space and is added to an existing scene.
  • Used to add an animated character of scene to a
    live action shot or sequence
  • An animation camera is a type of rostrum camera
    (which is used to animate a still picture or a
    still object) that is adapted for frame-by-frame
    shooting

10
Rotoscoping
  • An animation technique where an animator traces
    over live action film movement
  • Instead of tracing over a live action sequence,
    they would use it as a reference to add the
    animation to play off the live action actors

11
Mary Poppins
  • Released in 1964
  • It was the third live action/animation movie done
    by Walt Disney
  • This film is widely known as his crowning
    achievement

12
Mary Poppins
  • Technique used by Walt Disney
  • Disney used the sodium vapor process to combine
    the live-action actors and the animated
    background
  • An actor is filmed performing in front of a white
    screen and lit by powerful sodium vapor lights
  • Sodium light is used because it is a narrow
    spectrum source that falls neatly into a notch
    between sensitive layers of the color film
  • This allows the complete range of colors to be
    used in costumes, make up, and props

13
Mary Poppins
  • Techniques cont.
  • They would then use a camera with a beamsplitter
    prism that exposes two separate film elements
  • The first film element is regular color negative
    film that is into very sensitive to sodium light
  • The second is a panchromatic fine grain black and
    white film that is sensitive to the color of the
    sodium vapor lights
  • The second film element is used to create a
    matte, to that the regular color footage can
    later be combined with another shot without the
    two images showing through each other

14
Mary Poppins
  • Techniques cont.
  • The matte is then used as a the template for the
    animated portion of the movie
  • Making it at the same time as the live action
    makes it an easier fit in post production optical
    printing

15
Mary Poppins
  • They had the actors acting to practically
    nothing.
  • They sometimes had cardboard cutouts marking the
    location of the object the actors had to react to

16
Mary Poppins
17
Mary Poppins
18
Who Framed Roger Rabbit
  • Was released in 1988
  • Had a budget of 70 million dollars
  • Directed by Robert Zemeckis
  • Animation director was Richard Williams

19
Who Framed Roger Rabbit
  • Fun Facts
  • Animation was all hand drawn
  • Rogers voice actor Charles Fleisher dressed as a
    rabbit and stood in for Roger in some of the
    scenes
  • Sparked the most recent era in American animation
  • Last appearance of famed cartoon voice artists
    Mel Blanc (Daffy Duck, Bugs Bunny, Tweety Bird,
    and Sylvester) and Mae Questel (Betty Boop)

20
Who Framed Roger Rabbit
  • Fun Facts
  • First and only time were characters from several
    animation studios appeared in the same film
  • First time Bugs Bunny and Mickey mouse met on
    screen
  • First time Daffy Duck and Donald Duck met on
    Screen

21
Who Framed Roger Rabbit
  • Techniques
  • As a reference the film makers created exact,
    life sized rubber sculptures of the animated
    characters so that the live actors could react
    towards them
  • These models were also used to see the size of
    the character on camera and how the light would
    fall on them

22
Roger Rabbit as a Puppet
23
Who Framed Roger Rabbit
  • Techniques cont
  • They used a blue screen as a blank canvas when
    the live actor had to be in an all cartoon
    environment
  • The actors went to mime training to gain an
    understanding of how to make it look like there
    is something there event though there isnt
  • Film makers created robots, machines and puppets
    to move the objects the cartoons came into
    contact with, such as guns, plates, pianos, etc.

24
Blue Screen vs. The Finished Scene
25
Robots as Cartoons
26
Who Framed Roger Rabbit
  • Techniques cont
  • When the animators where drawing out the
    individual slides for the animated characters
    they created 4 different layers per slide
  • created one where Roger Rabbit is alone
  • created one with Roger Rabbit as a matte where
    they backlit him
  • created one for highlights
  • created one for low lights
  • All the layers where then sent to ILM and using
    their optical printers would composite them with
    the live action plates

27
Who Framed Roger Rabbit
  • Rule in animation is to keep the camera still so
    that you only see one side of the character,
    which makes it easy for the animator cause they
    only have to draw them from one angle
  • Zemeckis shot the live action like a normal
    movie, so the camera was always moving
  • The animators had to compensate for this movement
    and draw the characters more 3D then they usually
    would
  • Which meant drawing twice as much

28
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29
Style in Animation
  • where DOES it comes from??
  • by erika bird

30
A movie clip
  • from the beginning of Hercules

31
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32
Greek Pottery(in case youve never seen one)
33
Abstract Muses world
34
Gerald Scarfedesign consultant
35
Gerald Scarfe
36
Where is strong design seen in Hercules?
37
Landscapes
38
Phenomena
I see some greek columns here!
39
Characters
40
remember how Scarfe drew?
  • swoop and reverse-lines

41
Scarfe Characters
  • look at those lines! swoop and reverse!

42
Now, a clip to apply our learning (and to reward
your patience)
Ive edited this one, so in the first short bit,
check out the cloud hades makes with his hand
the rest of the clip is about the two minions
(they are quite stylized-especially the pink one)
43
A clip to apply our learning
44
Hercules
  • design permeated environs and characters matched
    each other
  • an example of a 2-D animated movie with a strong
    design ethos
  • ok, now were done with it

45
Lets shift to my other example, The Incredibles,
another very stylish movie
  • Ill preface this one with a clip about the
    films style from the Director, Brad Bird and
    the Production Designer, Lou Romano

46
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47
The Incredibles Driving Forces in its Design
  • Retrofuture
  • graphic style
  • caricature

48
Retrofuture influences included
Tomorrowland, Hanna Barbera, Bauhaus, Minimalism
49
Incredibles house
50
Graphic style
  • Brad Bird wanted graphic, but CG requires
    photoreal surfaces.
  • So Teddy Newton, Character Designer did photo
    cutouts

51
Paper Cutouts
52
Simple Textures
53
Other Concept Art emphasized pastelseffective
for palette
54
Palette (yknow--colors, lighting)
  • pure colors in the Golden Years highly
    saturated
  • a shift to drained colors at Insuricare
  • introduce some color back in to support the story
  • at end of film, color is natural and balanced

55
Color Script for palette consistencyThe Golden
Years
56
Color Script for palette consistencyInsuracare
57
Color Script for palette consistency
58
Incredible Clip the setup a scene with the
family at home, just normal family
stuffyou can get a good look at their house
and furniture
59
An Incredible Clip
60
Conclusion
  • style in animation doesnt happen accidentally
  • most movies create the look first, and then
    everything stems from that bible
  • style can be really cool--you just dont often
    notice it right away

61
for dessert, a final clip of something cool and
only sort of relevant
Flatworld
62
(No Transcript)
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