Look Ma, I’m King Of The Nerds! – My Fringe VFX Interview


The folks over at Sci Fi Scoop were nice enough to interview me about the effects work I’ve had the pleasure of working of for J.J. Abrams’ series Fringe. Not only did they write up a nice little piece, but also posted a recording of parts of our conversation along with a nifty slide show. Check it out, and try not to get too mesmerized by my droning vfx blather.

LINK to the full Fringe article


Share and Enjoy:

Digg
Technorati
Google Bookmarks
Reddit
StumbleUpon
del.icio.us
Facebook
LinkedIn
N4G
Tumblr

Guy Spends Two Years Making Movie About A Guy Who Lives Inside Google Sketch-Up

That “guy” is Bruce Branit, one of the creators of 405:The Movie and film he made is called World Builder. It was shot fully on greenscreen in 1 day and then spent about two years in post most of the work being done by Branit himself. The results are pretty impressive even if the ending is a bit maudlin. Sit back and relax with some popcorn the clip is a bit long.

(VIA Gizmodo)


Share and Enjoy:

Digg
Technorati
Google Bookmarks
Reddit
StumbleUpon
del.icio.us
Facebook
LinkedIn
N4G
Tumblr

On Set VFX Tips Answers The Age Old Question – “How Big Is That Thing?”

If your ever been on set and need to survey something really tall you basically have two options.

  1. Shimmy up said tall object with a tape measure clenched between your teeth or..
  2. Use a spiffy trick with an inclinometer to tell how tall the thing is from your foldable camping chair whilst you sip a frothy beverage

If you are like me and like the sound of #2, all you’ll need is a Suunto Tandem Inclinometer, a laser tape measure and the magic of “math”. Check it out it’s actually very handy

LINK to the full tutorial on On Set VFX Tips


Share and Enjoy:

Digg
Technorati
Google
Reddit
StumbleUpon
del.icio.us
Facebook
LinkedIn
N4G
Tumblr

Top 5 iPhone Apps for Visual Effects

It seems in this town, once you become a VFX Supervisor someone issues you a MacBook Pro and an iPhone. The iPhone for me has been a great tool for presenting previz and work in progress to clients on set and has proven indispensable in settling bar bets with grips and gaffers. Of course one of the best things about this little marvel from Cupertino is the applications you can put on it. Here’s my top 5 for VFX production.

clino.jpg

Clinometer

So of all the things I always manage to forget in VFX kit bag, my inclinometer always ends first on that list. But you know what I never forget? My iPhone! Enter Clinometer, turn it on it’s side and it becomes a pretty darn accurate slope finder. I compared it to an old school analog angle finder and came out with the same results. The coolest thing about this app though is if you lay it flat the whole interface turns into a bubble level. You can lock the angle for easy transcription later but it doesn’t have the ability to save, catalogue or email readings.

hdr.jpg

HdrHelper

A common question I get as a Supe is “How many stops apart should the pics for my HDRs be?”. First of all, when gathering bracketed exposures for generating HDRs (I use Photomatix but CS4 makes ‘em too) you want to make sure you change the shutter speed not the aperture. That way the depth of field won’t vary between exposures. There is no magic number to how different each exposure should be as long as the difference is consistent and travels from almost completely blown out to nearly black. I used to take test exposures, find the high and low end and do the math on a notepad to figure out what my shutter speeds should be. In HdrHelper, enter the start and end exposures and how many pictures you want to take and presto! It figures out the rest for ya.

jott.jpg

Jott

So if you are like me inspiration and/or panic can come at any time. You may be driving or away from our notepad and need to record a specific piece of info. What Jott does is turn your iPhone into a mini dictation machine. You just talk into it and after a few moments Jott transcribes what you said (watch out for super techy words) and lets you file the written tidbits away for later. To get started you have to sign up for there website from which you can send your notes as emails, SMS and the like. That’s the good news. The bad news is, what was previously free will now be a pay service as of February 2nd. Sign up for the free now and you still may be able to get the 10% coupon code when they start making us pay.

IMG_0014 copy.jpg

Dropbox

Dropbox is a web app kinda like iDisk with two large exceptions, you can use it on the iPhone and it works. Signup for an account online and you get 2GB of disk space free and little app for your desktop. The desktop app puts a folder on your system and every time you write to it Dropbox uploads the file to your site and assigns it a url where you can access it from any web browser including Safari on the iPhone. The great thing is if you put a text file, pdf, jpg or iPhone supported movie in the Dropbox folder your desktop, you can see it immediately on the iPhone side. I use a program called TaskPaper to make my todo lists. Taskpaper saves in plaintext so I just keep the file in my Dropbox folder and I always have it with me. Oh did I mention that you can share folders and files with your iPhone brethren?

googicon.jpg

Google Docs

Another web app but one that can really help you with gathering data on set. As you may know Google Docs allows you to create documents, presentations and spreadsheets via a web interface that you can then share with others. What you may not be familiar with is a document type called a form. With forms, you can set up a series of questions that you can post or email. After you fill out the form and submit it, Google posts the data from the form into a master spreadsheet. The forms show up great on the iPhone and when you come home at the end of a long day on set, all of your data is nicely timestamped and thrown into a spreadsheet for you. Here’s how it works..

  • Open up your browser and make a new form from the dropdown menu in Google docs.
newform.jpg
  • Fill out the title and description of the form then add the questions you want to show up in the spreadsheet. When you are all done, click on the “Email this form” button. Open up the email on your iPhone and follow the link. Here is a screenshoot of a form I made for VFX on-set data.
googeformscreen.jpg
  • Bookmark the link and bring it up on the go when you need to enter data. When you get back to the office, you will see that Google Docs has happily created a spreadsheet for you with the same title as the form. All the data you entered into the form is now placed in the spreadsheet through the magic of technology. Like this…
ssexample.jpg
  • You can edit the form, email it, or embed it into a your own blog or web page from the Form menu when you are editing the spreadsheet.

This is great for gathering info anywhere and also for gathering from multiple sources at once. Anyone who has access to the form can enter data into the same spreadsheet. That way you can have multiple people entering data at the same time! Who says a VFX Supe can’t have there butt in two places at once?

LINK to the VFX Data spreadsheet used in this post (you need a Google account if you want to save yourself a copy)

Share and Enjoy:

Digg
Technorati
Google
Reddit
StumbleUpon
del.icio.us
Facebook
LinkedIn
N4G
Tumblr

Alien Grey: Zone – X : You Have To See It To Believe It

So, if I had recently escaped an exploding toy plane, the force of which failed to even muss someone’s hair, and was being stalked by a madman. I still would not go past the sign that told me I was entering an area inhibited by lethal Alien Grey’s. Alas, this is the case with the poor hapless souls trapped in the “film” Alien Grey:Zone-X. There are plenty of things to like about this trailer. A dude fighting a mech-spider with some sort of mop that deflects laser beams. Aliens that can’t seem to stop floating around people and bothering them to death. Oh, don’t forget the Alien’s greatest ally, the T-Rex. This flick is gonna be great!

LINK to the AGZ-X website

Share and Enjoy:

Digg
Technorati
Google
Reddit
StumbleUpon
del.icio.us
Facebook
LinkedIn
N4G
Tumblr

VFX School Now Open – Tuition? Free!


VFXHack fan and all around great guy Agrapha, has compiled a plethora of VFX links(266 to be exact) on YouTube. There is some fantastic stuff here, how-tos and interviews from projects old and new covering a variety of subject ranging from stop motion and animatronics to compositing and miniatures. You kill a few hours on the Dark Crystal stuff alone! Another highlight is Walt himself walking us through the construction of Pirates Of The Caribbean. Check this video out and please post any ideas you may having explaining the babe with the riding crop.

LINK to Argapha’s VFX library on YouTube

Share and Enjoy:

Digg
Technorati
Google
Reddit
StumbleUpon
del.icio.us
Facebook
LinkedIn

Radiohead Video – Cool Laser Scanners Out-Franky Franky Goes To Hollywood

The video proves once and for all that CGI and Radiohead are two great tastes that taste great together. The basic idea is this, screw the cameras 86 the lights scan everything and make the whole piece out of realtime streaming data. The result is imagery so deep in the uncanny valley that it’s cool. This behind the scenes gives a great overview of the technical and creative issues involved. I love the image of Lidar scanner on a dolly. The only problem, “Ready, and, SCAN!” just doesn’t have the right ring to it.

LINK to the full video
thanks to JC for the link

Share and Enjoy:

Digg
Technorati
Google
Reddit
StumbleUpon
del.icio.us
Facebook
LinkedIn

100% Pure Creative Juice

I always wondered were that stuff came from.

Thanks to Nyarlathotep for the link

“Downfall” of Post

Hitler goes bananas after hearing that the film came back from the lab with a scratch on the neg that will have to be fixed in post. Classic.

Thanks to Aaron Z. for the link