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MRMC Newsletter

14th January 2005

This Week:
•Next Demo Day
•Polar Express
•Happy New Year

 
Demo Event In London

Mark Roberts Motion Control will be attending an open day in London hosted by Kay Media (the Kays Production Manual publisher). The event, in association with Island Studios and @ction Park Royal Film & Television Partnership, will be on the 25th of January. Along with a whole host of other companies exhibiting their equipment, we will be showing directors, cinematographers, DoPs and visual effects supervisors the new Ultihead, our motion control and remote pan-tilt head. Also on show will be the Motion Control Tutorial DVD with free copies available to anyone attending. The feedback from the DVD this year has been spectacular. To receive an invitation and find out more about the event in January please contact Sophie Roberts on (0)1342 334730 or sophie@mrmoco.com
 
Polar Express Equipment

T
he Polar Express animated movie is not a film one would normally associate with Simon Wakley, motion control operator for Camera Control Inc, but there you would be wrong.

The Polar Express is the latest creation of director Robert Zemeckis, the same man who directed "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?". It is based on the book and amazing art work of Chris Van Allsburg and while being an animated feature it is has a very live action feel to it. Although none of the characters are particularly real looking their movement has a very real feel to it which was created using motion capture. This combination makes them neither real nor unreal, but rather "compellingly attractive". The Polar Express, while being very much aimed at children, should never be thought as "soft" or "airy-fairy". It has a very eerie feel and creates very much the atmosphere that all is not as it seems. Many of the main characters add much to this sneaky atmosphere with Tom Hanks perfoming no less than 6 different on-screen characters.

While the movie is animated and created using computers graphics you would be quick to notice that its feel is quite different. To achieve this Zemeckis used real actors and captured their motions, a technique used more and more and refered to as motion capture or performance capture, but most incredibly he also used real cameramen! The actors motion was captured and rendered using computer graphics but new to this field, cameramen were then used to control virtual cameras to move about the virtual film scene. Zemeckis realised that while CG movies often have great action it can be time consuming for the "DoP" or cameraman to describe to the CG artist how the camera should move through space, or how an actor should be framed. Something they achieve themselves without trouble on a real set but it is much more time consuming on a virtual set. For this Simon Wakley from Camera Control Inc. supplied sets of remote handwheels to the cameramen. Such handwheels are often used in motion control or with remote heads to control the camera motion, except that in this case the handwheel circuitry was changed to send the data to the CGI machines. Therefore any motion the cameramen made such as panning or tilting using the handwheels was instantly shown on screen as if the cameraman was looking through a video assist monitor on set. Therefore no computer programming was needed to created the final camera framing and you will notice the look this gives to the finished product. Such handwheels are now referred to as 3D Wheels and are likely to be seen on CG "sets" more and more. These 3D Wheels were also used in the recent Martin Scorcese film The Aviator to allow the cameramen to do all the manual framing during the Maya pre-visualisation of the CG aircraft models. All the pre-vis shots were then sent to the director for approval and once approved the move data was exported from Maya and shot with Milo motion control on real models.

Shots from The Polar Express

 
Happy New Year
Mark Roberts Motion Control Ltd. and all its staff would like to wish you Happy New Year and welcome back!
 
Join the discussion group today at http://www.mocoforum.com
 

Do you know anyone else who should be getting regularly informed about the industry? Let us know; we would be happy to send them our newsletters or DVD Showreel - The 2005 Motion Control Explained DVD.

If you would like to have more information about CGI, remote heads, cranes, dollies, accessories or any other filming equipment please let us know at info@mrmoco.com

Mark Roberts Motion Control Ltd.
Tel: +44-1342-334700
Fax:+44-1342-334701

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