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Showing posts with label animation news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label animation news. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Animated Short Film | It's a plastic world

Animated, Short Film, It's a plastic world , animation , 3D , video , making , walllpaper, , posters, images , world , earth, global warming
It's everywhere. We need and want it. We find it in places where we wouldn't expect it. A world without plastic is inconceivable. But do we know the consequences of our self-indulgent plastic consumption? This film shows various problems associated with plastic and looks at possible solutions.

Animated Short Film | It's a plastic world


Credits

Production: Andreas Tanner (andix.ch)
Music and Sound Design: Alexander Rösch (facebook.com/darklobster)
English Voice: Thomas Lüthi
Webdesign: Malte Vollmerhausen

For more information visit itsaplasticworld.com

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Tangled | Character Design Development

Video, Tangled Ever After, The Rings, wallpaper, poster, cover, animation, Disney, movies

Here are some Character Design Development drawings for Tangled . I found them online on characterdesignnotes.

For the 1st character, we start  with Rapunzel. The Main character in the movie Tangled , with very long and magical Hair. This are expression sheets of Rapunzel for the animated movie Tangled .

Rapunzel, character designs, expression sheets, tangled, drawing, wallpaper, poster, photo, animation
Rapunzel, character designs, expression sheets, tangled, drawing, wallpaper, poster, photo, animation
Rapunzel, character designs, expression sheets, tangled, drawing, wallpaper, poster, photo, animation

The next Main character for the movie Eugene also know as Flynn Rider or Fitzherbert.He had alot of expression in the movie Tangled . He had to run alot. also fight.

Eugene, Flynn Rider, Fitzherbert, character designs, expression sheets, tangled, drawing, wallpaper, poster, photo, animation

Eugene, Flynn Rider, Fitzherbert, character designs, expression sheets, tangled, drawing, wallpaper, poster, photo, animation

Eugene, Flynn Rider, Fitzherbert, character designs, expression sheets, tangled, drawing, wallpaper, poster, photo, animation


And here are some more character designs or expression sheets for the characters in movie Tangled . Like Mother Gothel, the Horse the King in the movie Tangled, and some animals.

Mother Gothel, character designs, expression sheets, tangled, drawing, wallpaper, poster, photo, animation

Mother Gothel, character designs, expression sheets, tangled, drawing, wallpaper, poster, photo, animation
Mother Gothel, character designs, expression sheets, tangled, drawing, wallpaper, poster, photo, animation
Eugene, Flynn Rider, Fitzherbert, horse, character designs, expression sheets, tangled, drawing, wallpaper, poster, photo, animation


horse , character designs, expression sheets, tangled, drawing, wallpaper, poster, photo, animation


character designs, expression sheets, tangled, drawing, wallpaper, poster, photo, animation

King, character designs, expression sheets, tangled, drawing, wallpaper, poster, photo, animation

Queen, character designs, expression sheets, tangled, drawing, wallpaper, poster, photo, animation
Going to end the artical in a video By Disney. The video is about creating Tangled World and also Creating the Look of character in Tangled and also the sets

A Tangled World: Creating the Look

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Trailer | Despicable Me 2 | Teaser | Its BACK

Trailer, Despicable Me 2, Teaser, minions, movie, animation, video, trailer, cover, wallpaper, funny

One of My Fav. animated movies of 2010. And now just can`t wait for 2013 for Despicable Me 2. Yesterday Despicable Me 2 teaser trailer and also the poster were out. The trailer featured the minions sing "Barbara Ann" by the Beach Boys. Watch the Trailer of Despicable Me 2 below.

Despicable Me 2 | Teaser | HD

Chris Meledandri has said that a sequel is in the works. It is tentatively scheduled for release on July 3, 2013. Miranda Cosgrove stated on her official Facebook and Twitter page on October 14, 2011, that production had begun. In February 2012, it was reported that Al Pacino has joined the cast to voice the villain, Gru's nemesis. On March 1, the teaser trailer was released on iTunes Movie Trailers and featured the minions sing "Barbara Ann" by the Beach Boys. The trailer is also is attached to The Lorax also by Illumination Entertainment.

And not to forget Victor 'Vector' Perkins, hope to see him too or he still stuck on the moon?. I just loved the Way he said "OH! Yeaaaaaaaa"

Sunday, February 26, 2012

Oscar 2012 | Best Animation Film

Oscar 2012, Best Animation Film, wallpaper, poster, cover, award, johnny depp, news

Rango wins the Best Animation film for Oscar 2012. Well ILM did a good job

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Trailer | Ice Age 4 | The ScrAtist

 Trailer, Ice Age 4, The ScrAtist, wallpaper, poster, cover, movie, animation, blue studio

Ice Age 4 has a new Trailer out called "The ScrAtis". Well i don't know if its really from Blue Studios or from the Ice Age makers. May just another Fan made trailer. 

Posted this video .

Blue Sky Studios has released a silent, old fashioned trailer called “The Scratist” for promoting the futures release of Ice Age: Continental Drift.



The Artist Parody

Ice Age 4:Continental Drift in digital 3D JULY 12

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Oscars 2012 | Patrick Doyon’s nominated short | Sunday

Oscars 2012, Patrick Doyon, nominated short, Sunday, wallpaper, poster, cover
“It puts more pressure on me for the second one,” said Patrick Doyon, in his Montreal studio.

Sunday is one of two National Film Board of Canada movies in contention in the best animated short film category, the other being Wild Life, by fellow NFB animators Wendy Tilby and Amanda Forbis.
A cold picked up during his last visit to Los Angeles doesn’t dampen Doyon’s enthusiasm at the thought of walking the fabled red carpet.

“It’s very exciting,” said Doyon, who screamed with joy as he watched the Oscar nominations being announced on the Internet.

“It’s a little bit intimidating because there are lots of stars there. But it’s not a thing that happens often so I will try to appreciate each moment.”

Sunday | Trailer

The film is a charming tour through a child’s imagination as he tries to cope with a numbingly boring Sunday visit to his grandparents with his parents.

“I wanted to tell a story about boredom without boring the audience,” Doyon said. “But everything is exaggerated so it’s not an autobiographical film.”

Besides passing muster with the Oscar crowd, Sunday has also drawn accolades from a key audience — Doyon’s family.

“They were really happy about it,” the 32-year-old said, pointing out they knew it didn’t really reflect what he felt about those post-church visits to grandma’s.

Unlike many animators today, Doyon chose to go the old-school route with the film; he painstakingly drew each of the frames himself rather than use a computer animation program.

“For me, it was a natural choice,” said Doyon, who alternates between animation and doing illustrations for books and magazines.

He says he feels more natural working with pencil and paper because he’s actually still learning how to do computer animation.

“It took me two years to do it,” he said of the 10-minute film. “Every second of the film is drawn, there’s no special effects. Everything is drawn, even the snow in the film.”

He said he believes traditional animation is better for showing emotion.

“It’s just a different feeling with drawing. For me, it’s more warm.”
But the bottom line, he points out, is “the important thing is the story.”

Sunday, which can be bought through the NFB website, has already been honoured at film festivals in North America and Europe, including a special mention prize at the Berlin International Film Festival.

Besides dealing with the Oscar hoopla, Doyon is also busy with other projects.
He’s now illustrating a children’s book and will start working on the script for his next film later this year. He says it will also likely be drawn from his childhood memories and be an intergenerational tale.

Doyon says he likes alternating between animation and illustration but doesn’t have a preference.
“I like them both,” he said. “It’s different. For illustration, you have to put more details because the reader can pass a long period of time analyzing the details.
“For animation, you know that if you miss a drawing, that’s OK because the seconds pass and the audience will forget about it.”

He says he’s not interested in making a full-length feature film right now.
“I like the short format,” he said. “We can put so much emotion in a short period of time.”

Sunday, January 1, 2012

2012: India will do lot more in animation

2012: India will do lot more in animation
The year 2012 will reset the pace of growth of India's gaming and animation businesses. What happened in mature game and movie markets like the US, Europe and Japan over three decades will take place in India in a much shorter time, and the coming year will be the inflection point.

Cost-effective smartphones, computing devices, internet and social media will fuel the appetite for games, animated content and consoles among young and the old alike. People have started consuming such content even on DTH (direct to home) TV platforms.

Developed markets moved gradually, from coinoperated arcade machines to computer games to consoles to games on handheld devices , internet games, mobile games and social games. "In India, it is sort of happening at one go and all these platforms are going to push the growth of the industry in a big way," says Rajesh Rao, CEO of Dhruva Interactive.

The year 2011 upped the ante in animation for fulllength feature films. Tintin, Rango, Puss in Boots, Kung Fu Panda 2, Rio, Cars 2, Happy Feet 2, Smurfs and Gnomeo & Juliet took animation to a new level.

Biren Ghose, country head of Technicolor India, says India had a hand in many of these movies. "India also worked on movies in the Harry Potter, Pirates of the Caribbean and X-Men series. This is a quantum jump in the level of expertise and a tribute to local artists and technicians," he says.
Technicolor India did a significant amount of work for DreamWorks Animation's Puss in Boots. The Indian crew included animators, lighting artists, special effects experts, atmosphere and volume metric experts, image rendering specialists, secondary animation experts and simulation specialists.
Ghose says a lot more visual effects work will happen in India. "The estimate is over 20 major international titles will have value addition from Indian VFX studios," he said. India is a lower cost destination for global film studios, and talent too is rapidly improving . The growing domestic market is also spurring animation action.

Rajiv Vaishnav, vice president in IT industry body Nasscom, says 2012 will also see a major mindset change. "The outlook for the industry is changing with parents increasingly allowing their children to pursue careers in animation, visual effects, graphics or game development. It was an eye opener for the industry when a parent came along with his son to a recent Nasscom game developer conference in Pune,'' he says.

Many co-production treaties have been signed by leading Indian animation and gaming players like DQ Entertainment, Crest Animation, Technicolor Bangalore, GreenGold, Tata Elxsi, Red Chillies, PrimeFocus, Rhythm & Hues, Anibrains and Toons Animation with studious and producers in Canada, Britain, America and many parts of Asia.

The impact of these agreements will unfold next year and beyond.

From | timesofindia

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

The top 10 animated films of 2011

Puss in Boots, wallpaper, poster, cover, top 10 movies


Top 10 animated films of 2011

10. "Gnomeo and Juliet" -- I was tempted to put only nine movies on this list, but the few chuckles I got out of this otherwise forgettable Shakespeare-inspired comedy convinced me to include it.

9. "Hop" -- A bit of a stretch for this list, since it mixed animation with huge doses of live action, but it was a fun little whimsy.

8. "Cars 2" -- A solidly made movie, but not as affecting as Pixar movies generally are.

7. "Rango" -- Johnny Depp and Gore Verbinski team up for an animated movie that isn't necessarily for kids but is beautifully rendered.

6. "Rio" --A sweet -- and remarkably colorful -- flight of fancy.

5. "Arthur Christmas" -- Oh what fun it is to ride ...

4. "Winnie the Pooh" -- Sometimes simple is better. Case in point: this return to form for Disney's beloved fluff-stuffed bear.

2. "Puss in Boots" and "Kung Fu Panda 2" (tie) -- Both DreamWorks sequels had the same positives and the same flaws: They are both gorgeous, but the formulaic stories lack any real compelling narrative.

The Adventures of Tintin, wallpaper, poster, cover, top 10 movies
1. "The Adventures of Tintin" -- Steven Spielberg's nonstop adventure helped rescue an otherwise lackluster year for animated films.
















By

Thursday, December 22, 2011

News | Paramount announces new animation division

 Paramount announces new animation division, News, wallpaper, poster, logo, animation, studio
Paramount Studios announced Wednesday they plan to create an in-house division for animated films, the first of which will debut in 2014.

The Viacom subsidiary is ready to spend up to $100 million per film, they added in a press release.
"The marketplace has never offered as many opportunities to create wonderfully imaginative pictures at very appealing budget levels, so we feel this is a perfect moment to launch this effort," said Paramount Chairman & CEO Brad Grey.

"We are now eager to expand in animation with appropriate and prudent overhead and production budgets in a way that will allow us to be nimble, creative and innovative," he added.
Paramount Animation will count among its roster the catalog of characters developed for children's entertainment channel Nickelodeon, also owned by Viacom. The studio predicts it will produce one animated film each year.

Paramount has already produced animated films, the most recent "Rango" earned $241 million worldwide, but they have never backed a completely integrated animation division.

The studio is currently enjoying a boom as "Transformers: Dark of the Moon,"  following a series of successes with "Super 8," "Thor," "Paranormal Activity 2," "Kung-Fu Panda 2," "True Grit," and "Jackass 3D."

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Trailer | Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted | Official

Trailer, Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted, Official, wallpaper, poster, cover, animation, 3d, dreamworks


Trailer | Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted | Official

Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted is an upcoming computer-animated comedy film and the third installment of the Madagascar film series, also the first 3-D film in the series, produced by DreamWorks Animation, distributed by Paramount Pictures and directed by Eric Darnell and Conrad Vernon. It is a sequel to Madagascar and Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa. It is set to be released on June 8, 2012.

Plot 
Alex the Lion, Marty the Zebra, Gloria the Hippopotamus, and Melman the Giraffe set out to return to New York after escaping to Africa. Dependent on the mechanical know-how of the notorious monkeys, their plan inevitably goes awry and they find themselves stranded in Monte Carlo, where they try to escape Europe from animal control by joining up with a traveling circus by chance. Led by the venerable tiger Vitali, the animal-centered circus has seen better days. During the course of a tour through a series of European cities that ends in a fabulous big top in the heart of London, Alex, Marty, Gloria, and Melman help Vitaly, Gia the jaguar, and Stefano the sea lion, rediscover their passion for show business and reinvent circus performance.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Official | ice age continental drift | trailer 2 | HD

Official, ice age continental drift, trailer 2, HD, wallpaper, poster, cover, animation, 3d, blue studios
Official | ice age continental drift | trailer 2 | HD

Ice Age 4 Trailer # 2 Everybody's favourite sabre-toothed squirrel Scrat is back in Ice Age Continental Drift, the official title of Ice Age 4. This time, the world changed... A continental cataclysm triggers the our friends Manny, Diego and Sid. New and dangerous adventures are awaiting our poor animals ! Ice Age 4: In theaters: July 13th 2012

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Official | Brave | Trailer | Pixar

Brave, Disney Pixar, trailer, wallpaper, poster, cover, animation, 3D

Brave (previously titled The Bear and the Bow) is an upcoming American computer-animated 3-D film. It is being produced by Pixar Animation Studios and will be distributed by Walt Disney Pictures. It is directed by Mark Andrews and Brenda Chapman.

The film is scheduled for release on June 22, 2012

Official | Brave | Trailer | 2011 | Trailer 2

Monday, November 14, 2011

News | How animation will change business : DreamWorks CEO

News, How animation will change business, DreamWorks CEO
-It may seem like creating a top-animated movie has become a simpler process with the advent of computer graphics. Yet in a talk here at Techonomy 2011, DreamWorks CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg shared details that show just how tedious the work remains--even today. 
 
"An expert animator can do about three seconds of animation in a week," said Katzenberg, who was interviewed today by moderator David Kirkpatrick.

Jeffrey Katzenberg, right, talks to moderator David Kirkpatrick, left. (Credit: Paul Sloan, CNET)
Even more challenging is that the designers are working largely in the dark, unable for hours to see, for instance, how exactly a character's leg moves during a dance scene. The complexity of the imaging--which needs to begin as low resolution and then requires an eight-hour rendering process--means that animators are working "almost as though they are working blind." The result is an enormous amount of waiting.

"Ultimately you have to go through numerous passes to achieve vision," said Katzenberg, who at DreamWorks has produced such hits as "Shrek," "Kung Fu Panda," and "Monsters vs. Aliens." "They work without having any real idea of what it will look like."

But to hear Katzenberg describe it, the industry is in the midst of another sweeping change, driven by his company. DreamWorks is in the final year of a four-year partnership with Intel to develop authoring tools and visual technology that's making the process real-time, which, he said, has always been the "holy grail" in animation.

The technology is getting to this point, but there's still more to go. He said the animation software isn't yet up to the task--"It's like having a 1,000 horse-power engine in your car and driving 30 miles per hour"--but he spoke enthusiastically about how the technology DreamWorks and Intel are developing will increase productivity and quality in Hollywood and elsewhere.

"The implications of this are absolutely revolutionary," he said, arguing that any business that uses high-end rendering--whether it's an oil rig builder or aircraft designer--should be able to take advantage of what DreamWorks and Intel are spearheading.

And suddenly, Katzenberg was sounding like a Silicon Valley honcho more than a Hollywood mogul.
When asked about that, he said he fully expects over the next couple of years to repurpose what they're developing-- both in terms of technology and processes--and try to license it others.
"We are at the absolutely intersection between Silicon Valley and Hollywood," he said.

He's also always on the prowl for emerging technologies. "We spend a good deal of time looking over our shoulders and looking into every garage where some kid might be onto what the next thing will be," he said.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Trailer | THE FLYING MACHINE | animation

The Flying Machine,  2011, 3-D film, wallpaper, poster, cover, movie, iffi

Trailer | THE FLYING MACHINE

The Flying Machine is a 2011 3-D film being produced by BreakThru Films. The film is directed by Martin Clapp, Geoff Lindsey and Marek Skrobecki, and stars Heather Graham and Lang Lang.

Plot | A family take a journey across the globe on a strange and amazing flying machine, experiencing a series of adventures along the way.

IFFI | 42nd IFFI to attain new level globally: Shankar Mohan

42nd IFFI, goa, india, movies, photos
With a focus on Russian, Polish, American cinema, screening of 3D, animation and films in other digital formats, the upcoming 42nd edition of the International Film Festival of India (IFFI) is set to reach a new level as a global brand. The 11-day event, the largest film festival in India, is all set to begin from November 23 in Goa with new sections being added to it to make it a platform for exchange and dissemination of film culture. "With its 42nd edition, IFFI is all set to go onto the next level as a global brand. The entire purpose behind the festival is to make it a meeting platform for people from the Indian film industry professionals and those coming from outside," IFFI Director Shankar Mohan told PTI. And to make it a better platform for world cinema, IFFI this year is focusing on films from the USA, Russia and Poland, besides introducing new sections on 3D and animation. "We have a nice package of films from the US this year. We see to it that the films screened are a value addition to our delegates. We have a classic section too every year for connoisseurs of cinema and this year some brilliant Russian films are included in it." Technological advances in world cinema will reflect in IFFI as well with sections for 3D and animated films. "We are having a whole section on 3D films for the first time, following which we shall have master classes and conferences on 3D. Digital cinema is growing in a big way. We are also curating a whole section on animation cinema," said Shankar. Animation movies like 'The Flying Machine' and 'Fat Bald Short Man' alongwith 3D movies like 'The Cave of Forgotten Dreams' and 'Hara Kiri: The Death of Samurai' will be screened.

Saturday, November 12, 2011

News | Trailer | ‘Green Lantern: The Animated Series’ Premiere

News, Green Lantern, The Animated Series, Premiere, wallpaper, poster, cover, cartoon network
Cartoon Network has given fans a glimpse at the new Green Lantern: The Animated Series in a special hour-long episode that sets up the overall concept and provides an opportunity for the network to show off the slick, CG animated style of the show. While DC has normally done well by its heroes in the animated arena, Green Lantern: The Animated Series doesn’t quite live up to one series it is clearly attempting to follow.


Green Lantern Animated Series Sneak Peek | Trailer

 

Like the similarly titled Batman: The Animated Series, Green Lantern: TAS is being launched with a feature film still relatively fresh in the minds of its intended audience. After the critical drubbing and underwhelming financial gains of the Green Lantern movie, however, the world beyond the comic book pages has begun to look unduly harsh for the Emerald Knight.

To set this right, Green Lantern: The Animated Series intriguingly begins not with Hal Jordan or any sort of unnecessary exposition into the Green Lantern mythos, but by first introducing the audience to a relatively new faction of the overall GL universe: the Red Lanterns. This recent expansion of the Lantern color wheel – which was previously limited to green and yellow – has helped define the Green Lantern characters by the emotion associated with that lantern’s hue. For instance: green (willpower), yellow (fear), red (rage), orange (avarice), indigo (compassion), violet (love), black (death) and white (life).

In starting the episode with these newer Lanterns – Razer and Zilius Zox, to be specific – Green Lantern: The Animated Series is telling the audience that this will not be a simple rehash of the feature film – but instead it will be a far more expansive experience, akin to the direction writer/DC Entertainment executive Geoff Johns has taken the characters in the various GL books over the past few years.

Like the story-arcs seen in the books, there are hints of larger forces at play as Razer and Zilius Zox (basically a toothier version of Marvel’s MODOK) bait and kill a distant galaxy’s Green Lantern. Before we are allowed to learn more of the nefarious plot, however, the focus quickly switches to hot-shot pilot Hal Jordan and the only time we see him on earth. After setting up an unrequited romance with Carol Ferris, Hal is summoned to a strangely unpopulated Oa by Ganthet and the other Guardians. While answering to the Guardians for his unorthodox methods, Hal learns of the fallen Green Lantern and demands action be taken. Unfortunately, Hal and Kilowog are informed that even at full speed, it would take them 18 months to reach the sector where the murder(s) occurred.

Friday, November 11, 2011

News | New York VFX Houses Contribute to Tower Heist | Trailer

News | New York VFX Houses Contribute to Tower Heist | Trailer
Brett Ratner’s new action-comedy film, Tower Heist called for extensive CG environments, and visual effects work, which was divided up between a variety of New York VFX houses including Phosphene, Gravity, and the facilities of Company 3 and Method Studios, both subsidiaries of Deluxe Entertainment Services. The film, which is possibly the biggest film effects project ever completed in New York, is about working stiffs who seek revenge on the Wall Street swindler who stiffed them. After the workers at a luxury Central Park condominium discover the penthouse billionaire has stolen their retirement, they plot the ultimate revenge: a heist to reclaim what he took from them.

The film’s exteriors were shot at Trump International Hotel & Tower in Manhattan and in Queens, while most of the interiors were shot with green screens at Cine Magic Riverfront Studios (Brooklyn, NY).

The Phosphene visual-effects team, under the direction of creative director/VFX supervisor John Bair, augmented and manipulated the physical environment in approximately 70 complex 3D CG set extensions.

“New York’s VFX infrastructure and community is growing at a very fast pace, and it has been amazing to be able to take on a film this size and show the worldwide film community how capable the New York visual-effects talent pool is,” said Vivian Connolly Phosphene co-founder and VFX executive producer. “We are experiencing a trend of wonderful directors finishing their films here and feel incredibly fortunate to be part of the growth of the visual-effects community in the city.”
“John Bair and his company, Phosphene, with a very small group of artists, were able to deliver shots for Tower Heist with absolutely no compromises and perfect execution. It would have taken any other huge VFX company months to pull off what Phosphene did in a matter of weeks with perfection,” said Ratner.

For the exterior of the tower (in real life, the Trump International Hotel & Tower at Columbus Circle on Manhattan’s Westside), Phosphene created a luxurious outdoor environment for the film’s Wall Street billionaire, Arthur Shaw. Removing the array of satellite dishes and technological equipment on the existing building, Phosphene replaced the roof with an expansive swimming pool – with a floor that sports a painted $100 bill – and a roof deck. These digital replacements were vital for the numerous aerial shots, as well as shots that required the addition of city vistas behind the film’s actors.

“The trickiest shot is the film’s opening, a sweeping tracking shot which begins with a tight shot on the $100 dollar bill,” explained Bair. “As the camera pulls up we hear a splash, the edges of a pool come into view, a swimmer moves through the frame and water ripples over the bill on the pool’s bottom. As the camera continues to pull up, it is revealed that the pool is on top of a residential tower. Pulling back still further, the rooftop disappears into a vast aerial view of Manhattan at night. We shot the swimmer on set; the building rooftop was filmed from a helicopter. Then we built a CG pool and CG water and married the elements, making sure they flowed seamlessly together. It is a powerful opening.”

The largest number of scenes that required Phosphene’s work were those in which the characters traveled into the tower’s elevator shaft. Three floors of shaft were constructed on the set. The actors traveled up and down the length of the 60-story shaft riding atop an elevator cab. Additionally, they climbed ladders and over the grid work in the shaft, all of which required either a complete CG environment or a massive extension of the environment to make it look as if it is actually a 60-story building and a three-unit-wide shaft. “The challenge was making sure that all the shots were completely integrated, that they were consistent from all angles and that the space feels cohesive,” Bair continued.

Phosphene VFX producer Renuka Ballal added, “We worked closely with the edit as the cut developed because the speed at which the characters and elevator cab travel through the elevator shaft is the core of the scene’s tension. There were so many moving parts – literally, moving cables, wheels and additional elevator cabs – that we had to be mindful to ensure we were accurately conveying the velocity of the set piece. These are specifics that may not be strictly evident to the typical viewer, but which completely sell the shots and make a huge emotional impact when watching the film.”

Phosphene relied on Nuke, 3ds Max with a V-ray rendering engine and After Effects CS5 and PCs running Windows 7 64-bit to execute the project.

The Phosphene creative team, led by company creative director/VFX supervisor John Bair, visual effects executive producer Vivian Connolly and visual effects producer Renuka Ballal, included visual effects associate producer Lea Prainsack, lead CG artist Vance Miller, and lead compositors Thomas Panayiotou and JD Yepes.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Grand Theft Auto V Trailer | Official

Grand Theft Auto V, Trailer, Official, wallpaper, poster, cover, game, animation



Grand Theft Auto V is an upcoming open world action-adventure video game in the Grand Theft Auto series, developed by British games developer Rockstar North as the sequel to Grand Theft Auto IV. The debut trailer for the game was unveiled on 2 November 2011. The game features a return to an updated version of Los Santos and its surrounding areas, which was previously visited in 2004's Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas.

Monday, October 31, 2011

Steven Spielberg's Tintin 'save motion-capture animation'

Steven Spielberg's, Tintin, 'save motion-capture animation', wallpaper, poster, start, release




When Disney's Mars Needs Moms brought in just $6.9 million in its opening weekend earlier this year, commentators suggested the $175-million flop would sound the death knell of motion-capture animation. The technique, in which the movements of real actors filmed on a blank set are turned into computer animation, has delivered a number of disappointments from Beowulf to Polar Express; the consensus is that audiences don't connect with the characters' creepy, near-lifelike appearance. Turning that thesis on its head is Steven Spielberg's motion-capture The Adventures of Tintin, based on the immensely popular European comics about a young Belgian reporter and his dog. (Watch the trailer below.) The film, which hits the U.S. in December, opened abroad to a whopping $55.8 million over the weekend. Could Spielberg and Tintin "save motion-capture animation"?
 
Yes. Tintin proves that motion-capture can work: The film's "promising start" suggests audiences will embrace motion capture when it's done right, says Joshua L. Weinstein at The Wrap. In France, for instance, Tintin scored "the biggest opening ever for an original, non-sequel Hollywood film." This "spectacular" visual feat really draws audiences in, Rory Bruer, of film distributor Sony, tells The Wrap in the same article. "You couldn't ask for a film that's more immersive and incredible to look at than Tintin."
"Can Steven Spielberg's Tintin save motion-capture animation?"

No. Our brains were wired to hate this style: Though better than ever, Tintin's motion-capture animation is still not "good enough," says Steve Rose at Britain's Guardian. "It's a paradox of animation that you can put arms and a face on a spoon… and it looks cute," but if a character is too lifelike, "the brain no longer reads it as good animation," but as reality gone awry. Video game designers have long struggled with this problem. Maybe one day we'll find a solution "where we can't tell the difference between what's animated and what's real." Though that idea is "potentially more terrifying than all the zombies, Chuckies and glazed-over Tintin characters put together."
"Tintin and the Uncanny Valley: When CGI gets too real"

Tintin deserved better: "The motion-capture animation [in Tintin] makes all the characters look like… marionettes," says Peter Bradshaw at the Hindustan Times. It has neither "the charm, clarity and style" of the Tintin books' illustrations, nor "the immediacy and panache of flesh-and-blood human beings." You can't help but imagine how much better the movie would be if it were hand drawn or live action. Instead, we get a disappointing Tintin that's "flat and robotic and a little bit aimless."

Friday, October 28, 2011

Ice age 4: continental drift | Teaser poster and trailer

Ice age 4: continental drift, Teaser poster, trailer, wallpaper poster, cover, animation, 3d
Blue Sky Studios facebook shared this image with the below tagline

"We're so proud to share with you the updated IA4 teaser poster!"
 Ice age 4: continental drift | Teaser poster and trailer