Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Rotoscoping

When I was learning about rotoscoping I found these videos very useful in explaining the uses of the technique. It pretty much gives you the basics of the process and how it can be used, but it's a good starting point, and the guy narrates it all fairly clearly, with one of the less annoying american accents i've come across, so that's a bonus.



Science of Sleep




I'd find it really hard to say who I liked better when it comes to Spike Jonze and Michel Gondry, but I think if it really came down to it I'd have to give it to Gondry. Science of Sleep is a great example of his work. It's a really interesting and engaging film, switching between english, french and spanish. It is interspersed with sections of animation which add to the surreal dream feel. Imaginative, endearing and funny, it's a good place to start with Gondrys work.

Motion Control

This is a really good video to help understand motion control and it's many applications. I came aross this while trying to learn more about motion control, and it's a really thorough lowdown of the equipment they use and the different uses for it. I didn't realise it was used for so many different things. It definately helped me realise how lot of shots in various films and videos had been made. Makes you really want to get your hands on one of those milo rigs, they look incredible. It's a pretty long vid, the whole thing I originally watched on google video doesn't appear to be there anymore, but heres the first part on youtube:

The Pharcyde - Drop

Another gem from 'The Work of Director Spike Jonze' is the video for The Pharcyde song Drop. Pure Jonze goodness this, demonstrating just how inventive he is. In the whole video, the fotage is played through in reverse. The boys from the Pharcyde had to learn to lip synch all of the lyrics backwards, so it wold appear they mere singing normally when it was reversed. It must've been real hard work to get that together, then combine in with walking backwards bumping into three other people. Top notch choreography. Got to love this video, it loks amazing and works so well, all coming from what is essentially a pretty simple idea.

AE Rotoscoping Round 2

I had a go at refining the masking technique I used to make my buddy Jake skate along after himself in the style of the DVS echo ads. Havin only about three tripod shots without action in the background, I ended up using one of myself. Pretty self-indulgent I know. But I am great. So, this clip turned out to be a better one to use, and I got my mask a lot tighter, so I managed to fit a lot more copies on, and milked it out with slo-mo. Could definately be tightened up and improved, but it's still progress from my first attempt, and it's getting me more used to after effects. Oh yeah, the quality is LOW.


Echo from Tom Thiel on Vimeo.

How They Get There

Goddam I love Spike Jonze. This short was on his 'The Work of Director...' dvd, and is a great example of taking a simple little idea and making something really nice from it. Providing you've got a bit of your budget set aside for blowing cars up. This film start of seeming like a nice, pretty low budget affair, and then BAM, it just changes on you into some exploding, fireballing flipping car hollywood action moment. Spike always manages to do something a bit different, and this is just a little nugget of what he's good at.

Softlightes - Heart Made of Sound

Lovely stop motion video for the Softlightes song Heart Made of Sound. i've noticed over the past few years that it's been becoming quite popular to have song lyrics appearing in text in music videos in one way or another. This video pushes that to the limit, the whole thing being lyrics from the song appearing in a variety of imaginative stop motion animated typography. I like this video for the sheer ammount of different mediums they've come up with for the typography and how they make them move. Some of them rattle by so fast that it's hard to appreciate what they are, until you've watched the video through a couple of times and maybe paused it in a few key places. A couple of favourites ate the word made of ice cubes melting in the sun, and the plastic army men in a baking tray in the oven that appear to melt (it seems they replaced the figures with little blobs of paint in the same colour to make it look like they were melting). The video flows along nicely with the feel of the song, and draws attention to what the singer's on about (who sounds like he's been listening to a little to much Connor Oberst).


Softlightes - Heart Made Of Sound from Modular People on Vimeo.