I'm not sure if anyone's posted about this yet, but I was watching Jimmy Fallon last night and Jon Favreau was on it, talking about new Jungle Book movie, which he is the director of. The movie is the third live action adaptation of The Jungle Book, and there is only a few live action actors on the film, while the rest are voice actors for the computer generated animals. I imagine that this would be difficult for the actors as well as time consuming for the animators but the animation looks very mature and captivating and as a lover of the Jungle Book, I'll definitely be seeing this movie.
Showing posts with label computer generated image. Show all posts
Showing posts with label computer generated image. Show all posts
Thursday, April 7, 2016
The Jungle Book (2016)
I'm not sure if anyone's posted about this yet, but I was watching Jimmy Fallon last night and Jon Favreau was on it, talking about new Jungle Book movie, which he is the director of. The movie is the third live action adaptation of The Jungle Book, and there is only a few live action actors on the film, while the rest are voice actors for the computer generated animals. I imagine that this would be difficult for the actors as well as time consuming for the animators but the animation looks very mature and captivating and as a lover of the Jungle Book, I'll definitely be seeing this movie.
Labels:
animation
,
computer generated image
,
Disney
,
jimmy fallon
,
jon favreau
,
live action
,
the jungle book
Wednesday, February 19, 2014
Sticking To What I Know... Again...
So clearly I was going to another thing on CGI stuff and rendering. However, the problem with this post is that there isn't enough info online about the rendering side of things. But anyway, here we go!
The new Amazing Spider Man movie that is coming out. Clearly not all of it is live action, especially the scenes of Spider Man flying through the air swinging on his web. This is clearly computer generated. Now, to make something this crisp would obviously take a lot of computing power to create and render to its finished product. Unfortunately, I can't find anywhere how long or how much computing that would take, but I can tell you that it would be a fair amount of both.
Not only will the swinging scenes be needing a lot of the computing power, the fighting sequences will need it as well. These parts of the movie not only have super intense actions happening, a lot of it isn't actually real life and is either being used with green screen or completely animated. For example, the part where Jamie Fox is going after Spider Man and he is sort of "immersed" into the electricity field, that is clearly not real because no human can be absorbed into electricity. Kind of going off of that, the Green Goblin isn't real either because, well, we haven't exactly come up with that technology yet.
So needless to say, without getting too repetitive, a lot of these scenes are going to require a lot of time to render because of the quality of the image and how many frames are being used to capture all of the action. If you want to see the extended trailer, it's just down below.
The new Amazing Spider Man movie that is coming out. Clearly not all of it is live action, especially the scenes of Spider Man flying through the air swinging on his web. This is clearly computer generated. Now, to make something this crisp would obviously take a lot of computing power to create and render to its finished product. Unfortunately, I can't find anywhere how long or how much computing that would take, but I can tell you that it would be a fair amount of both.
Not only will the swinging scenes be needing a lot of the computing power, the fighting sequences will need it as well. These parts of the movie not only have super intense actions happening, a lot of it isn't actually real life and is either being used with green screen or completely animated. For example, the part where Jamie Fox is going after Spider Man and he is sort of "immersed" into the electricity field, that is clearly not real because no human can be absorbed into electricity. Kind of going off of that, the Green Goblin isn't real either because, well, we haven't exactly come up with that technology yet.
So needless to say, without getting too repetitive, a lot of these scenes are going to require a lot of time to render because of the quality of the image and how many frames are being used to capture all of the action. If you want to see the extended trailer, it's just down below.
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