I find the Bake Off to be extremely
valuable and always regret missing it, even when I can not stand it
anymore and have to walk out to the lobby. (Procedural note: since
I am not a member of the Academy VFX Subsection, I can not vote, so I
am not required to watch the whole thing).
Among the positive attributes are
running into friends and colleagues whom I rarely if ever see at any
other time of the year. One of my favorite people, Dennis Muren, I
*never* see except at the Bakeoff. Last year he said one of the best
things I have heard about the current state of visual effects:
"The problem with special effects is that they are not special anymore."
And there is value in seeing the
current state of the art from many different projects projected in an
excellent screening room one right after the other. Its amusing to
try to guess what the theme of the year will be in advance: space
battles? giant robots? hordes of zombies?
Notice the reflections on the bottom of the martian attack vehicle
One of the annoying downsides of
watching these 10 minute sequences back-to-back (with some gap
between them for the introduction of the next one) is the sheer
volume of noise involved. You see, visual effects are occassionally
used for those gentle and romantic moments, but not all that often,
actually. Usually they are used when the director feels the need to
blow up a city, or drop a spaceship on a bridge, or have one giant
robot sensitively punch another giant robot in the nose, and these
are loud, generally speaking, even in a vacuum in outer space. I
remember once being in the lobby of the Cinerama Dome in Hollywood
(on the telephone of course) while an unnamed very successful effects
film was screening, and noting that I could always tell when there
was a major effects moment because they were usually synchronized
with the subwoofers in the theatre, which from the outside, sounded
like a big truck slamming into a wall at 90 mph. About every 30
seconds or so, another truck would slam into a wall, it was sort of
amusing. But at the Bakeoff, it may be more like every 15 seconds
or less, and it is not muffled. The first 100 or 200 times that
happens it can be entertaining, but after a while it starts to get
old.
The second problem is that some effects
reels play better than others. These reels are created especially
for this screening and must contain only footage actually used in the
movie (e.g. no outtakes, works in progress or explanatory footage).
Depending on the film, and the choices made to show context of the
specific visual effects shot or shots, the reel can be very
entertaining or it can be disjointed. Of course they are all
ultimately disjointed, these are excerpts after all, but even so.
Ideally one will have seen the entire film in context, and for that
purpose screeners (e.g. DVDs) are often sent out.
Too bad they can not show sequences
from non, visual effects films at these things. That would be much
more entertaining.
Anyway, here is the list of films that
were shown:
Marvel's Avengers (to
distinguish it from the other Avengers),
Prometheus,
The Amazing Spiderman,
The Dark Knight Rises,
Skyfall,
John Carter of Mars,
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey,
Life of Pi,
Cloud Atlas, and
Snow White and the Huntsman.
Note: no Hunger Games.
To my amazement, most of these films were projected in stereo (e.g. 3D). I guess the fad, if that is what it is, is not over yet.
To my amazement, most of these films were projected in stereo (e.g. 3D). I guess the fad, if that is what it is, is not over yet.
My spies at the BakeOff liked: Life
of Pi, Dark Night, Avengers, Hobbit and
Snow White. In my spies words, they all made money, had good
efx, showed well at the bakeoff, and each of them either had humor or
strived extra hard to be realistic.
The nominations will be announced on
Jan 10.
Cool and interesting stuff shared here with good information...
ReplyDeleteConnie Jordan-Carmichael | Ubiquity Broadcasting Corporation