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Making Movies CS 445/645 Fall 2002. TAs Needed n Undergrads needed to TA and grade for CS courses –TA labs for CS101, CS201, CS216, etc. –Office hours,

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Presentation on theme: "Making Movies CS 445/645 Fall 2002. TAs Needed n Undergrads needed to TA and grade for CS courses –TA labs for CS101, CS201, CS216, etc. –Office hours,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Making Movies CS 445/645 Fall 2002

2 TAs Needed n Undergrads needed to TA and grade for CS courses –TA labs for CS101, CS201, CS216, etc. –Office hours, grading for many undergrad courses n To apply, fill out form at: http://www.cs.virginia.edu/jobs/ n Get to know CS professors (get a reference) n Good for your resume n Undergrads play an important role in delivering high quality CS courses at UVa!

3 Final Exam n Thursday, December 12 th at 7:00 n Olsson 011

4 Assignment 4 n Trackball in Angel text is a little difficult to implement so it works for extreme rotations n I tried to protect you from quaternions, but… –http://isg.cs.tcd.ie/scollins/OpenGL/ n look for trackball.c and dinospin.c

5 Dinospin n Very easy example of how you can use trackball method and quaternions to accomplish intuitive user interface n Feel free to cut and paste this code to suit your needs

6 Making Movies n Concept n Storyboarding n Sound n Character Development n Layout and look n Effects n Animation n Lighting

7 Concept n Pixar’s Lasseter is a genius – “Nothing gets in the way of the story”

8 Storyboarding n Explicitly define –Scenes –Camera shots –Special effects –Lighting –Scale n Used as guide by animators

9 Sound n Voice recording of talent completed before animation begins n Animations must match the voice over n A puppeteer once told me that the voice makes or breaks a character

10 Character Development n 300 Drawings

11 Character Development n 40 Sculptures

12 Character Development n Computer Models

13 Layout and Look n Build scenery n Match colors

14 Matchmoving n CG camera must exactly match the real camera –Position –Rotation –Focal length –Aperature n Easy when camera is instrumented n Hard to place CG on moving objects on film

15 Matchmoving

16 Matchmoving n Square patterns in live action made it easier to track – furniture, wall paper n 2D – 3D conversion in Maya

17 Water

18 Particle Sim and Indentation

19 Tools

20 Compositing

21 Compositing n Lighting

22 Facial Animation

23

24 Fur

25 Cloth

26 Buttons and Creases

27 Texture

28 Companies n Pixar n Disney n Sony Imageworks n Industrial Light and Magic (ILM) n Rhythm and Hues n Pacific Data Images (PDI) n Dreamworks SKG n Tippett Studios n Angel Studios n Blue Sky n Robert Abel and Associates n Giant Studios

29 Toy Story (1995) n 77 minutes long; 110,064 frames n 800,000 machine hours of rendering n 1 terabyte of disk space n 3.5 minutes of animation produced each week (maximum) n Frame render times: 45 min – 20 hours n 110 Suns operating 24-7 for rendering –300 CPU’s

30 Toy Story n Texture maps on Buzz: 189 –(450 to show scuffs and dirt) n Number of animation ‘knobs’ –Buzz – 700 –Woody – 712 n Face – 212 n Mouth – 58 –Sid’s Backpack - 128

31 Toy Story n Number of leaves on trees – 1.2 mil n Number of shaders – 1300 n Number of storyboards – 25,000

32 Toy Story 2 n 80 minutes long, 122,699 frames n 1400 processor renderfarm n Render time of 10 min to 3 days n Direct to video film

33 Toy Story 2 n Software tools –Alias|Wavefront –Amazon Paint –RenderMan

34 Newman! n Subdivision-surfaces n Polygonal hair (head) –Texture mapped on arms n Sculpted clothes n Complex shaders

35 Devil’s in the Details n Render in color n Convert to NTSC B/W n Add film effects –Jitter –Negative scratches –Hair –Static

36 Images

37 Images

38 Images

39 Stuart Little n 500 shots with digital character n 6 main challenges –Lip sync –Match-move (CG to live-action) –Fur –Clothes –Animation tools –Rendering, lighting, compositing

40 Stuart Little n 100+ people worked on CG –32 color/lighting/composite artists –12 technical assistants –30 animators –40 artists –12 R&D

41 Shooting Film For CG n Actors practice with maquettes n Maquettes replaced with laser dots –lasers on when camera shutter is closed n After each take, three extra shots –chrome ball for environment map for Stuart’s eyes –white and gray balls for lighting info

42 Match-moving n Film scanned n Camera tracking data retrieved n 3D Equalizer + Alias Maya to prepare (register) the digital camera n Once shot is prepared, 2D images rendered and composited with live action

43

44 Final Fantasy http://www.arstechnica.com/wankerdesk/01q3/ff-interview/ff-interview-2.html

45 Final Fantasy n Main characters > 300,000 polys n 1336 shots n 24,606 layers n 3,000,000 renders (if only rendered once) –typically 5 render revisions –render time per frame = 90 min n Most layers per shot 500 n 934,162 days of render time on one CPU –they used 1200 CPUs = 778 days of rendering

46 Final Fantasy n Renderman (Pixar) used for rendering –direct illumination –many hacks to fake global illumination n Maya used for modeling n Hair –Modeled is splines –Lighting and rendering complicated as well

47 Making Movies n Production Team n Production Line n Special Effects

48 Production Team n Directors n Modelers n Lighting n Character Animators n Technical Directors n Render Wranglers n Tools Developers n Shader Writers n Effects Animators n Looks Team n Security Officer n Janitor n Lackey


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