Cool Pic
- Graham Kennedy
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Cool Pic
The "Aint it Cool News" site has been running a series of pictures taken on the sets of iconic movies and TV shows. I thought folks here might like to see todays :
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Re: Cool Pic
I never thought of it before, but I'd say that that set pic looks just about exactly how I'd have imagined it.
Except for the can light sitting on the floor. Don't they get a bit hot to leave sitting on a tarpaulin?
Except for the can light sitting on the floor. Don't they get a bit hot to leave sitting on a tarpaulin?
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Re: Cool Pic
So basically the modell of the original Enterprise was about as big as other Enterprise models. What would interest me is why, after producing a rather gorgeous model, they didn't really do much with it. What I mean is that they didn't really make much with camera movement to suggest the ship is actually maneuvering and I cannot think of a good reason why this is so. Where cameras that big that it was impractical?
Now I get that money is a factor so of course phasers and photons are expensive and not as good looking as later on, but the ship itself and the studio is probably not that different a setup than later for Wrath of Khan I would imagine..... .
Now I get that money is a factor so of course phasers and photons are expensive and not as good looking as later on, but the ship itself and the studio is probably not that different a setup than later for Wrath of Khan I would imagine..... .
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Re: Cool Pic
Even for camera movement, remember that there was less automation and zero computer control. Also, maybe more importantly, there was really no precedent or example of how to do spaceships.
I can't stand nothing dull
I got the high gloss luster
I'll massacre your ass as fast
as Bull offed Custer
I got the high gloss luster
I'll massacre your ass as fast
as Bull offed Custer
Re: Cool Pic
So awesome. It would be a dream to own that.
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- Graham Kennedy
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Re: Cool Pic
The model itself looks too big to move, and the camera couldn't move except to slide down the tracks on the floor. So they were pretty much limited to pushing a static camera past a static model. Even that was expensive, hence the extensive use of stock shots.
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Re: Cool Pic
Yeah. There were simple technical and mechanical limitations to how to film the E-nil. And damn that's a gorgeous pic. Thanks, Graham!
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Re: Cool Pic
On the other hand the refit Enil for the first three movies was easily as big and heavy. Now I am aware that there obviously were technological limitation, I was just interested in what they actually were, since it seems to me that the technology for TOS and TMP and TWAK for example did not change very much. (Sure, they had computers in the 80s but those where not used for filming the models afaik)The model itself looks too big to move, and the camera couldn't move except to slide down the tracks on the floor. So they were pretty much limited to pushing a static camera past a static model. Even that was expensive, hence the extensive use of stock shots.
So was the only limitation really just that cameras where too big and unwieldy so that you couldn't simulate a moving ship with them or was it more that they just hadn't worked out how to film it properly?
Also, while I am aware that they used stock shots as cost saving measure, on a personal note I find it rather sad that they would go to lengths to produce such a gorgeous expensive model and then do only very little with it. Shame, really. Now I don't know what the prize of the model was back then but it sure would be interested how much it would be today.
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Re: Cool Pic
#1 - there was a decade between TOS and TMP. #2 - TMP had a movie budget; TOS had no budget.
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Re: Cool Pic
TMP is still one of the most costly trek's ever I believe. TOS had a puny budget by comparison.
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Re: Cool Pic
Sure sure, it is just that it seems to me - and I might be completely wrong since I admittedly have not much clue about the movie business - that first, in this decade the technology didn't change that much and secondly that the expensive part of the equation is the production of the models.Mikey wrote:#1 - there was a decade between TOS and TMP. #2 - TMP had a movie budget; TOS had no budget.
Once you have the model, the studio, the cameras, the setup was it really that much more costly to shoot 2 hours of footage instead of twenty minutes (just for instance, no idea how long all the stockfootage is, of course)?
So forgive my ignorance, it is just from my todays point of view - that it doesn't make much difference (if you already went to the length of constructing the model etc.) to shoot the damn thing for as long and from as many positions as possible. It seems like buying a ferrari for a million dollar and than only driving him only one mile because you want to save fuel....... .
(Maybe it is just so expensive because of strange union rules? I heard a thing or two, or were the tapes so expensive back then, I really have no idea)
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Re: Cool Pic
I'm no expert on sfx, historical or otherwise, but here goes.
It certainly did. Not the mechanical side of things, but the computerisation.Atekimogus wrote:in this decade the technology didn't change that much
Very. So expensive that the BBC routinely wiped old tapes and reused them to save money. The policy didn't change until around 1970 - that's why so many of the early Doctor Who serials are missing.were the tapes so expensive back then
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Re: Cool Pic
To clarify, I meant the decade between 69 and 79. I really don't know if or how they used much computer-tech for TMP to be honest.Captain Seafort wrote:I'm no expert on sfx, historical or otherwise, but here goes.
It certainly did. Not the mechanical side of things, but the computerisation.Atekimogus wrote:in this decade the technology didn't change that much
Interesting, didn't know that. Alas the drawbacks of growing up in the digital age:)Captain Seafort wrote:Very. So expensive that the BBC routinely wiped old tapes and reused them to save money. The policy didn't change until around 1970 - that's why so many of the early Doctor Who serials are missing.
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Re: Cool Pic
Having seen a lot of the extras on TNG DVDs....
Take a flyby by the Ent-D compared to the Ent-nil.
For the E nil, a guy pushes the camera past the model and films it. Then they replace the blue background with a shot of space using colour substitution.
In the Ent D, they might have the ship making a nice lovely curve through space as it orbits some planet or whatever. To do that, they keep the model still and pan the camera past on rails.
But that's only part of it. You do that for the model. But now you need all those little window lights. You black out the scene and do the same pan past, this time with the model's inside lit up so the window lights show up.
Now you do it again, with nothing but the nacelles lit up.
Now you do it again, with nothing but the deflector dish lit up.
Now you composit all those images on top of one another, and put it on top of a background image, and that's how you get what you see on screen.
And to do this, the camera has to move and pan past the model in EXACTLY the same way every time. That means that rather than have some guy simply shove it past, you have to have a computer attached to the motors on the rail and on the tilt and pan of the camera, so that it can run that camera down those rails tilting and panning it precisely the same, every time.
If there's another ship in this image and it's moving independently of the E-D - a shuttle, say - then you have to repeat the entire process all over again for that ship. And indeed for every and any moving object in the image. In fact it was only with the invention of computer controled movement that it became possible to have things like spaceships moving independently of one another in FX shots. 2001 is a truly beautiful rendition of Things In Space but not once do you see any two ships move relative to one another, because it wasn't until a couple of years later that Lucas invented the technique so he could have space dogfighting in Star Wars.
As you can imagine, this is an insanely time consuming and expensive effort. One single 10 second shot of the E-D flying past probably takes a whole crew several days and tens of thousands of dollars to film.
Of course, nowdays you do it all in a computer and the expense is in hiring many animators and buying computer rendering time or machines. But that has it's own costs. I remember an episode of Stargate where O'Neill walked through the gate. On a whim, the actor turned and tapped the event horizon with his finger before walking on and doing the rest of the scene. The following week he got an irate call from the FX department; "We had to re-render the iris footage to add ripples around your finger. It took two days and fifteen thousand dollars of rendering time! Please don't ever do that again!"
Take a flyby by the Ent-D compared to the Ent-nil.
For the E nil, a guy pushes the camera past the model and films it. Then they replace the blue background with a shot of space using colour substitution.
In the Ent D, they might have the ship making a nice lovely curve through space as it orbits some planet or whatever. To do that, they keep the model still and pan the camera past on rails.
But that's only part of it. You do that for the model. But now you need all those little window lights. You black out the scene and do the same pan past, this time with the model's inside lit up so the window lights show up.
Now you do it again, with nothing but the nacelles lit up.
Now you do it again, with nothing but the deflector dish lit up.
Now you composit all those images on top of one another, and put it on top of a background image, and that's how you get what you see on screen.
And to do this, the camera has to move and pan past the model in EXACTLY the same way every time. That means that rather than have some guy simply shove it past, you have to have a computer attached to the motors on the rail and on the tilt and pan of the camera, so that it can run that camera down those rails tilting and panning it precisely the same, every time.
If there's another ship in this image and it's moving independently of the E-D - a shuttle, say - then you have to repeat the entire process all over again for that ship. And indeed for every and any moving object in the image. In fact it was only with the invention of computer controled movement that it became possible to have things like spaceships moving independently of one another in FX shots. 2001 is a truly beautiful rendition of Things In Space but not once do you see any two ships move relative to one another, because it wasn't until a couple of years later that Lucas invented the technique so he could have space dogfighting in Star Wars.
As you can imagine, this is an insanely time consuming and expensive effort. One single 10 second shot of the E-D flying past probably takes a whole crew several days and tens of thousands of dollars to film.
Of course, nowdays you do it all in a computer and the expense is in hiring many animators and buying computer rendering time or machines. But that has it's own costs. I remember an episode of Stargate where O'Neill walked through the gate. On a whim, the actor turned and tapped the event horizon with his finger before walking on and doing the rest of the scene. The following week he got an irate call from the FX department; "We had to re-render the iris footage to add ripples around your finger. It took two days and fifteen thousand dollars of rendering time! Please don't ever do that again!"
Give a man a fire, and you keep him warm for a day. SET a man on fire, and you will keep him warm for the rest of his life...