Saturday, December 13, 2014

Peter from the jaw-dropping Matte Shot blog dropped by and left the following note:

"I run an extensive blog called Matte Shot on traditional special effects. I thought you and your readers might enjoy my latest article - a somewhat mammoth post on: 'The Magicians of the Miniature' which is pretty self explanatory. Hundreds of photos and detailed info."

Mammoth? That's an understatement! An amazing post with some incredible photos from the Golden Age of miniature work. And as a bonus, a shot of my favorite airplane, the Ford Tri-Motor in a miniature shot from the 1932 John Ford film, Air Mail.



Check it out!

http://nzpetesmatteshot.blogspot.co.nz/2014/12/magicians-of-miniature.html

Thursday, August 07, 2014

Behind the Scenes: Stealth Scud Missle Launchers


 A nice little page with some pics of Scud missile launchers used in the film Stealth. In the sequence, the fighter pilots attack a mountain hideaway where the missile launchers are staged.

Not much info, but as a bonus, the page includes a video of the final footage from the film, as well as raw footage of the explosive results.



Human Dynamo Workshop

Behind the Scenes: Star Wars Prequel Trilogy

While I am not a fan of the Star Wars prequels, there was some darn fine miniature work done on the three films. A thread over at the Jedi Council Forums, while old, has many behind-the-scenes photos that I have not seen before, so I decided to toss it up here. Give it a look - there are also many shots of the sets as well.

The photos in the middle below are of the crowd that watches the pod race on Tattooine. The seated figures are made from colored Q-Tip cotton swabs that would move when agitated with fans, giving a little movement to the scene. There's another link to a site that gives some more info on that  bit. The standing figures are apparently from Star Wars "Micro Machines" toys. I love creative solutions like these!









Jedi Council Forums

Q-Tip Spectators

Saturday, February 01, 2014

Behind the Scenes: The Rocketeer

I'm a sucker for films set in the 1930s-era, and The Rocketeer  is an old favorite. Disney totally blew it by not giving this franchise a chance to succeed and piled on the error by releasing both the DVD and Blu-Ray editions with no special features that show how the filmmakers brought the story to life.

I went looking for anything that might give some insight into this great film and uncovered a few tidbits.

The first is the page of Michael John Cummins, who did effects work on the Nazi zeppelin used in the film. He provided a few behind-the-scenes shots of the model.

Next up is a segment showing the stop-motion work done on the film from YouTube. It appears to be from a TV show (hosted by Christopher Reeve) and it is from the scene in the film featuring a Ford Tri-Motor airplane - one of my favorite planes.

Finally, a 'making of..." show made to promote the film, titled Rocketeer: Excitement is in the Air. While only part of this show is focused on the effects, there are some interesting bits.





Rocketeer Nazi Zeppelin

Rocketeer Stop Motion Props - Behind the Scenes

Rocketeer: Excitement In The Air



Skyborn Model Build

The details of the model build of the independent short Skyborn by Cat Harris.  Some very nice work is included in the trailer embedded on the page.




Skyborn Model Build

Low Budget Filmmaking Miniatures and Forced Perspective

Taking a cue from Steven Spielberg's Close Encounters of the Third Kind, this low-budget director turned a $23 Wal-Mart toy into an excellent foreground miniature that sells the shot.

Reading the details shows how he linked the sound effects used in the scene as an additional means to help make the shot more realistic to the viewer.

In the photos below, you first see how Spielberg used a foreground miniature, then the setup used by Vashi Nedomansky for his movie. Click through to his blog for more details and a link to video of the final shot and behind-the-scenes action.



Vashi Nedomansky

Low Budget Filmmaking Miniatures - Vashi Nedomansky

Blues Brothers Miniature Explosion

 I ran across an interesting tidbit on the excellent "Matte Shot" blog explaining a Chicago miniature explosion using a foam-core mounted blow-up of a matte painting in the foreground and a miniature street scene in the back. This was for the film, "The Blues Brothers."

A behind-the-scenes shot is also there showing the scale for this effect. I've linked the finished scene below as well (and, yes, that is the lovely Carrie Fisher setting off the explosion).



Matte Shot Blog

Finished Scene on YouTube