Blue Screen Compositing on Film

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  • čas přidán 26. 08. 2024
  • Learn how blue screen composites worked before the digital era.

Komentáře • 9

  • @TerraRiderAdventures
    @TerraRiderAdventures Před 4 lety +23

    You lost me... This is crazy, respect to everyone shooting and making movies like Star Wars etc... Awesome! Thanks for sharing!

    • @frankwildman5799
      @frankwildman5799 Před 3 lety +3

      Yes im lost too. No wonder they are geniuses and just so innovative. Seems like the newer technology got more simpler

  • @Ricoxemani
    @Ricoxemani Před 3 lety +6

    I was always so confused how they did this on film. This is helpful.

  • @MikeJohnson-yh4lg
    @MikeJohnson-yh4lg Před 3 lety +5

    Jon Erland is a true genius. Could we get videos on the Blue Max front projection bluescreen system and the reverse-bluescreen system he created for FIREFOX (1982)?

  • @hugoverdeguer6891
    @hugoverdeguer6891 Před 2 lety +2

    Jon Erland devised the bluescreen illuminated pylons for Star Wars.. They were as radical as the Dykstraflex

  • @TheRedSatan10
    @TheRedSatan10 Před rokem +2

    I seriously thought they made a film cut out on every frame!!

    • @rileykaiseeker4294
      @rileykaiseeker4294 Před 4 měsíci +1

      That's called an "Articulated Matte", where an artist will literally draw round the edge of the object they want removed and then paint the inside black, creating a 'Background matte'. Then they can make a negative of that image to create the 'Cover Matte'. (And yes, they will do it for every single frame!)
      The process shown in this video is called a "Travelling matte", which essentially generates an 'Articulated Matte' automatically through the use of blue screen and film processing. It's amazing what they used to do before computers.

    • @TheRedSatan10
      @TheRedSatan10 Před 4 měsíci

      @@rileykaiseeker4294 Frame by frame manually wow, that's something intricate I get tired just thinking about it.

    • @Wolfinger1935
      @Wolfinger1935 Před měsícem +2

      Sometimes we still do that, although it is much more streamlined and precise when you do it digitally in, say, After Effects or Nuke. It's also called rotoscoping. It is still a tedious frame by frame process, but the tools allow for much cleaner masking with soft edges for hair and fur.
      Old school chemical/film blue screen got better in the seventies (Star Wars, 1941) but some of the earlier attempts don't hold up so well by today's standards.