WHAT DOES "PERFORMANCE CAPTURE" REALLY MEAN TO THE FUTURE OF MOVIES?
Blog, Movies
Posted on Jan 13 2012 by Greg
There sure has been a lot written about motion capture, or as many actors prefer to call it, "performance capture." Much of the discussion and debate centers around whether it is true animation or not. Clearly animators are key to the process, but the films such as
The Polar Express,
A Christmas Carol and, most recently and most pointedly,
The Adventures of Tintin really beg the question, "Why aren't they simply live action films with augmented CG animated effects?"
Some felt
The Polar Express was a little creepy, particularly because the eyes didn't seem human. This is a challenge in much CG human animation, but it didn't bother me in
Polar Express because the entire movie had a dreamlike, eerie quality that fit the process. With
Christmas Carol, however, the actors were obscured by their no-cap faces, almost like excessive latex makeup. I would have preferred to see the excellent actors instead of having them hidden under a second skin.
But having seen
The Adventures of Tintin, the mo-cap process has certainly come a great deal farther -- to the point where the viewer can forget it's not live action at all. Which brings me back to the question again -- why isn't it just live action?
Is the ability to stylize a reason? Certainly. Some characters have exaggerated features and physical countenances that would be tricky -- but not impossible -- in live action (as so much was contorted in Burton's
Alice in Wonderland, which combined both techniques). But maybe the goal on the horizon is bigger than the realization of a filmmaker's vision -- maybe it's economics, politics and practicality.
Tintin, for all intents and purposes, took the viewer to exotic locations, through spectacular sets, over the ocean and among a cast of thousands. All pretty much by using actors with dots on their faces on green screens and environments created within sophisticated machinery.
Other than the mo-cap facilities, there was no need to rent soundstages, camera equipment, Chapman cranes, helicopters, cars, boats, planes, or anything you see on screen. It also means there was no need for a camera crew, lighting equipment, lighting technicians, craft services, transportation, hotel accommodations, dinners at restaurants, wardrobe people, makeup artists, permits from cities and countries for filming, police and security, stunt people, extras -- and all the insurance, unions and other ancillary issues that are part of making even the simplest Hollywood movie, much less a superspectacular, globetrotting adventure.
Remember when
Fred Astaire was electronically added to a vacuum cleaner commercial? Some folks were worried that this could mean the misuse of classic actors in roles they never agreed to. It didn't become as much of a problem as predicted. But what happens if, as so much digital technology does, motion capture becomes easier and cheaper? People can create a lot of animation on their home computers that was unthinkable not long ago.
What if mo-cap is used as a replacement for a live action movie -- say a
Pirates of the Caribbean sequel?
Johnny Depp can play Jack Sparrow for the rest of is life and never age on screen. That does not seem much of a stretch. But how about a movie that isn't a stylized costume romp -- a comedy like Bridesmaids or a drama like
The Descendants? Sure, mo-cap can't substitute for
George Clooney...now.
I'm not doomsaying here. It's not some Orwellian plot. It's just business. Making movies without locations, sets, costumes -- and actors. After all, once a CG character's performance is saved from one film, it can be used in another. So why not do the same with episodic TV and movies?
Just wondering.
NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTION - FORGIVE MELINDA DILLON'S "CHRISTMAS STORY" HAIR
Blog, Movies
Posted on Jan 02 2012 by Greg
We're watching
A Christmas Story today -- one of those movies that, like
It's a Wonderful Life and
Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, has been embraced as uberclassics even though they met with lukewarm receptions during their initial release.
Like millions of folks today, we love the movie. But I always get a little distracted by the anachronistic 1980's hairstyle adorning the lovely and talented
Melinda Dillon as Raphie's mom.
It's more at home for this '80s icon...
Or this '80s icon from TV's
Lou Grant...
Director
Bob Clark and his team clearly went out of their way to capture the 1940's American breadbasket world of essayist
Jean Shepherd. My dad also loved the movie, since he was only a little older than Ralphie during this era.
But according to Clark DVD commentary (thank you), Ms. Dillon insisted on avoiding the period hairstyle more resembling that of teacher Miss Shields (luminous Canadian actress
Tedde Moore, who was the best reason to watch
Mistletoe Over Manhattan on the Hallmark Channel).
By the way, Ralphie's
daydream about Miss Shield's delirious reception of his essay is one of my favorite
Christmas Story sequences, since I sometimes have similar expectations when turning in my writing and also sometimes get the same real-life results.
Melinda Dillon turns in an superb performance, adding a quirky dimension to her very warm and loving performance. Her top billing belies her 1983, star status in such hits as
Close Encounters of the Third Kind. So Clark didn't insist on the hair-do. And now,
A Christmas Story is probably the film Ms. Dillon is most known for, since it is run unceasingly and many have it memorized.
So maybe Ms. Dillon herself wishes in hindsight that she was more sartorially flexible. Maybe she does not. She's probably put in behind her, as I should in the coming year.
But I can't help wondering if fans still recognize her and say, "I loved you in
A Christmas Story! But what was the deal with your '80s hair?"
DISNEY AND STAGE LEGEND TOMMY STEELE IS CELEBRATED
Blog, News and Events, People
Posted on Dec 28 2011 by Greg

This week on BBC Radio, you can stream a free one-hour special honoring the legendary entertainer
Tommy Steele, who among many other triumphs starred in the London, Broadway (with
John Cleese) and movie versions of
Half a Sixpence;
Walt Disney's last film,
The Happiest Millionaire, and
Francis Ford Coppola's only musical,
Finian's Rainbow with
Fred Astaire and
Petula Clark.
You can listen to the program here for the next five days.
Tommy Steele (far right) with Gladys Cooper, Lesley Ann Warren, Fred MacMurray, Geraldine Page, John Davidson and Walt Disney on the set of The Happiest Millionaire.
Also this week on BBC Radio:
The Night the Animals Talked (2 days left to listen)
Jack and the Genetically Modified Beanstalk (2 days left to listen)
The White Christmas StoryMartin Sheen narrates a one-hour documentary about Irving Berlin's beloved song (2 days left to listen).
The Pied Piper of Hamelin (4 days left to listen)
The Beatles' Christmas (5 days left to listen)
Fings Ain't Wot They Used T'Be: The Lionel Bart StoryFive-part bio of the composer/lyricist of "Oliver!"
Christopher Lee's Fireside TalesFive 15-minute stories.
Aesop's FablesAdapted from the stage production by
Michael Morpurgo (
War Horse) (7 days left to listen).
Yeti's FingerWhat does Jimmy Stewart have to do with the abominable snowman?
The Adventures of Tintin (2 episodes left)
PLEASE NOTE: Some BBC Radio programming contains material intended for mature audiences.
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL RADIO PANEL ON "TV CONFIDENTIAL"
Blog, News and Events
Posted on Dec 23 2011 by Greg
The weekly radio show about television, past and present, TV Confidential, is devoting its second hour this week to
TV specials and holiday episodes of TV shows.
I'll be on the panel with author Joanna Wilson, actors Tony Figueroa and Donna Allen Figueroa and host Ed Robertson. The show plays on various stations throughout the country this week and will land in the podcast next Wednesday.
Here is the broadcast schedule:
WROM Radio
Sunday 12/25
8pm ET, 5pm PT
Share-a-Vision Radio
KSAV.org
Friday 12/23
7pm ET, 4pm PT
10pm ET, 7pm PT
The Coyote KWTY-FM
Ridgecrest, Calif.
Sunday 12/25
10pm PT
Monday 12/27
1am ET
InternetVoicesRadio.com
Tuesday 12/27
11:05pm ET, 8:05pm PTThe podcast of this episode will appear on Wednesday 12/28 and can be subscribed to at itunes or by
clicking here.
"ROCKETEER ROLL CALL, COUNT OFF NOW!"
Blog, Movies
Posted on Dec 21 2011 by Greg
There hasn't been a whole lot of fanfare, but for fans of
Dave Stevens' graphic novels and
Joe Johnston's 1991 Disney big-screen spectacular, the appearance of
The Rocketeer on Blu-ray is somewhat of an event.
On the package is a sticker proclaiming, "From the director of
Captain America." Clearly this release is piggybacking on the successful 2011 film -- and the two films seem, at least to me, inextricably linked by their setting and their director.
But why did
The Rocketeer run out of propellant while
Captain America blasted the box office? The most obvious reason is that the Marvel character has had more mainstream visibility, though the '60s cartoon and '70s live-action series incarnations of
Captain America were not exactly stellar. It's also a tricky matter to set a film in WWII, or during the '40s and make it resound with younger audiences.
Just because
The Rocketeer wasn't a smash, it isn't fair to dismiss it as some did back in the '90s. Actually, it's quite a fine film, with a likable cast led by
Billy Campbell, Jennifer Connelly and
Alan Arkin, as well as a scene-chewing tour-de-force performance by
Timothy Dalton -- clearly having a grand old time playing a thorough rotter.
The Rocketeer has very good effects for its time, superb art direction and photography, and one of the best background scores of the last several decades. I highly recommend the
soundtrack album of
James Horner's sweeping score. You can also hear this music as the
Epcot fountains dance regularly, as well as in countless movie trailers for other releases.
Hopes were just a little too high for
The Rocketeer. Disney was looking for a huge franchise, so a well-done, nicely received film wouldn't cut it. Even though Johnston only mentions
The Rocketeer once briefly in his
Captain America commentary (alas, he did not do one for
The Rocketeer Blu-ray -- there are no extras to speak of), clearly the director learned and developed over the years.
Perhaps the main issue between the two films is tone.
The Rocketeer is highly stylized and inconsistently campy with a hero who's a little too cocky for his own good, while
Captain America is a hybrid between retro, comic book and contemporary action movie style, with a much more sympathetic hero.
But if you haven't seen
The Rocketeer in Blu-ray, prepare for a treat. The spot-on animated sequence, the lavish nightclub scene, and even the sarcophagus-like dwelling of the villain are as vivid as can be. You just have to approach
The Rocketeer as a jaunty romp and enjoy the ride.
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