Thursday, 23 January 2014

Small screen, big effects

TVB Europe

The gap in quality between TV and film VFX has narrowed and the technological resources are interchangeable, yet budgets remain worlds apart. Adrian Pennington reports on the UK's burgeoning TV VFX sector.

http://legacy.tvbeurope.com/main-content/full/small-screen-big-effects/gg83#.VL7LzKDpBG5

As a mark of how far movie-style VFX for TV have come, consider that the averageDoctor Who episode in the last series contained up to 100 shots - the same amount produced by Mill Film for its Oscar-winning work on Gladiator in 2000. 

“In 2004 when the BBC tendered Who's visual effects work there was virtually no reference material available,” recalls Will Cohen (pictured), CEO at Milk Visual Effects. “The only VFX for TV were graphics sequences in documentaries or reconstructions in drama docs.”

A decade ago VFX for TV formed a cottage industry in relation to feature film fx, but now TV commissioners can base entire shows around CGI characters and environments. Doctor Who, along with HBO’s sprawling fantasy series,Game of Thrones, has helped spawn a new TV genre of sci-fi/fantasy in which CGI is embedded in the storytelling.  BlueBolt were the lead vendor on the first season of GoT, completing around 300 shots with photo-real CG environments and CG dragons. 

The ambition with TV
The international success of these shows have helped ignite a wider creative renaissance in TV drama. A-list directors like Steven Soderburgh, Ridley Scott and David Fincher find the freedom to tell expansive stories outside the confines of Hollywood, while cable and internet giants like HBO, Showtime, Starz and Netflix – which has just signed four series from Disney's Marvel - have the appetite and deep pockets for subscriber-netting episodics.

The UK's VFX for TV industry remains tiny in comparison to the US which built a sizeable one on the back of shows like Smallville, but growth is promising in light of the recently introduced TV tax regime which gives producers a greater incentive to locate work here.

Dneg, a beneficiary of Starz, made the decision to shoot the 16-hour sci-fi series Outlander in Glasgow, bagging the series' potential 2000 VFX shots. The facility also hopes to entice more work currently shot and posted in the US, to its London or Singapore studios.

“We are interested in shows that shoot in the States but put their VFX into the UK,” says Jonathan Privett, who heads Dneg TV. “That would be a real development for the sector.” The budget differentials remain vast. Privett estimates that for a major US TV series the VFX budget could be $2-3 million spread over 16 hours, whereas for a tentpole 90 minute feature the figure is more like $50-100m.

On the other hand, TV VFX work tends to be more predictable than the fickle nature of film projects which require massive scaling up one day and possible famine the next. The collapse of LA's VFX stalwart Rhythm & Hues on completion of Life of Pi is testimony to that.

According to Cohen, a film VFX house may ramp up its staff and pipelines to create hundreds of shots only to have the show's editorial slash its requirements. In TV though, the facility faces multiple but regular transmission deadlines ensuring a core spine of work to sustain the business.

“The ambition with TV will always match that of a feature but the challenges are time and budget,” says Cohen, who formed Milk last April with fellow members of The Mill's defunct TV division. “The time between series deadlines are very condensed and you have to stick with what you come up with first time. On film, you might have the luxury of creating a hundred iterations of an object. In contrast, on TV you have to go with version seven.” 

This demands an economy of storytelling he says, where a facility must find a way to communicate multiple plot points in short sequences. “TV is a slightly more forgiving medium,” he adds. “There is lots of stuff you can get away with on a TV screen that you couldn't if the shot were blown up to a 90ft screen. That is a huge difference.”

Privett, who left Rushes with VFX producer Louise Hussey to help set up Dneg TV also in April, agrees: “If you're doing a green screen shot for example, then the gold standard is 100% perfection but if a tiny bit of detail is lost somewhere then on TV you probably wouldn't worry about it, whereas on film you would go the extra mile.  That is the compromise you make when your budget is a hundredth of what it would be for a feature.”

Adds Hussey, “In TV, you don't have six months of creatures work, you might have four weeks. Instead of several months of heavy effects design, you might only have time for a quick, simple effect.”

A collaborative approach
Artists, however, enjoy a more direct relationship with the lead creatives on a TV job. Instead of dealing with layers of VFX supervisors and decision by committee, by working hands on with the TV director, facilities can obtain approvals faster and the whole experience feels more collaborative. “There's not as much prep time, not as much time to complete the shot and you have to think about your approaches much more carefully,” says VFX supervisor Hayden Jones. “Not only do you need to create the effect to deadline but when a client wants an alteration you need to make those changes quickly.” 

Since 2000, the quality gap between TV and feature film effects has shortened and the techniques and technology pipelines to produce them have become virtually indistinguishable. “We needed to develop tools to create 30 creatures a year for Primeval [at The Mill] in order to hit the TV schedule which meant devising really light rigs, but that technology and experience is transposable back to features,” says Cohen. “Deconstruction tools for TV are another element that easily crosses over.” 

Dneg piggybacks its TV arm on the pipeline and rigs of its mammoth feature film business and found its TV wing useful in establishing a relationship with major directors. Ridley Scott, for example, placed the VFX for Exodus at Dneg after the facility worked on the pilot for Scott's TV project for Sony Television,The Vatican. Other projects include the BBC’s By Any Means and Death in Paradise.

“For TV, we run a slightly stripped down version of the pipelines but it's not really too disimilar,” explains Privett. “The fact that we have a fantastic pipeline in place will help us to do TV VFX faster and better than our competitors.”

Dneg, which employs 900 people in Fitzrovia, 50 on TV and the rest on features including Jupiter AscendingGodzilla, Wally Pfister's Transcendenceand Alex Garland's Ex Machina, has the luxury of exchanging artists between TV and film jobs.

“If we need an effects artist for a week we can pull one away from features,” says Hussey. “We have the ability to cherry pick very specific sets of skills, which is harder in a boutique company because you'd have to go and hire that person from the market and they might already be working for companies like us.”

Doctor Who’s high-profile 50th
Milk has completed shots for the third series of Sherlock; creature animation for David Attenborough’s Natural History Museum Alive in 4K 3D for Sky Atlantic; and is in pre-production on BBC/Space's Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell. It is also working on the featureHercules. The facility is synonymous though withDoctor Who, having worked on all seven series since 2004 and just landed series eight with a possible two more to follow. 

The 129 shots in 3D for the 75-minute special Doctor Who 50th anniversary episode: The Day of the Doctor was the team's first chance to stereo treat a TV drama. “Because we are dealing with four times the amount of data, the time spent compositing and rendering is longer and the cost was probably double the normal spend,” explains Cohen. “We updated CG models or created new assets of the Tardis, Daleks and spacecraft and matte-painted plates were reworked with a stereo depth.” 

Milk's creations included a CG fly-through of the besieged Gallifreyan city Arcadia and a framed painting that appears to be a two dimensional object but which, when the camera moves around it, is revealed to be a full 3D environment with depth. Milk also created flying fighter machines Dalek Pods, following initial design by the BBC's art department. Milk refined and animated the model in Maya, textured in Mari and rendered it with Arnold before marrying it in the CG environment, itself a mix of traditional matte painting and 3D geometry.

“A lot of the tricks you can get away with in 2D you can no longer do in 3D,” says Cohen. “Instead of 2D matte painting you are exploring the geometry of the scene and lighting it in 3D which is more complicated, technically demanding and more time consuming in terms of set up and rendering, and it requires more crew.”

“You rescale elements in 2D so you can tell how large an object is. In 3D, though, extreme rescaling doesn't work so that is one example of a technique that is removed from your box of tricks. 2D elements will often not work in stereo as they have no depth.” 

Murray Barber, VFX supervisor, was tasked with developing a tornado effect which could be controlled easily shot to shot. “The hardest thing to create is something that's not been seen before,” he says. “It's a process of trial and error until we come up with a look that the director likes and it fits into the storyboard.”

Tuesday, 21 January 2014

Smart glass future is waveguide – Vuzix

TVB Europe

Vuzix says it is will launch the world’s first consumer grade smart glasses incorporating waveguide technology within a year.

http://www.tvbeurope.com/smart-glass-future-is-waveguide-vuzix-2/

Technicolor and Dolby build enhanced UHD pipelines

TVB Europe

Richer pixels rather than more pixels are seen by some as key to a compelling consumer Ultra HD proposition with several companies working to deliver enhanced Ultra HD from capture to screen

http://legacy.tvbeurope.com/main-content/full/technicolor-and-dolby-build-enhanced-uhd-pipelines/gg46

Breakthrough year for autostereo on Stream

TVB Europe

Bubbling under the surface of the Ultra HD noise at CES were autostereo technologies, with the most aggressive among those, that of Stream TV Networks.

http://www.tvbeurope.com/breakthrough-year-for-autostereo-on-stream-2/

Friday, 10 January 2014

CES 2014: manufacturers gearing up for 4K products, supporting workflows

Sports Video Group

4K over WiFi and budget-friendly 4K cameras are just two of the tantalising trends in evidence at this year’s International CES – the many and varied highlights of which have been filleted for SVG Europe. 

http://svgeurope.org/blog/headlines/ces-2014-manufacturers-gearing-up-for-4k-products-supporting-workflows/

Thursday, 9 January 2014

CES 2014: Netflix Says Consumers Unclear on UHD Benefits

Streaming Media

A panel at CES I moderated: Unless the industry decides on greater UHD improvements and educates buyers, UHD TV will be reduced to a resolution number

http://www.streamingmedia.com/Articles/ReadArticle.aspx?ArticleID=94161

CES 2014: Wearable cameras, connected everything

Televisual
A number of interesting cameras debuted at CES. Among them: Liquid Image showed off a $200 wearable mini-cam (the Ego LS, pictured) capable of streaming video live over the 4G LTE network. It's light enough to be worn on the body for action sports or reportage.
http://www.televisual.com/blog-detail/CES-2014-wearable-cameras-connected-everything_bid-560.html

Tuesday, 7 January 2014

CES2014 : Marissa Mayer Announces Sweeping Yahoo! Revamp



StreamingMedia

The internet giant introduces a revised suite of ad tools, declares 2014 year of video, and buys contextual search specialist Aviate

CES 2014: Sony to Launch Live and VOD Cloud TV Service



StreamingMedia

Focus will be on recommendation, personalization and "watch and resume" functionality across devices including tablets, phones, and of course PlayStation and PS4.


http://www.streamingmedia.com/Articles/News/Online-Video-News/CES-2014-Sony-to-Launch-Live-and-VOD-Cloud-TV-Service-94095.aspx

CES 2014 Roundup: Sony, Panasonic, Sharp, and an Answer to the 4K Bandwidth Question



StreamingMedia

At Monday's Sony press conference, Netflix CEO Reed Hastings finally addressed the issue of 4K bandwidth, saying 15Mbps would be required for 4K encoded in HEVC

CES: 'Breaking Bad's' Vince Gilligan and Sony Pictures' Michael Lynton Talk Content's Future


THR

At its keynote, Sony announces a new cloud-based TV service and a streaming option for Playstation gamers to play PS4 games on their smartphones.

Monday, 6 January 2014

CES 2014: Ultra HD/4K Rollout Slower Than Expected



StreamingMedia

At the CES curtain raiser, the Consumer Electronics Association heralded the age of mass customization and an explosion in wearable computing, while sounding a cautionary note about Ultra HD/4K adoption

http://www.streamingmedia.com/Articles/Editorial/Featured-Articles/CES-2014-Ultra-HD-4K-Rollout-Slower-Than-Expected-94045.aspx

CES 2014: Samsung Announces 4K Streaming with M-GO, Amazon



StreamingMedia

Latest range of Ultra HD TVs from Samsung—from 55 inches to 110 inches—will include access to M-GO and Amazon Instant Video, with future partnerships planned with Comcast and DirecTV

CES 2014: Dolby Vision Strives to Make Ultra-bright Displays the Future of 4K



Streaming Media

Netflix, Amazon Instant Video, Microsoft Xbox Video, and Vudu have already signed on, as has Sharp and Vizio. But the drastic image improvement brings with it a 20% data overhead, and may be incompatible with current 4K displays.

Watch Michael Bay Walk Off Samsung Stage at CES (Video)

THR

The director abruptly exited the stage after indicating there was a problem with his teleprompter

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/behind-screen/watch-michael-bay-walk-samsung-668690

CES: Startup Tarsier Introduces Stereo Glasses for Gestural Recognition

THR


The prototype MoveEye system comprises a set of battery-operated smart glasses embedded with their own stereo web cameras.



http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/behind-screen/ces-startup-tarsier-introduces-stereo-668630

CES: Mini-Cam Capable of 4G Live Streaming Debuts


THR

The device is intended to be used to capture extreme sports, news reports and point-of-view shots.

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/behind-screen/ces-mini-cam-capable-4g-668611

Sunday, 5 January 2014

Second screens will deliver communal experience around live


IBC

There are two main drivers in the world of sports broadcasting which will leap into the public consciousness over the next 18 months with the next round of international sports extravaganzas.

CES 2014: China Holds the Power in Consumer Electronics Spending



StreamingMedia 

The value of the global tech market is on the up and China's massive domestic market will now dictate trends in consumer electronics, says the Consumer Electronics Association


http://www.streamingmedia.com/Articles/News/Online-Video-News/CES-2014-China-Holds-the-Power-in-Consumer-Electronics-Spending-94046.aspx

Friday, 3 January 2014

Gravity and the case for awarding Visual Imaging and Stereography


IBC

Alfonso Cuarón's outer space spectacle Gravity is being heralded in some quarters as a cinematic landmark on par with the shock of the Lumière brothers' train hurtling toward the screen


http://www.ibc.org/page.cfm/action=library/libID=2/libEntryID=221/listID=4