copy written for Sohonet
Guillermo del Toro‘s stop-motion feature adaptation
of the famed children’s novel Pinocchio has been a passion project for at least
a decade in the making.
article here
The director
co-wrote the animated musical and produced for Netflix with The Jim Henson
Company and ShadowMachine (Robot Chicken, BoJack Horseman). Featuring
the voices of Ewan McGregor, Christoph Waltz and Tilda Swinton, Guillermo
del Toro’s Pinocchio relocates Carlo Collodi’s 1883 story to an Italy
simmering with fascism in the first half of the twentieth century.
Pre-production
began in earnest in 2018 with production shooting for 1,000 days and involving
40 animators working across 60 stages, the majority of which were at
ShadowMachine’s studio in Portland, Oregon. Puppet fabrication was led by the
UK’s Mackinnon & Saunders. Animators working expressly on the
Black Rabbit sequences were based out of Guadalajara, Mexico. The director of
photography is stop-motion expert Frank Passingham (Kubo and the Two Strings), and
the film’s co-director is Mark Gustafson.
While
computer-generated animation proved itself far more resilient to lockdown than
live-action production because artists could carry on their work at home
without much disruption, that’s not the case with stop motion. This very
physical form of filmmaking still requires animators to collaborate together on
stages. Under strict Covid protocols, ShadowMachine’s animators continued to
create shots in Portland, but other members of the production were forced to go
remote.
Crucially, this
included the entire editorial team who still needed to run dailies and send off
reviews and special cuts to the directors. Editorial needed to share files with
the VFX department which in turn also needed to review with the directors as
well as share with external VFX vendors.
“The problem we
faced was that the streaming solution we were using wasn’t good enough for the
job we needed it to be doing 24/7,” explained Don Schwarz, the show’s
pipeline technical director. “It just went down too often.” Del Toro was busy all over the world working
on and promoting multiple projects including his 2021 directorial feature Nightmare
Alley. Nonetheless he made it a priority to be hands-on in reviewing and
approving material.
“When you are in
the midst of a production that is ‘go, go, go,’ then time is money,” said
Schwarz. “It is the producer’s job to watch the money and when something
doesn’t happen on time then they rightly get frustrated. Guillermo is always
remarkably busy so when he is scheduled for a session and it doesn’t work the
way we expect, then that’s not good enough. We just had to move to something
more stable.”
Schwarz said, “I
knew from previous research that we should switch from our current streaming
provider to ClearView.”
“There’s a
misconception that stop motion production is slow but in fact we’ll be
constantly shooting on stages and constantly shots are being delivered,”
explained Schwarz. “The editors are going to want the directors to review shots
as quickly as possible to know if they get approved.
“In our pipeline we
would publish from the stage and run through an AWS Deadline render farm which
would make all the different media. Editorial got their AAF version for Media
Composer; a DNxHR version was created for viewing in 4K in a theatre. Editorial
would then run the dailies session on a regular basis so that people around the
studio and remote could jump on, see it, and make notes.
“What drove that
was the pandemic more than anything else but since we’ve been allowed back in
person, people have gotten used to not having to run to the screening room. The
editorial team didn’t want to come back in the building but to continue working
remotely. They proved that they could so that’s why it kept going that way.”
Schwarz commends
the ease with which users can create and log onto sessions in ClearView
Flex particularly for less tech-savvy team members running the sessions.
“Our previous tool was much more finnicky and required more technical hoops to
go through. In contrast, ClearView has just a really straight forward
setup.”
Shortly after
taking possession of the system, Sohonet introduced annotation and drawing
tools for ClearView Flex. “Guillermo loves to mark-up because he
finds it a lot easier to draw a circle on an image than trying to explain, say,
‘lighten the left-hand corner’,” Schwarz observed.
A major improvement
was in streaming performance. “Instead of a software encoded streaming service
where performance depends on the machine you are on, ClearView is a
hardware-based system and the difference in quality was instantaneous. We
didn’t need to make a ton of adjustments to the stream. You have more bandwidth,
more processing power, greater image fidelity and all round just greater
confidence in the session. That’s what gives ClearView a major upper hand.”
After the film’s
world premiere at the BFI London Film Festival in October, ShadowMachine
used ClearView Flex for final tweaks ahead of a Christmas release on
Netflix.
“We’re under the
gun to get it ready and will be using ClearView right to the end. If our next
production is remote in any way, then we’ll be sure to use ClearView for
editorial too.”
“When you are in
the midst of a production that is ‘go, go, go,’ then time is money,” said
Schwarz. “It is the producer’s job to watch the money and when something
doesn’t happen on time then they rightly get frustrated. Guillermo is always
remarkably busy so when he is scheduled for a session and it doesn’t work the
way we expect, then that’s not good enough. We just had to move to something
more stable.”
Schwarz said, “I
knew from previous research that we should switch from our current streaming
provider to ClearView.”
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