Archive for August 2008

In transit

Ohare International Airport, Chicago, Illinois

The last week was dedicated to subletting the Brooklyn apartment and making the pilgrimage to Michigan. That all went down without a hitch and now I’m on my way to Pinedale Wyoming, for the wedding of Dave and Darcie.

297 hours on the motion graphic to do list

Brooklyn, New York

Hello friends,

Mid August and time for an inventory of the motion graphics tasks, though with surprises around every corner there’s really no way to compile a comprehensive list. At least I can document what’s obvious, estimate the amount of time each task will take and project an ETA for the finished product. Of course I am still climbing the learning curve of After Effects and the myriad of supporting applications, so time estimates are highly dubious.

What the hell, let’s give it a go.

So here’s a spreadsheet detailing about 95% of what’s left to do for motion graphics. On the right is the time in hours. Tasks that don’t have an hour estimate are either part of another task or are not a priority. The total is 297 hours.

IN

OUT

scene

department

specialty

description

297

00:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg plan mg strategy, which images are the priority? CG and re-edit montage after 2
00:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg montage options assemble all usable shots for possible speed up and then stop, opening montage 6
00:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg montage options what’s the strategy, how does this thing start? 20
00:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg plan fast montage ­ why are we seeing all these images so rapidly ­ from whose perspective? is it time travel, a progression, joes travels? 6
01:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg montage options 007U7 shot of broken rails
01:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg montage options 0027X9, 00241C, 0026H3 rails into forest rails into rainforest 00256B
01:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg montage options 003CU bricks close on beach
01:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg montage options 0032Y misty morning water
01:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg montage options 0011Z8 water with silhouettes, could be mailboxes or something on the top of a building
01:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg montage options 0007R6,  swamp
01:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg montage options donkey barn needs metro sign 2
01:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg montage options 00051I smoke stack
01:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg montage options 0008WB, 0007CG weight limit sign
01:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg montage options ship and shore, ship aground
01:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg montage options 00160N shoreline concrete
01:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg montage options 0013G7 another really great closeup of bricks and water
01:00:00:00
act 1.0 mg repair character C can uncle joe be more plausible? makeup is not totally convincing 0
01:00:00:00
act 0 mg essential story A don’t trust the dead! deceased persons need not apply ­ other posters? 0
01:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg montage options 0017Q2, 00198Q water and bricks with sun
01:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg montage options winter highway
01:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg montage options uncle joe traveling
01:00:00:00
act 1.0 mg essential story C should joe have a PKD pin?
01:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg montage options steel skeleton skyscrapers over the road with tunnel
01:00:00:00 01:00:46:00 act 0 mg montage options 00075G close up of suspended train car
01:00:45:23 01:01:11:16 act 0 mg essential story A gerry outside, 3 shots that could be used for more exposition ­ horizon has wreckage, crashed spaceship, you name it. 4
01:00:53:23 01:01:03:12 act 0 mg essential story A broken windows in museum, smoke billowing out, (warehouse, fire?) signs posted here too  8
01:01:11:15 01:01:21:02 act 0 mg essential story A c walking ­ transform wharfside with alexander henry into flood scene, restaurant neon pokes up out of water, roof of a house, etc. she’s walking along something unexpected 3
01:01:11:15 01:01:38:02 act 0 mg essential story A alex henry – name change, missing sign, what else could tell the story? (2 shots) 3
01:01:38:03 01:02:02:05 act 0 mg essential story A unsteadicam hallway needs red light and perhaps dawn water in porthole window, bloom color transform 4
01:01:38:03 01:02:02:05 act 0 mg essential story B steadicam tracking practice, armory ­ guns and swords, wire tangles, signs… what other stuff could be on the walls?
01:01:38:03 01:02:02:05 act 0 mg essential story A unsteadicam hallway ­ box labels and posters 6
01:02:02:06 01:03:54:13 act 1.0 mg repair production extension cord in shot, vertical corner and floor. could be passable 1
01:02:29:17 01:03:54:09 act 1.0 mg essential story C phone ­ whispy springy antenna, little blinky lights?
01:03:10:17 01:03:15:14 act 1.0 mg repair light “believe me it’s important” when christina turns back, room gets darker… why check original files a) cause – an iris adjustment during shooting most likely, although i don’t remember being by the camera at this point. b) solution – using keyframes on the color corrector and slight increase in highlight value over the three or so frames that the scene darkens c) also changed old color corrector to bring correct excess luma and copied color corrector to previous shot (same shot) to match 1
01:03:50:16 01:03:50:21 act 1.0 mg repair actor c glances at camera, can we fix? 1
01:03:54:14
act 1.0 mg essential story B c rises up, cut to mirror. she’s in darkness, she could be a little more in the dark there then emerge into the light… naw
01:03:54:14 01:08:51:05 act 1.0 mg repair continuity continuity, christina’s dress tag (near shoulder) comes and goes (5 without, 9 with) 5
01:04:11:14 01:04:14:03 act 1.0 mg repair light the door is slightly ajar, light is coming through, black along the seams both as she opens and when they are talking with it closed 2
01:04:14:14 01:04:26:23 act 1.0 mg repair production windows water – c opens door (roto) 4
01:04:14:14 01:04:26:23 act 1.0 mg essential story A door frame red hall ­ c opens door (roto) 2
01:04:27:00 01:04:38:21 act 1.0 mg essential story A red hall ­ c opens door (roto) 4
01:04:38:22 01:04:56:00 act 1.0 mg repair production windows water (roto) 4
01:04:56:01 01:05:03:14 act 1.0 mg essential story A red hall ­ “not your uncle joe” (roto) 4
01:05:03:15 01:05:04:22 act 1.0 mg repair production windows water (roto) 4
01:05:03:15 01:05:04:22 act 1.0 mg essential story A door frame red hall 2
01:05:04:23 01:05:08:13 act 1.0 mg essential story A red hall ­ “my name is melchior” (roto) 4
01:05:08:14 01:05:10:18 act 1.0 mg essential story A door frame red hall 2
01:05:08:14 01:05:10:18 act 1.0 mg repair production windows water (roto) 4
01:05:10:19 01:05:20:04 act 1.0 mg essential story A red hall – “only assumed the appearance” (roto) 4
01:05:20:05 01:05:22:23 act 1.0 mg repair production windows water (roto) 4
01:05:20:05 01:05:22:23 act 1.0 mg essential story A door frame red hall 2
01:05:23:00 01:05:29:04 act 1.0 mg essential story A red hall ­ hat (roto) 4
01:05:27:08
act 1.0 mg essential story B transfer of hat from j to c ­ electric sparks like static from his head, crackling and sputtering?
01:05:29:05 01:05:38:23 act 1.0 mg repair flaw scratch on window – uncle um… 2
01:05:29:05 01:05:38:23 act 1.0 mg repair production extension cord in shot vertical corner, with gaffer tape. extends to seaman plaque horizontal 3
01:05:40:13 01:05:45:07 act 1.0 mg essential story A red hall ­ “are you an angel” (roto) 4
01:05:45:08 01:05:57:23 act 1.0 mg repair production joe’s radio mic is visible at collar of shirt… 2
01:05:45:08 01:05:57:23 act 1.0 mg essential story A door frame red hall 4
01:05:45:08 01:05:57:23 act 1.0 mg repair production windows water (roto) 4
01:05:58:00 01:06:29:10 act 1.0 mg essential story A red hall ­ “what’s the deal” (roto) 4
01:06:29:11 01:06:37:18 act 1.0 mg repair production joe’s radio mic is visible at collar of shirt… 2
01:06:29:11 01:06:37:18 act 1.0 mg essential story A door frame red hall 2
01:06:29:11 01:06:37:18 act 1.0 mg repair production windows water (roto) 2
01:06:37:19 01:06:43:19 act 1.0 mg essential story A red hall ­ “he was born” (no roto) 4
01:06:43:20 01:06:59:05 act 1.0 mg repair production windows water (roto) 4
01:06:43:20 01:06:59:05 act 1.0 mg essential story A door frame red hall 4
01:06:43:20 01:06:59:05 act 1.0 mg repair production joe’s radio mic is visible at collar of shirt… 2
01:06:59:06 01:07:02:03 act 1.0 mg essential story A red hall – “really” (no roto) 1
01:07:02:04 01:07:09:06 act 1.0 mg essential story A door frame red hall 4
01:07:02:04 01:07:09:06 act 1.0 mg repair production windows water (roto) 4
01:07:02:04 01:07:09:06 act 1.0 mg repair production joe’s radio mic is visible at collar of shirt… 2
01:07:09:07 01:07:14:22 act 1.0 mg essential story A red hall ­ lesbian (no roto) 1
01:07:14:23 01:07:22:11 act 1.0 mg repair production joe’s radio mic is visible at collar of shirt… 2
01:07:14:23 01:07:22:11 act 1.0 mg essential story A door frame red hall 4
01:07:14:23 01:07:22:11 act 1.0 mg repair production windows water (roto) 4
01:07:22:12 01:07:26:02 act 1.0 mg essential story A red hall ­ lesbian too (no roto) 1
01:07:26:03 01:07:34:19 act 1.0 mg repair production windows water (roto) 4
01:07:26:03 01:07:34:19 act 1.0 mg repair production joe’s radio mic is visible at collar of shirt… 2
01:07:26:03 01:07:34:19 act 1.0 mg essential story A door frame red hall 4
01:07:34:20 01:07:45:15 act 1.0 mg essential story A red hall ­ “so super” (no roto) 1
01:07:46:20 01:07:48:06 act 1.0 mg repair production joe’s radio mic is visible at collar of shirt… 2
01:07:46:20 01:07:48:06 act 1.0 mg repair production windows water (roto) 4
01:07:46:20 01:07:48:06 act 1.0 mg essential story A door frame red hall 4
01:07:48:07 01:08:10:05 act 1.0 mg repair production extension cord in shot vertical corner, with gaffer tape. extends to seaman plaque horizontal 3
01:07:48:07 01:08:10:05 act 1.0 mg repair flaw scratch on window – “did god…” wide scratch on coat not as prominent 2
01:08:25:02 01:08:32:04 act 1.0 mg repair production extension cord in shot vertical corner, with gaffer tape 3
01:08:25:02 01:08:32:04 act 1.0 mg repair flaw scratch on window – “twice the miracle” 2
01:08:39:00
act 1.0 mg essential story A or the bra scene, could we do something sort of like the impact scene from clockwork orange? several moments in there – what? flashback 2
01:08:51:05 01:09:04:20 act 1.0 mg repair production extension cord in shot vertical corner, with gaffer tape 3
01:08:51:05 01:09:04:20 act 1.0 mg repair flaw scratch on window – “we’ve got this handled…” 2
01:09:01:11 01:09:04:20 act 1.0 mg essential story A j, “here, check it out” hypnosis, the CD light is playing on her face, he flashes it on her eyes and she blinks 3
01:09:04:21 01:10:12:07 act 1.0 mg essential story B change laptop to army green, maybe camo colored
01:09:04:23
act 1.0 mg essential story A christina’s face is in the DVD reflection until he moves it. 2
01:09:23:09
act 1.0 mg essential story A the gerry picture could be more processed 2
01:10:13:21 01:10:23:12 act 1.0 mg repair flaw scratch on window – gut punch 2
01:10:13:21 01:10:23:12 act 1.0 mg repair production extension cord in shot vertical corner, with gaffer tape 3
01:14:27:22 01:14:42:18 act 2.0 mg repair relight long hallway, flickery reflections in picture in background of hall detract from the shot 2
01:14:27:22 01:14:42:18 act 2.0 mg essential story A long hallway, dead birds carry contagion and other posters 4
01:14:27:22 01:14:42:18 act 2.0 mg essential story A long hallway, red hall fixes abrupt reactions of c 0
01:14:51:08 01:15:32:05 act 2.0 mg essential story A red hall – wires on steve’s door the trick, the door swings open (3 shots) 8
01:15:00:09 01:15:24:06 act 2.0 mg essential story A red hall – christina at door (2 shots) 4
01:15:32:06 01:15:36:07 act 2.0 mg repair production tape on the wardrobe at right of screen 1
01:15:38:23 01:15:38:23 act 2.0 mg repair light in g’s cabin, g clicking light and brighter room 2
01:15:52:15 01:16:11:21 act 2.0 mg essential story A in g’s cabin, where’s the pink shirt ­ missing in all carmen close-ups near closet (5 shots) continuity here also, wrong closet door is open ­ oh well. 3
01:16:17:15 01:16:26:08 act 2.0 mg repair production tape on the wardrobe at right of screen 1
01:17:04:17
act 2.0 mg repair flaw g close, can the transition be softened? 3
01:17:11:02 01:17:14:14 act 2.0 mg repair production tape on the wardrobe at right of screen 1
01:17:19:03 01:17:34:01 act 2.0 mg repair continuity “tired of pretending” carmen can be seen bouncing in the reflection. 2
01:17:34:02 01:17:40:12 act 2.0 mg repair production “we have to make love somehow” radio transceiver n thigh 2
01:18:28:09
act 2.0 mg repair continuity can we remove christina’s hand from her face in the start of this shot ­ continuity 4
01:18:28:13 01:18:31:03 act 2.0 mg repair production tape on the wardrobe at right of screen 1
01:18:46:03 01:18:51:23 act 2.0 mg repair production tape on the wardrobe at right of screen 1
01:19:00:00 01:19:18:22 act 2.0 mg repair production tape on the wardrobe at right of screen 1
01:19:25:05 01:19:28:12 act 2.0 mg repair production tape on the wardrobe at right of screen 1
01:19:28:13 01:23:22:21 act 2.0 mg essential story B bathroom, broken chemical glass and bottles? bathroom cabinet full of books? (12 shots) 0
01:19:40:19
act 2.0 mg ? “we just have to” fix c nostril shadow
01:21:08:15 01:21:26:05 act 2.0 mg repair production tape on the wardrobe at right of screen 1
01:21:28:19
act 2.0 mg repair light g ­ light switch illuminates area more 2
01:21:30:02 01:21:30:17 act 2.0 mg repair light gerry moved toward kitchen, the scene brightens to match when he hits the switch, must match the earlier scenes 1
01:25:11:21
act 3.0 mg essential story B mediatronic pages – a cool security interface sequence, decrypt to joe’s warning
01:25:11:21
act 3.0 mg essential story A mediatronic pages – minimum fix spelling of “their” 1
01:25:18:10 01:25:19:01 act 3.0 mg essential story B airplane hitting building on “joe?”
01:26:00:00
all mg essential story A label all boxes inventory 1
01:26:00:00
all mg essential story A label all boxes composite 8
01:26:38:19 01:26:41:09 act 3.0 mg essential story A change color of caboose in third shot, we have a release from the NJ train people.

So 297 hours seems like a lot right? It is! That’s 24 twelve hour days – another month of full on focus. 5% of the tasks on this list are completed, that’s what I’ve been writing about the last few updates. So perhaps it won’t take so long. There’s also the possibility that as I get more experienced, my speed will increase. Again, time estimates are highly dubious.

Just for fun check the column labeled “specialty”. Tasks labeled “repair” are the result of where I screwed up on set – continuity, lighting, shooting. The reason I’ve labeled these is so later I can look at what percentage of this motion graphics work was needed to repair failures on location. How much time did it cost me to make these mistakes? What can I do to minimize these issues next time? It’s kinda exciting to think about…

So another month to knock off the motion graphics. Then what’s left? According to Stu’s order of operations I’ll be at step 7 of 10, color correction. As I discussed in an earlier post, my prior color correction work in Final Cut won’t translate to After Effects, so I’ve gotta start from scratch. That means purchasing a color corrector that will move between FCP and AE, Colorista. I can finish DOG with Colorista and use it on future edits too. I could use Apple’s Color which I already own but my initial research into this looks like there’s another steep learning curve that I just don’t have time for. By the way, I popped for the professional FCP to AE translation software, Automatic Duck. Results from the free utilities I was attempting to use were frustrating. Credit cards are feeling the strain, thank god for 0% APR.

The color correction could take a week or two (wild guess). I’ve got another 4 days of foley and a final sound mix somewhere, so let’s say another 2 weeks to wrap the sound.

I’ll be on the road in September for two weeks doing weddings and river trips, so that puts me at the end of October for the big finish. Then there’s the web site, legal approval, dvd duplication… So maybe snow will fly before these updates are complete. November 15, 2008 is our new (secret) release date. That’s only one month short of 2009

For your visual fix, I offer a recent youtube video featuring the illustrious Australian citizen Brad Robinson and myself, along with his nef and neez and the vocal stylings of various other mystery players. This has nothing to do with DOG but it’s kinda twisted and fun. Enjoy!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3UcQXUQnMeM

Dan Kelly

More fascinating esoterica about rotoscoping, the DV Rebel methodology

Brooklyn, New York

I’m operating mostly from intuition. I know which controls to futz with and generally I achieve what’s needed, but at this point I don’t know enough yet to make a comprehensive plan. There’s still a mighty learning curve to climb.

Are you tired of reading about rotoscoping yet? This will be the third week of roto work and there are probably several more yet to go – at least. For the red hallway, I’ve repaired about 6 of the 12 reverse scenes, the shots from the hallway into Christina’s cabin with the over-exposed window in the background. In last week’s update, I thought there were only five to fix – oops. Warning – technical descriptions ahead.

To review, there are three critical layers to this scene, each defined by one or more masks. Let’s start with the window and water. The problem in the original shot is that the water is overexposed, so it has to be replaced completely. The window is square in shape, partially covered by a venetian blind. I could get away with just a simple rectangle mask for this window, but I’ve added a horizontal sliver mask where one of the venetian blind slats was slightly askew. The idea is to get away from a strictly square window into a more haphazard and accidental shape. This gives the new window a stronger presence and integrates it into the rest of the shot.

Not only do the outline of the actors change as they move in front of the window, but light from the over-exposed windows spills onto the edges of their outlines. The actor masks have to cut in closer where there is excessive light spill, slicing off the bright edges.

One layer defines the new background (water) and another defines the foreground (clothing). That gives a consistent edge between the actor’s clothing and the water. However, the actors shoulder is not completely in front of the window, but is also passing in front of the window frame. Even though there is no problem with the window frame, it also has to also be replaced by a new image. Otherwise the original line of the actor’s clothing will change as it moves across the border between the window (new image) and frame (old image with old outline of clothing). The edges of the clothing that I cut away will reappear when shoulder is in front of the original window frame. So our third layer is a new window frame.

Here cut outs between the shoulder mask and the original image show how much the outline of the clothing changes, especially over the over-exposed water.

The camera doesn’t move in this shot but the various takes differ slightly in angle and zoom. I grabbed still images of the window frame from later on in each of the 5 takes, when no actors were standing in front of it, (thank god!)

Even when nothing is moving in a moving image, there is usually dancing grain as the pixels (or for film, bits of silver) quaver between frames. So when compositing a still image like the window frame, I have to add grain that matches the surrounding image.

The layers are stacked from foreground to background in a slightly different order than real life. Since the window layer’s mask doesn’t change shape, it’s placed in front of the window frame layer and enlarged slightly to cover the light spill that is on the edges of the window frame. The window frame is the transition from old image to new image. It’s mask shape must change to surround the entire shoulder mask while avoiding other unmasked parts of the actor’s body like hair and skin. On top of these two is the shoulder layer. These three layers are built up into a composition, which then becomes the foreground of the original scene.

Think of these layers as an irregular blob with new image in the middle and a bit of original image at the edges. When the blob is stuck on top of the original image, the edges disappear. There’s no more blob, either. It’s a spaceship landing in a cornfield, a kitten talking on the telephone, a bowl of live crickets and cream. The illusion is accomplished.

Each layer is created like an Eternal’s MNC or minimum necessary change (Isaac Asimov, The End of Eternity) – we alter only what we must to achieve the desired result. Building animated masks to isolate background and foreground (rotoscoping) can be incredibly time consuming and tedious work. You don’t want to roto more than you have to.

Which brings us to key frames. An airplane high in the sky moving from left to right at a constant speed could be defined by two keyframes. A ball thrown up in the air is a different story. The ball moves up slowing until it stops and then falls down going faster and faster until it hits the ground, all the while moving from left to right. I could still define the left to right movement with 2 keyframes, but the acceleration requires more information.

The movement of a human body is full of acceleration and de-acceleration. Body parts rotate and articulate while moving, changing their outlines. Rotoscoping requires an ability to recognize where the crucial changes are – where a moving hand has begun to de-accelerate or when a swinging arm has reached the top of it’s parabola. These are keyframes and once identified a mask can be made to follow the movement pretty nearly. So a lot of what I am doing is actually the opposite of traditional animation in that I am finding inherent keyframes rather than creating them from scratch.

Here’s a strip of images illustrating the masks changing over time to follow the movement of the actor and the de-acceleration as his head turns from left to right. Notice the fuzziness of the head in the top frames resulting from motion blur and the corresponding fuzzy edge of the mask. As the head finishes turning and becomes sharper, the mask is also becoming sharper. The head is partially masked because it passes in front of the window in earlier frames and also interacts with the coat mask in these frames. A better masking solution for these frames would have been to mask the jacket up to the skin only. That’s the MNC discussed above.

In July I joined fxphd.com which offers advanced production courses. I am way behind on the homework at this point, in fact I haven’t even finalized on which courses I want. I am leaning toward red production night and day, miniatures and perhaps a basic sound course.

Nothing like staying home all summer and looking at screens. You couldn’t pay me to do this by the way, it’s all about the vision! I’m about to miss the WHO farm bus which is going to Burning Man and points farther west for the next three months. Rats. They stopped by the Prospect Heights Community Farm today!

So where am I? How far away is the finish? I can’t really say exactly, but I am going to try and repair the entire red hallway by next week’s update, that’s about 25 shots in all, a good hunk of the first act and the very start of the second. I might know enough now to really crank. Next week I’ll take a shot at presenting an inventory of what’s left and project a schedule, though that will probably not be pretty. Keep your fingers crossed.

Until next week,

Dan Kelly