I'm sick of seeing "2012," so I'mma say Twenty Twelve. See how stupid your title is, Roland?
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Friends In Your Head | Forums → Posts by Teague
I'm sick of seeing "2012," so I'mma say Twenty Twelve. See how stupid your title is, Roland?
Isn't Chuck a Zoic show? Is Johnny Banta one of the guys you met? Dacklin somethin'?
And "Cloe" has no h.
That aside, fucking sweet. We have this functionality in our search, too.
The WB tower is in Burbank. We had one hour to do everything, and everything includes filming in three locations.
Read: means finding parking and filming in three locations.
The whole sign is CG, and about twice the size it should be from this distance. (It works pretty well, because that's pretty much what the hill would look like if you were twice as close to it. We just...weren't twice as close to it.) The company logo is CG, the WB tower was added last minute, the DC-3 is CG. The two-strip is obviously a complicated lil' effect.
And Beldar, boy oh boy do I agree, wowzers, etc..
Really interesting point about resembling a skeleton, though.
Written by the published fucking author of "Two Gentlemen of Lebowski," Adam Bertocci, based on an instant message story meeting on two days ago. Script delivered yesterday. Filmed about ten hours ago.
Cinematography by Brian, the lovely lady is Carolyn Siegel (from Movers, if you hadn't noticed) and the rest is me. (Visual effects, music, color correction, editing, so on.)
This came about because I worked my ass off on a really effective method for two-strip color emulation in After Effects. I wrote a detailed tutorial here, as well as included presets and project files.
Okay, let me be clear: it's not out yet, we're recording the commentary for when it comes out.
You can also buy it.
Hee hee. The movie will be on Netflix by the time the commentary is released.
Spoiler: the big whale destroys stuff.
Hee hee. The movie will be on Netflix by the time the commentary is released.
Spoiler: the big whale destroys stuff.
Heya Praxus, welcome to the forum!
All of those movies are on the "absolutely going to do" list.
From what I understand, most of the nine new minutes are filled with action.
Added support for restoring whites to the original AEP project.
(This is a compressy image, bear in mind.)
Hm. I really don't think I do, which is a shame. It'd be on one of the Mactops in the apartment.
My film noir pictures are here, I'm pretty sure the album is public.
Good point. Adding the whites back in is pretty simple, I'll update the AE project tonight.
The Aviator.
Wrote this up as a note on Facebook, posting here in case there's interest.
This is for the FX nerds. Muggles, ye be warned.
I've been playing with emulating two-strip color processing in After Effects. (Two-strip refers to early attempts at color film developed by Technicolor, where two black and white images would be exposed simultaneously in the camera, one through a red filter and one through a green filter. They'd be projected back together, and the result was a very vibrant image heavy in cyan and red hues. You can see this effect prominently in the first third of the film "The Aviator.")
It's tricky, because the effect is very specific - naturally the result of actual light blending in a certain way - and getting After Effects to do it right isn't intuitive for the user or for After Effects. Ultimately, though, the trick to getting a good emulation was pretty straightforward. The airplane above was manipulated using the method and the project I'm gonna post here.
You could probably guess that the secret involves simulating the original process - splitting an image into red and green brothers, and then adding them back to each other. Getting the two images that will become red and green to properly represent their respective color channels is the fun part.
Here's what I did, and let me start by explaining the project file.
http://www.downinfront.net/twostrip.aep
http://www.downinfront.net/twostrip.atn
(Similar Photoshop action, for testing with pictures.)
This will open in After Effects CS3 and above, and is a pretty good starting point for anyone wanting to play with the effect. You import footage into the "Import Footage" comp, and check the results in "Assembly." Most of what you'll want to tweak is opacity adjustment layers in that comp. Naturally this isn't likely to be perfect (or global) when you first import your footage, but it should be pretty close. Tweaking per-shot would be ideal.
However, for this clip I did no shot-by-shot tweaking. The global settings saved as default in the project were used on the whole clip as one. The results are pretty good.
Note that this effect is playing with channel values, and fidelity of individual channels is one of the first things to go when footage is compressed. Uncompressed footage off of a good camera is the best way to go here: I did some tests with Flip footage, and while the effect works the same, the footage becomes blotchy-looking.
The method is as follows.
Footage is imported into a comp, and - this is not set up in the project file - that footage should be white balanced appropriately. (And can be tweaked later - small tweaks to the white balance in the imported footage can have massive changes to what gets divvied up into red and cyan in "Assembly.") This composition is duplicated twice, one to be red, one to be cyan. In each comp, a Channel Mixer is applied in monochrome, favoring the red or green channel respectively. The balance is not 100, 0, 0 or 0, 100, 0, it needs to retain contrast and often going all in for red will result in a mostly white image. In each comp, this footage receives its color channel treatment, and also a Colorama effect, ramping from black to red or turquoise depending on the comp. The result will be a fuzzy image that is black in dark spots, and your color in light spots. It will probably look funny.
In a fourth comp, these items are assembled together. Red is screened on top of green, and the raw effect is the result. Adjustment layers to tweak saturation of red and cyan control specifics, and a monochrome adjustment layer is set to Soft Light to restore contrast utilizing the new colors.
There you have it. I'd love if some folks downloaded the AE project and ran some tests with various kinds of footage (or photos!), I used half a dozen different clips myself and tweaked the project so it worked pretty well with all of them, but as you'd expect, one size certainly doesn't fit all when it comes to color correction. Any inventive extensions of my project would be awesome, or different methods of reaching the desired goal: turning something normal into something really, really cool looking.
Look how pretty Chicago is in two-strip! This is using the default settings in my AE project. (The source was a crappy JPEG to begin with, the artifacting is compression, not the effect.)
Same deal, default settings.
1. Huh?
2. Some of it was shot in a water tank.
3. Matt is wearing sunglasses in the video and looks like this.
4. Cage is from New York. His voice is not affected in this song, that's just how he talks.
That's crazy. I'm Brian Fellows. But seriously it's crazy.
This is a song from my friend Chris "Cage" Palko's last record, the music video was directed by Steve Reedy (DIF's The Fountain, The Truman Show), FX supervised by me (with a good deal of FX by me,) and featuring Matt "Fayda" Vayda as a douchebag. See if you can spot him.
Do me a favor and load it up at 480p or higher (1080p is quite nice, ya know) and wait for a sec. We worked on it for six months, the least you could do is see it in high rez.
we do serius movie on down in front becoz we are smart
You kill a screenwriter.
"Fade....to black."
...interesting. Wiki on the vagus nerve.
Hi Dawy, welcome to the forum!
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