Posts Tagged ABC

ABC’s ‘V’ Returns from Hiatus — Zoic Provides the VFX

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Recently ABC’s alien invasion drama V returned from hiatus, and Zoic Studios has been working night and day creating the VFX for the critically-acclaimed sci-fi series.

I managed to pry compositor Nate Overstrom away from his desk for a few minutes, to discuss some of the work the Zoic team has done for V since the show returned from its Winter Olympics break.

nateoverstrom_188x250“We’ve been working on so many shots that everything kind of blurs together,” Overstrom says. “We’re delivering about 200 shots per episode, on a two-week turnaround. We’re moving lightning fast, and doing the best we can to keep everything running smoothly.”

The most memorable effects scene since the show returned might be the final shot of episode #105, “Welcome to the War,” when (spoiler alert) V leader Anna (Morena Baccarin, Firefly), having just finished mating joylessly with an anonymous V male, says “now my eggs need nourishment” – her head juts forward, a mouthful of fangs protrudes from her maw, and she lunges at the doomed male.

“Anna’s teeth were pretty interesting,” Overstrom says. “There were two shots we worked on for her face. The first one, where she first started opening her mouth, was primarily a 2D effect. First we used The Foundry’s Nuke to warp her mouth and jaw open, and moved her existing teeth out of the way. Then we rendered the upper and lower CG jaws and teeth separately, and tracked in the 3D elements to the new warped face.

“The second shot was a digital prosthetic. The matchmovers tracked Anna’s face, and modeler Jason Monroe built out a new lower face with the jaws extended, as well as the new CG jaws and teeth. Sal Massimini and Chris Strauss took it through texturing, lighting and rendering. They projected the textures of Anna’s original face back onto the CG model, so everything lined up pretty well. Then it was just a matter of color correcting it in.”

She seemed to do a thing where her whole head slid forward…

“That was just [Baccarin]. She leaned forward, and I did a little bit of a warp on her jaw before she opened her mouth, to kick her jaw forward a little bit, and give her a bit of a menacing motion.”

In another scene, Fifth Column member Ryan Nichols (Morris Chestnut, Boyz n the Hood) reveals his alien nature to terrorist Kyle Hobbes (Charles Mesure, Hercules: The Legendary Journeys) by pulling down his lower eyelid and pushing up his false human eye, revealing a reptilian slit pupil. “Jason built the eye models and did the initial textures,” Overstrom says. “Sal and Chris did the rendering.

“Those were pretty straightforward. We layered in each eye separately to maintain as much control in comp as possible. The tricky part was getting just the right kind of ‘membrane’ effect on the human lid, which was accomplished through a few extra CG elements. We had to do a little bit of extra 2D warping on the pupil of the second shot to simulate the eye constricting and dilating.”

There’s nothing practical with the actor, right?

“He’s just doing this [pulls down eyelid].”

The brunt of the show is virtual sets – anything on the mothership, which is a lot of shots…

Episode #104, “It’s Only the Beginning,” reveals a surveillance room aboard the mothership, from which the Vs can monitor humans who have been tagged with fake flu shots. “These are 300 foot long digital sets,” Overstrom explains, “with dozens of digitally added extras, and accompanied by 3D holographs around each group. The only thing rendered in CG was the room; then Dayna Mauer populated the expanse of the room using Nuke’s 3D capabilities. She extended out a full set of extras and holograph screens, and added reflections and shadows of everybody.

“The groups of extras were shot on greenscreen – six or seven plates of five groups of people standing in different positions. She went though and did 30 extra greenscreen comps, lifted those people out, put them on cards and placed them out in 3D.”

Since the show came back, the mothership technology has centered a great deal on the V control screens, which are flat 3D interfaces that appear in midair. What’s involved in creating these floating holographic screens?

“The production has a group of motion graphics artists that provide us with the playback elements,” Overstrom explains. He says that the actor is given on-set direction about how to interact with the screen, which has no practical on-set element. “They provide us with the elements. We track them into the shots in Nuke, and time the animations accordingly.

“Sometimes we get fancy and add some chromatic depth by taking a display, duplicating the object twice, and shift the channels on each iteration so each is either a red, green, or blue channel. Then we shift each ‘channel’ in space so the three are slightly offset from each other and then recombine them. So if the camera rotates around, we see that there’s a little 3D depth to it that creates a chromatic separation.”

In another memorable scene, from episode #106 “Pound of Flesh,” Anna tests the loyalty of a group of Vs who failed an empathy test. They are told to consume pills that will immolate their bodies instantly. The Vs who take the pills die, but pass Anna’s test. “The V immolation shot was definitely challenging, especially on such a tight turnaround. We custom-built and animated a CG rig to provide a series of animated mattes, skeleton elements, a charcoal mannequin, and several sets of particle passes. We then cleaned several actors out of the greenscreen and re-layered the effects in, also taking care to add the reflections of everything in comp.”

Overstrom admits that working on V, while tremendously satisfying, is also a challenge, due to the scope of the work. “The brunt of the show is virtual sets – anything on the mothership, and a lot of matte paintings for New York City, which when you watch the show… is a lot of shots. But we also have to take account of all the other shots that go into the show as well: all the holoscreens, the healing effects, medical instruments and prosthetics that need cleanup, rig removal… you know all the ‘standard’ work that goes into just about every show. That’s all there as well.”

“The biggest hurdle for any of these shots that we’re doing is the time constraint — but our work on V has come off pretty successfully!”

More info: Official V site on ABC.com; Nate Overstrom, Jason Monroe, and Chris Strauss on IMDb.

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ABC’s ‘V’ Returns March 30th

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ABC’s sci-fi drama V returns from hiatus this coming Tuesday, March 30th at 9 pm (10pm central). Culver City, California’s Zoic Studios produces visual effects for the series, which is a re-imagining of the beloved 1980s miniseries. It stars Morena Baccarin (Firefly, Serenity), Elizabeth Mitchell (Lost), and Joel Gretsch (The 4400).

Zoic’s creative director, Andrew Orloff, discussed his excitement for the upcoming episodes.

It’s a big season, with a lot of surprises and a lot of new stuff. We’re spending a lot more time on the mothership. We’re getting a lot more into Anna, and the Vs and what they are really up to. We can’t give away too much, but there’s a lot happening, and a lot more to the visual effects — it’s going to be very cool. We’re continuing with the virtual set work we’ve been doing, and the virtual prosthetic work.

We’ll see a lot more of the V technology; we’re going to see a lot more of the V physiology; we’re going to see more of everything. We’re working a lot to create the reality of the whole environment. It’s going to be a lot of fun.

They’re really pushing the limits – it’s something that’s going to be really unprecedented as far as the scope of it. The scope is expanding astronomically for the first couple of episodes.

Be sure to watch the new episode of V, “Welcome to the War,” next Tuesday night at 9pm on ABC!

More info: “Zoic Brings Visitors to Earth for ABC’s ‘V’” on IDYE; the official V web site; “Welcome to the War” preview clips on VisitorSite.net.

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Visitors Invade ABC Website, Add Lizard-Face(book) Technology

ABC.com

Tomorrow (November 7th), the Disney/ABC Television Group will launch a new feature on ABC.com, that will allow users to view complete episodes of selected programs, and then create their own “commentary tracks” using their Facebook account.

The pilot episode of ABC’s new sci-fi series “V” will launch the ABC Social: Episode Commentary service, with commentaries by executive producers Scott Peters and Steve Pearlman.

From the press release:

To create and share their own fan commentary tracks, participants can go to ABC.com and log on using their Facebook account. As they view an episode in Commentary Mode, they can simultaneously add their own comments and read expert commentary, as well as see comments from their Facebook friends. Actions taken on ABC.com will be shared in the viewer’s Facebook stream, alerting friends to view the episode online and add their own comments…

Expert commentary featured in the Full Episode Player will vary from episode to episode and may include insights from a series’ producers, writers and directors, stars of the series, production and costume designers, music supervisors and network executives, among others.

Lizard-FacebookThe Hollywood Reporter points out that other networks, like ABC Family and NBC, have experimented with adding social networking capabilities to their online video content. But ABC appears to be the first to align its offering with a powerhouse site like Facebook, which has 300 million active users and Alexa ranking of 2.

ABC is experimenting with inserting advertising in the comment stream.

More info: ABC.com’s Full Episode Player; full press release on bythenumbers.tv; ABC introducing ‘Social’ Web tool on THR.com; IDYE on Facebook; Facebook on Alexa. Thanks to Miles Dinsmoor!

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Zoic Brings Visitors to Earth for ABC’s ‘V’


A Visitor mothership hovers over Manhattan.

Tomorrow evening (11/3/09), ABC will broadcast the premiere episode of its highly anticipated new sci-fi series V, which updates and re-imagines the original 1983 miniseries of the same name. The visual effects for the new V were created by Culver City, California’s Zoic Studios, known for providing VFX for a number of well-loved science fiction franchises.

Scott Peters, creator of The 4400, brings fans a modern take on the classic V that pays loving homage to its 80s inspiration. Written by Peters and directed by Yves Simoneau, the pilot episode stars Elizabeth Mitchell (Lost), Morris Chestnut (Kung Fu Panda 2), Joel Gretsch (The 4400, Taken); and Firefly alumni Morena Baccarin and Alan Tudyk.

The remake hews closely to the story of the original: mile-wide alien motherships appear above the major cities of the Earth. The aliens call themselves “The Visitors,” and appear to be identical to humans. They claim to come in peace, seeking to trade advanced technology for resources. But the Visitors are not what they seem, and hide sinister intentions. While much of humanity welcomes the Visitors, a resistance movement begins to form.

Four episodes will air this month; the show will return from hiatus after the 2010 Olympics.

Visual effects and digital production

Zoic is handling all of the visual effects for V, under the oversight of creative director and VFX supervisor Andrew Orloff (FlashForward, Fringe, CSI) and visual effects producer Karen Czukerberg (Eleventh Hour). Work on the pilot was split between Zoic’s Vancouver studio, which handled greenscreen and virtual sets, and the Los Angeles studio, where the motherships and other effects were created.

Zoic began work in February 2009 on the pilot, which featured about 240 effects shots, 125 of which involved live actors shot on greenscreen in Vancouver where the series is filmed. Another three episodes now in post-production have some 400 effects shots overall, half of which involve digital compositing of actors on greenscreen.

A more detailed view of a Visitor mothership.

Orloff worked in collaboration with the show’s creators – Peters, Simoneau, and executive producers Steve Pearlman and Jace Hall – to design the motherships. The enormous, saucer-shaped Visitor mothership is one of the original V’s iconic images (along with a certain hamster), and visually represents the Visitors’ technological superiority and their domination over humanity. In addition, Orloff says, the creators were dedicated to realism and internal consistency and logic in the design of the alien technology and culture.

Orloff created the mothership on his laptop, working through numerous iterations with input from Peters and Simoneau. He wanted a design that was “freaky and menacing,” and would be emotionally impactful when it made its first momentous appearance onscreen.


The underside of a Visitor mothership begins its transformation. Buildings in Vancouver were supplemented with 3D models of real Manhattan skyscrapers from Zoic’s library.

Because the mothership itself is enormous, the 3D model used to represent it is huge and highly detailed. Zoic CG supervisor Chris Zapara (Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles, Pathfinder) modeled the “transformation” effect, in which the ventral surface of the ship changes, causing the frightened humans below to fear an imminent attack. In fact, the ship is deploying an enormous video screen, displaying the greeting message of Visitor leader Anna (Baccarin). After many rounds of pre-visualizations, a design was chosen with large, movable panels and a grid of smaller panels arranged in a snakeskin pattern. The mothership was created in NewTek’s Lightwave 3D.


The “snakeskin” panels underneath the mothership flip over to reveal a video projection surface.

Digital artist Steve Graves (Fringe, Sarah Connor Chronicles) was responsible for filling in the copious detail that gives the mothership the impression of immense scale. After the pilot was picked up by ABC, the dorsal surface was remodeled to add photorealism. The model initially was detailed only from the angles at which it was shown in the pilot, due to the many hours of work necessary. As shots were created for the second through fourth episodes, Graves created detail from new angles, and now the mothership model is complete.


Our first view of the alien mothership, reflected in the glass of a skyscraper.

The mothership design was not the only way the Visitors’ arrival was made to seem momentous and frightening. As businessman Ryan Nichols (Morris Chestnut) looks to the skies for an explanation of various alarming occurrences, he first sees the mothership reflected in the glass windows of a skyscraper. Although a relatively simple effect (Zoic took shots of real buildings in Vancouver, skinned them with glass textures, and then put the reflected image on the glass), the effect on the viewer is chilling.


Visitor leader Anna (Baccarin, seated left) is interviewed by Chad Decker (Scott Wolf, seated right) on board the Manhattan mothership. The “set” was created virtually, with the actors shot on a greenscreen stage.

Because the motherships are enormous, it only makes sense that they would feature enormous interior spaces. These sets would be too large to build, so half the effects shots on V involve actors filmed on a greenscreen stage with tracking markers. These virtual sets, based on Google Sketch-Up files from V‘s production designers (Ian Thomas (Fringe, The 4400) for the pilot; Stephen Geaghan (Journey to the Center of the Earth, The 4400) for later episodes), were created at Zoic’s Vancouver studio in Autodesk Maya and rendered in mental images’ mental ray.

The ship interiors were created before the related greenscreen shots were filmed. For the episodes shot after the pilot, Zoic provided the production with its new, cutting edge proprietary Zeus system, which allows filmmakers to see actors on a real-time rendered virtual set, right on the greenscreen stage. The technology is of immeasurable aid to the director of photography, crew, and especially the actors, who can see themselves interacting with the virtual set and can adjust their performances accordingly. Zeus incorporates Lightcraft Technology’s pre-visualization system.

After actors are filmed on the Vancouver greenscreen set and the show creators are happy with the pre-visualized scenes in Zeus, the data is sent south to Zoic’s Los Angeles studio, where the scenes are laid out in 3D. Then the data goes back up to Zoic in Vancouver, where the virtual set backgrounds are rendered in HD.


An alien mothership inserted into a stock shot of London.


A mothership composited into a stock shot of Rio de Janeiro, with matched lighting and atmospheric effects.

Other alien technology was created for the series, including shuttlecraft and a “seek & destroy” weapon used to target a resistance meeting.


A Visitor shuttle docks with a mothership.

The alien shuttle and the shuttle docking bays were created in Los Angeles by visual effects artist Michael Cliett (Fringe, Serenity), digital compositor Chris Irving and freelance artist James Ford.


The “Atrium,” a city in the interior of a Visitor mothership.

The “Atrium,” a massive interior space inside the mothership, was created for Zoic by David R. Morton (The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Serenity). The complex 3D model served essentially as a matte painting. It was incorporated into a complex composited shot, with actors on the greenscreen stage inserted into virtual sets of a corridor and balcony by the Vancouver studio; the camera pulls out to reveal the Atrium, which was created in LA. Extras in Visitor uniforms were shot on greenscreen and composited into the Atrium itself.


An F-16 fighter, its electronics disrupted by a Visitor mothership, crashes onto a city street.

An F-16 fighter crash, featured in the first few minutes of the pilot, was done by the Los Angeles studio. The airplane, automobiles, taxis, and Manhattan buildings in the background, and of course the explosion, smoke and particles, are all digital. All the components came from Zoic’s library. The actor was shot on the greenscreen stage. Correction: The actor was shot on a Vancouver street. Thanks to Johnathan Banta for the correction.


FBI Agent Erica Evans (Mitchell) examines a wounded Visitor and makes an alarming discovery.

A scene involving an injured Visitor, which gives the viewer one of the first clues to the aliens’ true nature, was shot entirely with practical effects (including the blinking eye). But Zoic used CG to enhance the wound, merge human skin with reptile skin, and add veins and other subcutaneous effects.


Visitor leader Anna looks out over her new dominion.

According to Czukerberg, one of the more difficult shots to pull off was the final scene in the pilot. It involves the alien leader, Anna (actress Morena Baccarin on the greenscreen stage), in an observation lounge on the mothership (virtual set); the camera pulls out (practical camera move) past the mothership windows to reveal the entire ship hovering over Manhattan (CG mothership over an original shot of the real Manhattan created for this production). The shot required cooperation between the LA and BC studios, and took a great deal of time and effort – “it was crazy,” Czukerberg said, but she adds that everyone involved is tremendously satisfied with the finished product.

Zoic Studios looks forward to doing more work when V returns next year, and helping the series become a ratings and critical success. “Rarely do you get an opportunity to redefine a classic series,” Orloff said. “Everyone at Zoic put their heart and soul into this show, and it shows on the screen.”

For more information: V on ABC; the first nine minutes of the pilot on Hulu; original series fan site.

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Re-Imagined ‘V’ Prompts Cheesy 80s Nostalgia

A cheesy 1980s rubber-mask David Icke Visitor from V.

I was 16 when the original V miniseries (if two episodes constitute a “miniseries”) premiered in 1983 on NBC, the network best known at the time for Knight Rider and Remington Steele. I liked V, if only because it was so much better than the original Battlestar Galactica, or any contemporaneous sci-fi show (Tron rip-off Automan, bizarre shape-changing drama Manimal).

Apparently, NBC’s Fall slate for 1983 was one of their least successful ever. (We Got It Made? The Yellow Rose? Anyone?) Good thing they had V, which did very well and led to both a sequel miniseries (V: The Final Battle, 1984) and a short-lived regular series (V: The Series, 1984-85).

This, despite the fact that V was pretty darn cheesy. One the one hand, it wanted to be a serious parable about the rise of fascism in the United States (right down to the Visitors’ swastika-like symbol); on the other, it featured bizarre 80s costumes, haircuts and makeup, subpar special effects, and Willie the Friendly Alien (a pre-Freddy Krueger Robert Englund). It also relied on the tired old War of the Worlds solution to an alien invasion: bacteriological warfare.

The new, re-imagined four-episode V miniseries premieres next Tuesday (11/3) on ABC. As a special bonus for Firefly flans and Zoic fans, the series features Firefly vets Morena Baccarin as Anna, the leader of the Visitors, and Alan Tudyk as FBI agent Dale Maddox. Zoic also handled the effects for the miniseries; an in-depth post will be forthcoming.

Also, on Sunday the Channel Formerly Known as Sci Fi will air an all day marathon of both original V miniseries.

Learn more: YouTube preview for the new ABC re-imagined series, intro to the 1984-85 TV series. And speaking of Firefly, Captain Tightpants Lives Again!

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