Thursday, September 15, 2005

Yay Subtlety!!!

If you haven't been able to tell already, I'm a sucker for the subtle stuff. Some people are all about the big movements, the physical stuff, etc..but me...give me a scene of subtlety.


It doesn't even have to be a long shot for me to be happy. If I can convey one emotion in a subtle way people can relate to, I'm one happy camper. I want to explore everything about conveying an entire emotional thought process with only the eyes and slight head shifts.


Like everyone, I'm still learning. There are a lot of times that I study life and see an amazing level of complexity in the movements people make with their head, their blinks, their eyes, their mouth, etc. I notice it a lot more when the person isn't acting for a camera...when they are being "real".


A lot of that complexity doesn't make it into animation. I think a big reason is it's really hard to plan for that stuff, and even if we shoot video reference of ourselves we tend to think about the action we have to do more than just being "in the moment." This creates a simplified more rehearsed look to our acting.

I feel that animation is too perfect. In real life we fumble, we make simple foot adjusts, we miss steps, our eyes double blink at random times, our eyes dart off in random places, our hands will miss their target, things slip from our grip, our head jerks, our brows will twitch, our mouths open and close when we aren't planning on it, etc... I think we can convey the feeling of witnessing a spontaneous action by releasing our hold on perfect movements.


If done correctly, I think these things should add a level of pleasing complexity to the overall feel of the animation. It should help cascade the viewer into a relationship with the character.

Sunday, September 04, 2005

Have you ever had your head incased in Jello?

Well I can officially say that I have!

I doubt there are many people that can say that lol. Tonight I went into the city and saw the Blue Man Group. I got pulled onto the stage as the "victim" for the finale of the show. They put me into a jump suit, put a motorcycle helmet on my head (I was blind inside the helmet..I think they painted the visor opaque). I was led downstairs..covered in paint, tied by my feet, pulled into the air upside down by a rope, and slammed into a giant canvas a couple of times. I guess it was called living art or something like that.

LOL

Then I was crammed into some small box and had to stick my head inside of a giant piece of Jello that was covered by a bucket. It was crazy. It was actual Jello. I was surrounded by it. It was cold and sticky and it was so close to my face that my nose was touching it. The box with the Jello was brought onto the stage and the blue men took the bucket off and revealed the Jello. Then they started poking and hitting at the Jello...ya know playing with it (btw my head was still inside of the Jello....lol it was very disorienting). Then they broke open the Jello and pulled my head through it. LOL...what a night.

Anyways, as odd as my night was...The Blue Man Group was kick ass, and I totally recommend it to everyone!