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Hello Everyone I am once again back with another query I just wanted to know how does Wonder woman and Doomsday perform a jump like this and how to achieve it
A clip after that
How to get this effect done
Doomsday charging and wonder woman charging HELP????
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What effect are asking about? What do you need help with? You're just asking how it's done? It's done by an elite team of artists and others with years of experience in every aspect of CGI & special effects. Even if someone here took the time to breakdown how it MIGHT have been done it would likely sound like a foreign language.
It was done with careful planning, computer controlled camera rigs, 3d modeling, rigging, texture mapping, MoCap, advanced particle simulations, expert digital lighting, painting, & animating. And all that's before it ever reached After Effects for compositing and color correcting etc.. if After Effects was even used at all.
Here's adocumentary about ILM that briefly touches on common techniques used to create special effects.
Industrial Light & Magic creating the impossible FULL HD - YouTube
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I am asking about just the way the characters are performing jumps towards each other..
So my question is
How it is done?
What requirements do i need to execute such a thing.???
How much it will cost??
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It looks to me like they modeled, & textured both the characters and the environment. Then they rigged the characters and either animated or digitally captured the performance. Then I think they added various particle simulations for the smoke and fire. Then probably someone did the lighting. All of that was likely done in one or several full featured 3D applications like Maya or Houdini.
Finally I would assume it went to a compositing program for color correction, compositing and post effects.
What would it require? It would require learning how to model, rig, texture, light, animate in one or more 3d applications as well as advanced knowledge of dynamic particle simulation. Then, assuming you can't afford a MoCap stage, it would require learning the animating tool set of one of the 3d apps. Once you've got all that down you can start the animating process. I'm assuming the environment was digitally modeled. I could be a physical scale model with a motion controlled camera.
From there you would need to know a tiny bit about rendering everything out in the correct passes and file formats so you can bring them into a program like After Effects and begin the compositing & post effects.
How do you do it?: I don't know, precisely.
How much does it cost? The shots you're asking about probably cost tens of millions of dollars & a team of artists with a combined learning period of between 5 to 20 years, or more.
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The first shot:
The second shot:
You can go a long way toward creating similar effects through careful planning and careful camera work. You won't be successful if you just go out and shoot something then try and put together all of the elements that you require for the scene.
If you really want to learn how to do this kind of stuff, the principals are all pretty much the same. Plan, separate elements into things you can either film or create, carefully execute the blocking (how the actors move in the scene and how the camera moves) and then start building the composite. I suggest that you read some books on visual effects and start small. Just learning how to separate an actor from the background successfully can take several days.
I hope this helps. Books I have in my Library that I have studied:
The Filmmaker's Guide to Visual Effects
The Art and Science of Digital Compositing
And nobody should approach any visual effect without reading and understanding The Illusion of Life .
This great tutorial from Red Giant isn't what you asked for but it will help: Red Giant | Cheap Tricks #4: Aquaman Underwater Effects - Part 1
and Part 2 is even more fun:
When you search for tutorials make sure you vet your trainers. Most of the new tutorial I see folks having problems with are made by amateurs that don't really know what they are doing. There is a lot of bad advice out there.
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