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Scale on the Big Screen

 
 

Have you ever seen a movie and wondered, "How did they do that?" One reason why people go to movies is to be transported into a world where anything is possible. The art of special effects relies on how the human brain and eyes perceive the world. Like the magician who uses slight of hand, special effects use perspective and angles to trick the viewer into thinking that the scaled-down model—whether it's a gorilla, a spaceship, or the White House—is the real thing.

In the landmark 1933 monster movie King Kong, a 50-foot-tall king of the jungle rampages through New York City. To make this 18-inch miniature look real, animator Willis O'Brien used stop-motion animation. In this technique, the small-scale miniature Kong is moved through a range of motions and photographed one frame at a time with each movement. To create the illusion that the creature is moving, the frames are simply projected at the regular film speed of 24 frames per second.

When special effects designers re-created the Titanic ship for the 1997 movie, they built one side of a ship, just 1/20 of the scale of the big ship that went down in 1912. The real ship was approximately 883 feet long. Actually, two 45-foot models were created: one in perfect condition as it set sail, and one as it looks today. Producers combined the small-scale model with footage of white water and wakes and a matte painted sky background in a computer, and voila, the Titanic appeared to be crossing the Atlantic.

To make a scene like the White House explosion in the movie Independence Day, cinematographers shot the film faster than the normal 24 frames per second. Ironically, to create slow motion, you shoot the film faster. To judge how fast to shoot the film, directors generally take the reciprocal of the square root of the scale. So a model built at 1/16 scale would be shot 4 times as fast (the square root of 16) as normal. When you see the shot in slow motion, it looks as though it were a full-size explosion.

Like opening the curtain on the Wizard of Oz, uncovering the secrets of special effects is sometimes disheartening. But have no fear, the special effects "wizards of ahs" will no doubt continue to leave you wondering, "How did they do that?"

 

 

 

 

   
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