"Forbidden Planet": Artifacts from the Krell
A celebration of the technology behind "Forbidden Planet" which featured a screening and discussion.
A celebration of the technology behind "Forbidden Planet" which featured a screening and discussion.
Revolutionary developments in digital technology continue to impact every aspect of filmmaking. Cinematography in the Digital Age explored how current skills and techniques of cinematographers have evolved from traditional methodologies used when working with celluloid film.
Rawdon Hayne and Robert W. Jeffs of Leelium Tubelites received a 2002 Technical Achievement Award for their contributions to the development of internally lit balloons for motion picture lighting. The helium-filled balloons were designed to be usable indoors or out, quick to set up, and can light a large area.
The Aerohead motion control camera head and the J-Viz Pre-Visualization system, designed by Alvah Miller (pictured), Michael Sorensen and J. Walt Adamczyk, serves the needs of the live-action filmmaker and allows for sophisticated tiling and pre-visualization techniques. (2005 Technical Achievement Award)
In April 2010, Short Films and Feature Animation Branch governor Bill Kroyer led an evening focused on two Oscar-winning films – “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button” (2008) and “Avatar” (2009) – to demonstrate how innovations in performance-capture technology, digital doubles, digital makeup, photorealism and image manipulation are affecting actors.
In this landmark report, the Council examined ways in which the movie business and other industries handle long term storage and access of important digital data. The goal was to better understand the problems faced today and what, if anything, is being done to avoid full-fledged data access disasters down the road. The study’s surprising results have caused reverberations around the globe.