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An Introduction to Computer Animation Dr Ian Palmer Electronic Imaging & Media Communications Department University of Bradford.

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Presentation on theme: "An Introduction to Computer Animation Dr Ian Palmer Electronic Imaging & Media Communications Department University of Bradford."— Presentation transcript:

1 An Introduction to Computer Animation Dr Ian Palmer Electronic Imaging & Media Communications Department University of Bradford

2 Outline  In the beginning  Some computer graphics basics  Digital animation in the entertainment industry  Special effects  Animation  Today and the future 1

3 1979-2002 2

4 Early days Mid-nineteenth century: Zoetrope –Individual images on the perimeter of a wheel –Wheel rotated and images viewed through a fixed slot Turn of the century: Film –Allowed production of individual frames –Winsor McKay’s “Gertie the Dinosaur”

5 The birth of animation 1930’s: Walt Disney –Use of transparent cels to produce layered images –Animation moves from novelty to mass entertainment and art form 1930’s: Willis O’Brien –Stop-action model animation in “King Kong” set a standard for special effects animation

6 Traditional animation  One hour of animation on film (24fps) requires 86,400 frames  If frames are generated one by one this is an enormous task  Key-framing was first used for feature length animation by Walt Disney  ‘Master’ animators draw the key positions  Less experience animators draw in-between frames

7 The use of computers 1970’s: First use of computers –New York Institute of Technology –2D in-betweening –3D in-betweening 1980-90’s: Advanced techniques –Motion capture –Dynamics and kinematics –Procedural and character systems

8 Some computer graphics basics  Computers must store models of objects to allow them to be animated.  Most models stored as a set of points that are connected together to form polygons, and then a number of polygons are connected to form a ‘mesh’

9  These object meshes can then be ‘moved’ through the 3D world - 3D animation  To show this on traditional displays (e.g. TV and film) a 2D picture has to be created of the 3D world - this is called rendering  All methods are based on some aspect of modelling the way light behaves  A common one is ray tracing which calculates how rays of light travel and are reflected from objects Some computer graphics basics

10 Ray tracing

11 Animating  Once we have a way of creating objects and generating pictures of them, we need to animate them  We can key frame them in three dimensions lw

12 First major example: Tron  1982: Disney produce a film which contains a substantial amount of computer generated imagery (15 minutes!)  Landmark in digital animation, but a commercial failure 3

13 After Tron  Digital animation retreated back into the research laboratory for the next few years  But another technique and landmark film hit the screens in 1982: The Wrath of Khan  Particle systems - a collection of small objects that combine to produce the desired effect 4

14 Particle system Some phenomena are made up of tiny particles, each of which is individually (virtually) invisible It is the combination of many thousands or millions of these particles that produces the effect Particle system is a collective name for the approach that attempts to approximate fire, smoke, etc. by producing a system of individual elements that collectively produce the desired effect There is no ‘surface’ as such (just as in a real fire the flames have no surface)

15 Meanwhile...  John Lasseter, inspired by Tron, was trying to convince Disney that digital animation was viable  Produced short animations, including the Oscar nominated Luxo Jnr (1986) Luxo Jnr 5

16 Back in the special effects department: The Abyss (1989)  Modelling of a fluid creature  Modelling flexible bodies & reflections  Convinced John Cameron that SFX could play a major part in a movie 6

17 1991: Terminator 2  Used similar techniques to The Abyss for many of the effects  Motion capture of actors  Hollywood now convinced - birth of the ‘SFX movie’ 7

18 Motion capture  We can attach motion sensors to different parts of the body of an actor and then use the appropriate channels to drive the motion of parts of a character  When the actor moves, the character is driven in real time

19 1993: Jurassic Park  Behavourial modelling  E.g. flocking of birds and animals  Each object must try and match the velocity of its neighbours whilst avoiding collisions and trying to remain close the the centre of the ‘flock’  Such animation makes the automated process of animated large numbers of (almost) identical objects much faster 8

20 1995: Toy Story  The first feature length digital animation (79 minutes)  114,240 frames  800,000 rendering hours  3.5 minutes a week produced on average  Example character: Buzz  34,846 lines of code  700 separate animation controls  Quality of Disney applied to a 3D world 9

21 1997: Titanic  Procedural modelling  All modelling and animation is described by a (usually text- based) scene file  This is in a scene description language and is usually created by using an interactive package initially but may be edited  The scene file contains procedures that define the animation, hence the name procedural modelling 10

22 1999: The Matrix

23 2001-3: Lord of the Rings  Combines state of the art techniques with older methods  Vast amount of special effects  Only now is it possible to create Tolkien’s vision

24 Today  Mass produced TV digital animation  Starship Troupers, Max Steel, Excalibur…  Many SFX based movies (and many with little or no plot!)  Hugely successful CG movies: Finding Nemo the most successful animated film ever  Tools make it much easier to produce all kinds of computer animation... 11 & 12

25 Today & the Future  Driving forces are the film industry and the computer games industry  New tools and research are making the production process much easier  Complete virtual actors with autonomous behaviour


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