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  • If you're on the film side of TikTok like I am,

  • you may have seen videos going around

  • that show what famous movies

  • would look like if they were framed for our phones.

  • They're kind of sick!

  • And they all seem to have been released

  • right after the debut of Photoshops

  • newgenerative filltool.

  • As the name implies,

  • the tool allows you to generate imagery

  • with a simple text prompt.

  • And these videos, they're using this tool

  • as a really technologically advanced filmmaking technique,

  • one that's been used for over 100 years...

  • Albeit, with a totally different skill set.

  • So will A.I. be the next evolution of the matte painting?

  • when it comes to traditional matte paintings,

  • You might think of something like this from The Wizard of Oz.

  • Dorothy and friends are real,

  • but the Emerald City isn't really there.

  • It's just an illustration.

  • Using this technique,

  • filmmakers were able to make an impossible world

  • look real, at a much cheaper price tag

  • than building a full set.

  • This one was made with crayons,

  • but usually matte paintings are painted on glass,

  • like in Mary Poppins...

  • ...or Star Wars,

  • which is maybe the best example, because, you know,

  • everybody like Star W-

  • I was never a Star Wars fan, which is hard to admit for me.

  • It was Alien, Blade Runner,

  • when The Matrix came out was th like... my final like, what is that?

  • I want to do that for a living.

  • I'm Maxx Berman, I spent over a decade working

  • as a matte painter in film and games

  • and I'm the co-founder of Kitbash3D.

  • Maxx is here to help me explain how matte paintings

  • went from oil paint on glass... to this.

  • in terms of the transition from traditional to digital,

  • there's a couple of chapters of this,

  • the first one is Photoshop.

  • We can paint in layers

  • and layers changes everything for us.

  • We can go backwards and forwards.

  • We can be working on the background

  • and the foreground separately, and having every brush

  • imaginable, and every color imaginable.

  • Now, this is the first digital matte painting.

  • And it still feels like a painting because it kind of was

  • The tools were different, but

  • we brought a painting technique to that digital.

  • Then we kind of moved into

  • what's called photo bashing.

  • I did a film called Her,

  • I was responsible for doing all the matte paintings of future L.A.

  • I had backpacked through Southeast Asia

  • for about six weeks with a camera, so I would be pulling

  • from all of those photographs from my travels to say,

  • what if we used, kind of, Bangkok a starting point?

  • And then we modified the architecture

  • to look more like the L.A.?

  • So did traditional matte painters see photo

  • bashing as a sort of cheat?

  • Like, whoa, you don't have to paint anything anymore?

  • That's not fair.

  • some of the other

  • more senior matte painters would be like,

  • What the hell are you doing over there?”

  • Every era of a technology change,

  • it's looked at as cheating until it becomes commonplace.

  • We'll hear more about the

  • next big step forward in matte painting

  • after a message from this video’s sponsor.

  • This episode is presented by Microsoft Copilot

  • for Microsoft 365: Your A.I. assistant at work,

  • Copilot can help you solve your most complex problems at work.

  • Going far beyond simple questions and answers

  • From getting up to speed on a missed Team's meeting

  • in seconds, to helping you start a first draft faster

  • in Word, Copilot for Microsoft, 365

  • gives everyone an AI assistant at work

  • in their most essential apps, to unleash creativity,

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  • And it's all built on Microsoft's

  • comprehensive approach to security,

  • privacy, compliance, and responsible A.I.

  • Microsoft does not influence

  • the editorial process of our videos,

  • but they do help make videos like this possible.

  • To learn more, you can go to Microsoft.com /copilotforwork

  • Now back to our video.

  • The next big step forward for matte painting

  • was to push those 2D layers into 3D space.

  • which Maxx did on Iron Man 3,

  • using the compositing program Nuke.

  • For those shots,

  • I painted a bunch of clouds and they were all on layers

  • and then I painted the landscape and the sky behind it.

  • All of that was set up as a projection

  • so that as we moved the camera with Iron Man back,

  • you could see the clouds moving, and him

  • getting further and further away from the shoreline.

  • Yeah, I actually found this example really interesting

  • because Iron Man is already being made in 3D,

  • so why not just make the whole shot 3D?

  • It is way cheaper and easier

  • and and more achievable to paint a photorealistic cloud

  • than it is to do a 3D simulation of a realistic cloud,

  • at least in that time.

  • So for a lot of those more expansive establishing

  • shots, bringing in a matte painter

  • could circumvent a lot of that.

  • But 3D tools caught up.

  • it is just as fast, if not faster today

  • to actually create

  • that environment in 3D than it would be in 2D.

  • Maxx's company actually helps

  • speed the process up in some ways.

  • Their pre-built assets are meant

  • to be dragged and dropped, helping

  • artists quickly build worlds

  • like you can see in this teaser for their Manhattan kit.

  • If you're using our Manhattan kit,

  • you're using the same exact thing that

  • Doctor Strange is using on their films.

  • Technology's getting a lot better these days.

  • Rendering and computing is cheaper than ever.

  • And because of that, you know, the need for a 2D artist

  • is becoming less and less valuable.

  • But what about a 2D artist

  • that can make a matte in seconds?

  • Now, I am not skilled enough to have ever pulled

  • anything like this off on my own.

  • But even artists who do have those skills

  • might one day have to start adding A.I.

  • to their toolbox.

  • I think it's just early days in this tool

  • we have some more work to do.

  • as someone who's learned how to communicate via

  • visuals composition, lighting, color,

  • all of these are my ways of expression,

  • and these are not the things that today

  • A.I. is picking up working with

  • Tools like Nvidia's A.I.

  • Canvas could begin to bridge that gap, as it takes

  • simple brushstrokes and transforms them

  • into photorealistic images.

  • But obviously, these tools aren't the same as a paintbrush.

  • Digital or physical.

  • Because with this, what you see is exactly what you get.

  • With these tools,

  • there's a gap between

  • what you put in and what you get out of it,

  • Getting exactly what you want

  • ends up being an iterative process,

  • often involving dozens of prompts, plus

  • some paintbrush tinkering in Photoshop or another app.

  • So right now,

  • these tools are thriving with individual creators.

  • But in Hollywood...

  • I have not seen anyone or any production

  • utilize it in production

  • and I think there's a couple of reasons for it.

  • One, it's not there yet.

  • It's close and it's getting better real quick,

  • but it's not there today.

  • The other part of it is the legalities

  • of you know, who owns the work that's being generated,

  • who owns the data that it was trained on.

  • ultimately, it's going to change everything.

  • I think we can't deny that.

  • And ultimately,

  • human plus computer beats

  • human and beats computer.

  • It is the marriage of these two

  • in which technology's always shined.

If you're on the film side of TikTok like I am,

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The evolution of the movie backdrop(The evolution of the movie backdrop)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2024 年 02 月 24 日
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