字幕表 動画を再生する 英語字幕をプリント 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 new ‘generative fill’ tool. 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, unlock productivity, and up level skills. 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.
B1 中級 米 The evolution of the movie backdrop(The evolution of the movie backdrop) 8 0 林宜悉 に公開 2024 年 02 月 24 日 シェア シェア 保存 報告 動画の中の単語