Saturday, May 10, 2014

creating stereoscopic 3d images


red/cyan (focus is on the left tree- the 3D isn't as impactful, but you can tell the tree is layered)




red/cyan
(whole image is blurry, but it works if you focus on my hands)




THE BEST!!!!

red/cyan


I found that the red/cyan glasses worked the best. THe last image with my zebra i tried with the green magenta and for some reason the 3D quality wasn't great





                                             

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Recreating lights in Maya

 
 
 
PHOTO 5802
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
RENDERED IMAGE
 
Rendered ~45 degrees


 
 
Image 5869 
 
 
RENDERED IMAGE
Render image ~ 45 degrees
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Monday, April 28, 2014

Building a Scene in Maya- bonus points (lighting)

"LM"- introducing lighting


 Light one: Directional



   Light two: Ambient Light




                                                                Light three: Spot Light



*Note that there isn't much difference in figure three from figure two. The addition of spot light is most noticeable on the "M" where the two triangles meet- the shade is lighter.



Thursday, April 24, 2014

Third term paper

My first two term score papers were 80 and 90, respectively; I will not be writing a term paper

Monday, April 14, 2014

Outline of third term paper- Specical Effects

 
It is very amazing to learn about how much time and how many special effects are needed in order to produce a movie that can look as realistic as possible. There is need for stunt men, scale models, dummies, various stages, and much, much more. Out of all the possible things needed to capture a satisfying visual, we will be looking at how directors attempt to create realistic jumps from very high places. The two films in this discussion will be the Titanic and and the Dark Knight Rises.
                        Titanic- When the ship hits the iceberg, the ship begins to sink and people begin jumping off. Already, the ship is actually just a large set in which people can act on. When the director needed to show a steeper degree of sinking, then the cameras were tilted more as they modified the back drops. To show that people were jumping from the tallest part of the ship, the actors were made to wear black suits and jump off small set ups with large ranging motion. Once the directors got these recorded they used the motion to catch the gravity and weight of the person in order to add CG to the rest of the fall. This was done because the actors, even the stuntmen, could get injured badly.
            Dark Knight Rises- In this movie, the director was all about doing as much as he could with actual events. There is a scene in the movie where the airplane gets damaged in the air. Rather than using scaling objects or CG in order to fulfill the action, the director actually has stunt men in the air hanging off of the airplane with the cameras rolling from inside a helicopter to catch the action.
Whether it was the time in which the movie was made or whether it depended on the director, the requirements for both jumps varied. However, both seemed very realistic. The shot in the Titanic was during the night, so the person falling from up high off the ship didn’t have to be clear, as long as the shadowed movements seemed real. In the Dark Knight, the fact that no special computer effects were used helped showcase the honest jumps in the particular scene.

Monday, April 7, 2014

Stop-Motion Animation



An Arizona having a bad day that is lured in to the building by some lady in a swim suit. He comes out a changed man after hitting the club.

I did a little improvising since my first idea was for the can to be lured into recycling with the help of a trail of Cheerios. I did this stop-motion on my own which is difficult to do. I held my camera and an improvised tripod at times to take all the stills and I slowly kept adjusting the can. Sometimes the can would fall over so I would lose the placement of the camera angle and it was difficult to readjust. Overall, it was entertaining watching my finished product. The beginning is an instrumental from a "sad" song, the laughter is Gabriel Iglesias during his standup, and the last song is Lil John's "Turn down for what."


Friday, March 28, 2014

FILM FESTIVAL 2014


 
 
I went to the 12pm showing of Victoriana. I was surprised to find that most of the fanatics at the film festival were adults who had bought passes. Even inside the theatre, I was 1 of about 6 in their 20's out of the other who were in their 40+. I had this naive misconception that only Hollywood can make good movies, but this movie was great! It started a bit slow, but as the movie progressed it became very interesting especially when their was an incident that was supposed to end in major jail time. After seeing what the artists are capable of I will defintely take great effort in catching their movies next time they are in town.

Friday, March 21, 2014

Science Fact or Cinematic Fiction


 

Cinematic Fiction

If you’re like me then going to the movies is for pure entertainment and scoping out science properties in physics in movie scenes is not part of the experience. You are purely involved in the movie that you just follow the storyline and all of the cinematic actions that come with it. However, sometimes the physical properties that are incorrectly expressed are so ludicrous that they become more obvious than normal. One concept that we will focus on will be the act of jumping. While we will look at jumping overall, the properties that are involved in a jump such as momentum, air resistance, and the force of a land, will be more closely speculated as they become violated in the featured films.

The Big Boss- In this Bruce Lee movie, Bruce Lee fights a crowd of opponents in the ice factory. During the fight he uses an opponent as a tactic to leap and land over to the opposite side from the crowd to get away. What is wrong with the scene is that Bruce Lee does not attempt to gain neither speed nor momentum in order to make this leap. He simply takes a couple steps, jumps on the man for extra cushion, and makes a great leap. There was no momentum from his simple two steps that would have allowed him such a great jump. In order for this attempt to be successful, one must first try to calculate in their head how far back to stand to create a runway to build speed. The only thing that can help get better height from the ground is by the force that one uses against the ground by lowering the body closer to the ground to push off. Now, if we want to involve direction in our action/reaction force, then there must be momentum which is created with motion and speed. If Bruce Lee just wanted to jump over the man with no arch motion and land close to his original spot, he could have done so by the amount of force that he used to push off the ground and by how fast the man was moving towards him. Because Lee was the one moving, he needed to add more steps to his running start to create a quicker motion and increase his weight as he landed on the man in order to jump off the man and land further away from the crowd as it was portrayed in the movie.
 
@ 0:32 sec
 

Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon- This film features Lucy Liu where she is dressed in all black attempting to fight a man in the dark hours of the night. This fighting scene has a few properties out of place, but there is one in particular where her jump is unrealistic. The actress decides to jump during her fight, but seems to defy gravity and air resistance. Instead of going up in motion and then coming back down from her jump’s apex, she glides in mid air for a few seconds; ultimately, making air resistance and gravity zero longer than what would’ve been appropriate. Whether it is an object or a human, anything that pushes itself off the ground goes up and then comes down, while experiencing a point where the entity stays in mid air for a certain period of time known as the apex. Sometimes there is an arc that is noticeable and sometimes there isn’t during the motion. There is nothing about Liu’s jump that would cause her apex to withstand for more than a few seconds since gravity is quickly pulling her down after she has gone against it during her jump. With this said, it is obvious that the character is not following the laws of physics.
@ 0:54 sec
 

Iron Man- This movie involves super strength powers that seem realistic, yet defy some properties while in action. There is a scene in which Iron Man leaps and lands with his fist to the ground that creates a huge crack effect on the ground. While his landing force may potentially have the power to break the cement, his force onto the ground was not reciprocated as any force acted on any object is supposed to do. Iron Man was not affected from the land at all, which in turn violates the law of physics in action and reaction. Whenever there is a force acted upon an object, the same force used in principal must be the same force that is returned. For example, when a man punches another man in the face, then the force of the fist gives the man a bloody eye, but in return the same force breaks the man’s knuckles simultaneously. In comparison, the force that Iron Man used when he put his fist to the ground should have acted on him as well and resulted in severe damage to himself. If it was not to kill off their superhero in a cool stunt, the Iron Man would have broken a lot of bones and would have ruined his awesome gear.


@ 0:13 sec

Ultimately, while these films may have intended to produce the most realistic scene possible they failed to follow through. In each scene, the character is depicted as doing everything right in order to jump, but whether it is the preparation, the act or the final step, one thing is out of place failing to generate full reality. Because the movies referenced involve sometime of hero or heroine, it is safe to say that these fabricated actions were meant to give the character more credibility as a fighter. For Bruce Lee it depicted him as the man that can do it all with little effort. For Lucy Liu’s character, it showed her savvy ways of combat. And finally for Iron Man, it helped keep his character persona as a cocky superhero that always knows how to make a big entrance anywhere he landed. Regardless, these scenes were not what a physicist would like to see because of the errors they contain. Hopefully, they don’t hate going to the theatre because of this.

 

 

 

Friday, March 14, 2014

Outline of Second Term Paper


            If you’re like me then going to the movies is for pure entertainment and scoping out science properties in physics in movie scenes is not part of the experience. You are purely involved in the movie that you just follow the storyline and all of the cinematic actions that come with it. However, sometimes the physical properties that are incorrectly expressed are so ludicrous that they become more obvious than normal. One concept that we will focus on will be the act of jumping. While we will look at jumping overall, the properties that are involved in a jump such as momentum, air resistance, and the force of a land, will be more closely speculated as they become violated in the featured films.

The Big Boss- In this Bruce Lee movie, Bruce Lee fights a crowd of opponents in the ice factory. During the fight he uses an opponent as a tactic to leap and land over to the opposite side from the crowd. What is wrong with the scene is that Bruce Lee does not attempt to gain neither speed nor momentum in order to make this leap. He simply takes a few steps, jumps on the man for extra cushion, and makes a great leap. There was no momentum from his simple two steps that would have allowed him such a great jump.

Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon- This film features Lucy Liu where she is dressed in all black attempting to fight a man. This fighting scene has a few properties out of place, but there is one in particular where her jump is unrealistic. The actress decides to jump during her fight, but seems to defy gravity and air resistance. Instead of going up in motion and then coming back down from her jump’ apex, she glides in mid air for a feJuw seconds; ultimately, making air resistance and gravity zero.

Iron Man- This movie involves super strength powers that seem realistic, yet defy some properties while in action. There is a scene in which Iron Man where he leaps and lands with his fist to the ground that creates a huge crack effect on the ground. While his landing force may potentially have the power to break the cement, his force onto the ground was not reciprocated as any force acted on any object is supposed to do. Iron Man was not affected from the land at all, which in turn violates the law of physics in action and reaction.

Ultimately, while these films may have intended to produce the most realistic scene possible they failed to follow through. In each scene, the character is depicted as doing everything right in order to jump, but whether it is the preparation, the act or the final step, one thing is out of place in order to generating reality.

 

 

 

Sunday, March 9, 2014

Reverse Video Reference

 

 
 

Walk A
 
 
Walk B

 
 
 
Walk C
 
 
 

Walk D

Sunday, March 2, 2014

Stop Motion Animation of Falling





















I began by looking for any action figures around the house. Figuring out what they were going to do was the hardest of the whole process. After deciding the action in the video, I began by placing the figures where I wanted them and took multiple shots with my camera phone. I uploaded them to computer and got to work. I do not have photoshop, so I proceeded to use windows movie maker. I shortened the time length for each frame for the slideshow to go quicker. After many attempts to upload the short film onto the blog, I had to resort to recording the video with my Canon while it played on my laptop screen. Sorry for the poor resolution.

THE END

Monday, February 24, 2014

The Lion King



The lion King
The featured animated film gives life to animals with human characteristics. While doing its best to maintain all natural scenes, the artist fails to maintain the laws of physics in order to entertain or to illustrate a more dramatic effect. It does so by inaccurate arc of motion, and unexplainable events are cause by improbable actions. The Lion King movie, my favorite, is a children’s musical classic filled with beautiful music and entertaining characters. This film was released in 1994 by Walt Disney’s Pictures and produced by Walt Disney’s Feature Animation. 
The award winning film focuses on Simba, a lion next in line to be king after his father Mufasa. When Simba is fooled to believe his uncle of murdering his own father, he relinquishes his home at Pride rock and lives in exile. After leaving, he befriends a Meer cat and a hog who care for him and  teach him their way of life after he is found passed out from dehydration as a young cub. Simba, then, finds himself meeting a former lioness friend from the past who has told him that he was thought dead amongst the others  and how he is needed to defend the land that belongs to him, which has become empty, dry, and ugly. Simba becomes convinced that he must return to save his land from his uncle Scar and in the process finds out Scar’s nefarious actions. Scar admits to killing Mufasa, his brother, and the battle begins.
Throughout the movie, Walt Disney does a good job in keeping the physics elements in mind and it is seen throughout the movie. However, there are scenes in the movie in which the world that Simba lives in, breaks the rules of gravity, paths of action, and improbable arc motion: One scene from the movie in which the laws are defined is when the bird Zazu, Mufasas wing man, is caught by the hyenas at the dead elephant’s graveyard. The hyenas being more playful than harmful put him in a crater filled with lava AKA the “birdie boiler” at the moment. When the pressure from the birdie boiler reaches its maximum it sends the bird flying through the air and out of the frame. The direction that the bird followed was not ordinary. Rather than reaching its apex and falling back down, the director add more effect on the scene by having turn a slight direction towards the left side and out of the frame to indicate that zazu has been thrown so high up in the air and out of sight. There was fire in his trail up into the abyss as if indicating that he was some type of rocket. When forced into the air, he is neither flying nor given any type of implementation that that was what he wanted to do. With that being said, the director portrayed the idea that this small boiler was the only entity that pushed him through the air.
 In addition, one of the most iconic scenes of the lion king of Scar and his nephew uses improbable arc motion. Scar and Simba have been fighting back in forth when Scar manages to throw Simba onto the ground at Pride Rock. At this moment Scar throws himself over the blazing fire divider by jumping to reach Simba’s side. One would expect that as an animal, the audience would see Scar’s head followed by the rest of the body during his jump, rather than the whole body all at once like a human.  At the apex of the motion arc, the character’s body is prolonged in mid-air for a more dramatic effect which in turn gives the ability of the artists to not give him a more accurate arc motion because it is no longer the focus-the audience cibcebtrates more on the awe of the dramatic jump rather than it’s precision of motion. The scene represents the idea that these animals require some level of human characteristics in order for the emotional appeal to take effect. The animals are given a level of some human facial characteristics as well as being able to make impressions as a human. This jump looked more of that of a human making the jump as opposed to a lion making the jump.
Improbable causes. After Nala reunites with Simba and tell him of everything that is going wrong at Pride Rock, Simba is filled with confusion and seeks peace among the jungle. When found by rafiki, the baboon, he is lead through the jungle until they reach a body of water. Out of nowhere, clouds begin to move with no sign of a change of weather or any outside force. The clouds begin to merge together to form the body if Mufasa. While this action in the scene was intended for Simba to gain wisdom from his father , the way it all took place was by mysterious action of forces. The bamboo corrected Simba when Simba asked if he knew his father. The bamboo said correction “I know your father,” as if Mufas was still alive. When the mirage of Mufasa appears distinctively in the clouds one is able to understand why the bamboo would say such a thing but all be able to know that this doesn’t happen in the real world. The next scene is at the water hole where Simba and Nala go to play. The whole illustration of the savannah scenery turn to various colors for no reason. This begins when Simba starts to sing. This give the movie a colorful playful scene for the audience to enjoy .
While the film did its best to demonstrate action by animals with human characteristics was, overall, well done. They artists studied each animal and their movements in order to execute them on the film. Although given human characteristics, the artist successfully kept the vital instincts of a lion, not losing the effect and purpose of the entire movie.

SCENES REFERENCE :
Scar jumping over the fire: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1tawPobeCIk












Thursday, February 6, 2014

Tracker Video Analysis of falling kid's ball.


Tracker Video Analysis of Ball






Copy of frame. I hope we get to use more of this program in the future. It seems very interesting.





Whole video of project. 

Monday, February 3, 2014

Video Reference






Three frames capturing a water bottle at different stages in a toss in the air. 

                                             
                           



                                  



Took this at work last night. I threw the bottle in the air many times because the first few heights of my throws varied a lot.

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Mini-Portfolio

 
* This is a scene from the Disney movie The Lion King.
 
 


https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=the+lion+king+mufasa+mufasa+mufasa&sm=1



 

http://www.fact.co.uk/media/2771214/Wall-e%203.jpeg

I chose this image of Wall-e, because I love how anything could be shown having human characteristics with animation.



I chose the Simpsons' opening frame because there is so much creativity that goes on every opening sequence. The opening sequence follows a structure while the ending always ends differently which is very amusing.

About myself:

I am a fourth year economics student and I am proud to say I am a huge Lion King fan! The clip above is by far one of my favorite scenes of all time. I use to watch this movie a few times a day back-to-back as a child. I am currently trying to add a swimming course to my schedule just for the potential workout time in the pool. I have only taken one art class and that was photo 40. While in college I plan to start my own stock portfolio when I get the chance and after college I plan to be a financial advisor.

Friday, January 24, 2014

The first post

Maria Martinez

Maria Martinez

I clearly have no idea if I am doing this correctly so bear with me.

I am an Econ major, 22, and ready for the beach this summer!

Liz Martinez