Showing posts with label ILM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ILM. Show all posts

Complete Star Wars Saga on Blu-ray


“The most anticipated Blu-ray release ever” begins the press release announcing the impending availability of the complete Star Wars Saga on Blu-ray.
Star Wars: The Complete Saga on Blu-ray will feature all six live-action Star Wars feature films utilizing the highest possible picture and audio presentation, along with three additional discs and more than 30 hours of extensive special features including never-before-seen deleted and alternate scenes, an exploration of the exclusive Star Wars archives, and much more.
Save up to $50 off the MSRP if you pre-order now via Amazon (Prequel Trilogy set; Original Trilogy set; The Complete Saga). Ship date: September 2011.

George Lucas To Donate More Than Half Of His Wealth To Education

In a letter dated July 16, 2010, Lucas has agreed that he will donate the majority of his wealth (a.k.a. more than 50 percent) to improving our schools through the George Lucas

Educational Foundation. In the letter, he cites the importance of technology in the classroom as well as a fear that the "education system as little better than an assembly line with producing diplomas as its only goal."


Read More at Cinema Blend

Vader Hammer Time



Happy Friday!!!


Rango



First official character poster for, Rango.
Industrial Light & Magic-animated feature about a “chameleon with an identity crisis,” co-starring Isla Fisher, Abigail Breslin, Alfred Molina, Bill Nighy, Harry Dean Stanton, Ray Winstone, and Timothy Olyphant.  A tentative release date has been set for March 4, 2011.



The first full-length trailer of the Gore Verbinski-helmed, Industrial Light & Magic-animated feature.

Opening Text for Empire Strikes Back


Behind the scenes look at the opening text 
crawl shoot for Empire Strikes Back.

just because...

Story, Story, Story...

I posted the hilarious 70 Minute Phantom Menace Review and now we have highly-anticipated review of Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones.  I know many young rising animation stars read this blog.  Please take from this...story is everything, not random characters that look kewl.  




Stan Winston 1946 - 2008

Stan Winston

STAN WINSTON

1946 – 2008

F/x master Stan Winston dies

Work included 'Jurassic Park,' 'Terminator'

By DAVID S. COHEN FROM VARIETY

Stan Winston, one of the great names in special effects, has died at age 62.

The Oscar-winning visual effects artist died at his home Sunday evening surrounded by family after a seven-year struggle with multiple myeloma, according to a representative from Stan Winston Studio.

Winston won visual effects Oscars for 1986's "Aliens, "1992's "Terminator 2: Judgment Day" and 1993's "Jurassic Park," for which he created animatronic dinosaurs that complimented the film's digitally-animated creatures. "Iron Man" visual effects supervisor John Nelson "Stan was the man when it came to making those kind of prosthetic effects, he was the guy. If you look at the litany of other good people in the business, they tend to be people who worked for Stan."

Stan Winston Studios did the practical Iron Man suit for this year's Marvel/Paramount blockbuster but Winston himself was not actively involved on set.

For decades, Winston's robotic/animatronic creatures were the best in the industry and his prosthetic makeup was among the best available.

"It was a perfect compliment to the stuff thwat we were doing," said Dennis Muren, who supervised the digital effects on "Jurassic Park."

"His creatures would work with the actors and when you put the two together the audience was confused, and sometimes we were too, about who had done what."

But Stan had always said it shouldn't be all one or all the other, it should be a combination of the two."

Eric Roth, executive director of the Visual Effects Society said "It's a big loss. Our industry has lost one of its giants, someone who has had a tremendous impact on helping tell stories with the use of effects."

The conference room at Winston's Van Nuys studio was long one of the most effective sales tools any effects company could hope for, with life-sized creatures including the original "Alien," the lunching out of the walls toward the conference table on all sides.

Winston is survived by his wife, Karen; a son, daughter, brother and four grandchildren.

From...First Showing.net



Pixar - A Human Story of Computer Animation





[Recorded May 16, 2005]
Brad Bird, Writer/Director, The Incredibles, Pixar Animation Studios, Ed Catmull, Co-Founder and President, Pixar Animation Studios, Alvy Ray Smith, Co-Founder of four centers of computer graphics excellence (Altamira, Pixar, Lucasfilm, New York Tech) and a Microsoft Fellow, Andrew Stanton, Writer/ Director, Finding Nemo, Pixar Animation Studios , and Michael Rubin, Moderator, Author of Droidmaker: George Lucas and the Digital Revolution.

Wowsie Wow...I heart Ed Catmull. Mr. Catmull, I would love to buy you a beer at Siggraph this year...please look me up? And, for anyone who hasn't seen the series Brad Bird talks about in this movie called - Family Dog (possibly my most favorite animated pilot ever) - go to my posted link below on the series.




Late Night at ILM

800 to 1...yeah, I think that is about right :)

ILM/Lucas Arts Parties

So, ILM/Lucas Arts have been sponsoring these parties in LA to try and recruit folks up north. I went to one in my Venice neighborhood at James Beach and met a bunch of my friends and some contributors to the book! After a long day of animating...free mojitos and food sounds pretty good! Here are some pix from that night...











Kevin Culhane and Katie Stokes model the book


Lori Frietag - pretty as can be and a great compositor!


Leigh Rens (book contributor), Alex Sokoloff and Kevin Culhane.


Pepe Valencia and Carlos Pedroza, amazing artists!


John Riggs, my favorite rigger at DD.


Anthony Ruey (Coordinator) and myself.


My girlfriend Liz stopped by...



Did I mention Riggs is my favorite rigger?