Animation Magazine - August #312 Special Siggraph Issue

Page 56

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Courtesy of Paramount Pictures, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures and Skydance.

VFX VFX

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The Way of the Samurai VFX supervisor Olaf Wendt takes us behind the scenes of Snake Eyes. By Trevor Hogg

A

n iconic ninja warrior in the G.I. Joe franchise gets his own movie with the release of the summer thriller Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins. The action-packed film is directed by Robert Schwentke (Flightplan) and stars Henry Golding, Andrew Koji and Úrsula Corberó. The storyline centers on the mysterious lone fighter who is trained by an ancient Japanese ninja clan called the Arashikage, but finds his loyalties tested when secrets from his past are revealed, as he eventually goes on the path to become the famous hero. The project utilizes practical and digital effects, with visual effects supervisor Olaf Wendt (Ad Astra) dividing 1,100 shots among Mr. X facilities in Toronto, Montreal and Bangalore. “Snake Eyes [Henry Golding] starts off as a streetfighter and ends up as this accomplished samurai in the Arashikage costume, which is where the story ends,” Wendt tells Animation Magazine. "You also have characters like the

Baroness [Úrsula Corberó] who are wellknown that enter the movie."

Sword Fights on Freeways

The production spent two months in Japan shooting at Himeji Castle, Kishiwada Castle and Horyuji Temple, as well as around Tokyo, Osaka and Hiroshima. “[Our director] Robert Schwentke was after something that still felt grounded in realism. One of the big things for him was to shoot in Japan to get this feeling of authenticity.

We were also working with a lot of Japanese crew and stunt guys. That was the starting off point. We’re still having sword fights on top of a car carrier whizzing down a Japanese freeway. The Arashikage have their own mythology and this special weapon called the Jewel of Amaterasu. Snake Eyes and Tommy/Shadow Storm [Andrew Koji] have superior fighting abilities, but they’re still [regular] people not superheroes.” The signature action scene where Snake Eyes jumps from vehicle to vehicle on a freeway was filmed in Vancouver. “We shot on an airstrip with

‘One of the big things for him was to shoot in Japan to get this feeling of authenticity. We were also working with a lot of Japanese crew and stunt guys. That was the starting off point. We’re still having sword fights on top of a car carrier whizzing down a Japanese freeway.’ — VFX supervisor Olaf Wendt

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Famestore Montreal animator Loïc Mireault gives us a tour of his WFH work-life balance.

1min
pages 65-66

Autonomous Animator

4min
page 64

A Noble Quest

7min
pages 62-63

Tech Reviews

8min
pages 58-59

Capturing Natasha Romanoff in Action

6min
pages 60-61

The Way of the Samurai

6min
pages 56-57

Reliving Moments of Truth

11min
pages 52-55

Which 3D Animation Jobs Are Right for You?

6min
pages 48-49

SIGGRAPH Spotlight

10min
pages 46-47

Interactive Immersion

8min
pages 44-45

Spinning New Tales

3min
page 43

Starfish Sidekick Takes Over

4min
pages 40-41

Drawn to the Marvel Universe

6min
pages 38-39

Musical Fantasy Misfits

6min
pages 36-37

The Mouse Is Back

3min
page 42

Delivering Smiles

6min
pages 34-35

Thoroughly Modern Hanna-Barbera Toons

7min
pages 30-31

A New Crew Clocks In

9min
pages 32-33

Senior Moments

4min
pages 28-29

A Fantastic Finale

6min
pages 24-25

Puppy Treat

6min
pages 20-21

A Magical, Mythical Tour

5min
pages 22-23

Stuff We Love

3min
pages 8-9

August Animation Planner

2min
pages 10-11

Cuban Rhapsody

8min
pages 16-19

LeBron Gets a New Dream Team

7min
pages 12-15

She Means Business

7min
pages 26-27
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