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Extract from Lokmer in an ezboard mailing list.
Bullet Time and Frozen worlds are two different iterations of the same effect,
called Virtual Camera Movement. Despite what the guys on the Matrix DVD would
have you believe, they did not invent this effect, nor did they revolutionize
the technology that makes this effect possible. Here's the dope:
Virtual Camera Movement (VCM) was developed in 1994. It has since been used
in a variety of motion pictures, including Lost in Space and The Matrix. There
are two separate patented systems that produce this effect for films: One which
takes a series of stills on still cameras triggered by computer ( reelefx.com/
) and is capable of full 360 degree arcs , and the other which passes motion
picture film through an array of lenses ( www.virtualcamera.com/welcome.html
and here is an article on it written by the inventor: www.virtualcamera.com/ascmag.html
) and is, at the moment, limited to arcs of around 90 degrees. Both methods
are patented and offered only through these two companies, as far as I know.
The latter is the original process, the former is the newer process and is the
one used in The Matrix and Lost in Space. Both are capable of producing frozen
moments (a.k.a. Frozen World) and Flo-Mo (a.k.a. Bullet time). The major contribution
that The Matrix team made to the process was adding 3D bullets with refracting
Nurbs shockwaves to the finished product, creating the illusion of Neo dodging
the bullets.
Personal rant:
Now, don't get me wrong, I loved The Matrix, but the FX were NOT revolutionary
(particularly this one). They were what most good effects are: minute adaptations
improvised upon tried and true technologies. However, listening to the Matrix
DVD commentary and the "What is Bullet Time" special, you come away
with the idea that they invented or at least seriously revolutionized the process
- an impression reinforced by their renaming the process to make it their own
- which is a total load of bullshit. To add insult to injury, they won the Oscar
over TPM, which, whether you liked it or not, was the most FX intensive film
in history. I loved the work they did on The Martix, I'm looking forward to
the next film, but one thing I really really hate is someone taking credit for
someone else's work, or drawing more attention to themselves than they're legitimately
due (i.e. arrogance and immodesty).
*End of Rant*