Completed a nine month assignment in India with Prime Focus World on the new film: Sin City, A Dame to Kill For. This was an exciting and demanding project.
"It's all about the post-production
on a movie like this" www.toplessrobot.comI spent the first couple of months with the title of PreComp Supervisor. This involved
training, organizing and supervising a team of junior compositors to de-noise plates and pull basic keys in NUKE. During my leadership, we completed about 1260 of the 2500 shots -- just over half. This was a great assignment, as I had some time to do develop and do some training of the team in my keying methods.
Then I was moved over to Sequence Supervise a big bunch of shots, heading one of several teams. My team and I did lighting and final renders and put out comps on over 300 shots in 6 months. All the shots involved building virtual sets and massive amounts of in-comp color grading to get the on set lighting to work with the style of the film and lighting of the sets. On another 100 or so shots I did some prep work and planning, ordering paint, roto etc. from support departments, then management rebalanced shots with new teams, so I can't really count these in my shot tally. Generally, my supervisory role involved interpreting instructions from the VFXSupervisors and Director to the team, quality control, NUKE template development, ad hoc training, one-on-one working with artists in NUKE and MAYA... plus looking ahead.
In addition, while at PFW, I also worked as a VFX Training Consultant with Michael Pecchia, Director of VFX Training, drawing up a complete training outline for new compositors.
One of my shots from the trailer. Dwight (Josh Brolin) has something on his mind. Not the final version. opens 22 August 2014 source:www.toplessrobot.com |
More than that I cannot say, after all, every company has its NDA secret recipes! I can say that the recent merger announcements are great news and will greatly effect VFX post worldwide. (http://www.primefocusworld.com/)
This was my third tour in India, where I previously worked for Reliance Media Works and GEON Studios. I stayed this time at the wonderful Renaissance Marriot at Lake Powai.
Working and living in India is always a challenge -- far from home, family and friends; a change in diet, climate, and tempo. But after a short adjustment period, you get into the groove. The people are like people everywhere in a huge metropolis - stressed. But they were also friendly and pleasant. There is also enormous poverty counterbalancing enormous wealth. The crew and management were excellent to work with, as I said before. I look forward to going back again.