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Wachowski Brothers and the Speed Racer Movie 333

Steven Weintraub writes "Susan Sarandon talks about the Wachowski Brothers Speed Racer movie and confirms the revolutionary way the brothers are making the film — the entire frame will be in focus like a cartoon."
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Wachowski Brothers and the Speed Racer Movie

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  • I for one welcome our new always-in-focus overlords.
  • Focus is a tool (Score:5, Insightful)

    by suv4x4 ( 956391 ) on Monday August 27, 2007 @05:21AM (#20369345)
    Focussing on an object draws the people attention to it. It's used as an artistic tool. If everything is in focus, then the public will most likely not even notice (unless they specifically check for this).

    I hope they don't spend a lot of money/effort on this "feature", the way they did on the game-quality 3D graphics of the Burly Brawl (ref: Matrix 2).
    • Re:Focus is a tool (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 27, 2007 @05:24AM (#20369369)
      Maybe, just maybe they're a bit more imaginative than you.
    • Re:Focus is a tool (Score:5, Interesting)

      by 15Bit ( 940730 ) on Monday August 27, 2007 @05:43AM (#20369463)
      Then i guess they're going to have to use some other trick to draw the attention of the audience to what they want you to see. I guess there are a number of ways, have the characters more heavily coloured than the background (done very nicely by Spielberg in Schindlers' list with a red child on b&w background), have the characters much larger in frame than usual, maybe layer the background like a cartoon so that perspective is screwed up and the background seems 2D rather than 3D.

      There are other ways than depth of field to emphasize an object, but its not easy even in stills photography. In movies i'd guess its going to be very hard to get the right "look" consistently. Good luck to them.

      • Re:Focus is a tool (Score:5, Informative)

        by ajs ( 35943 ) <ajs.ajs@com> on Monday August 27, 2007 @08:25AM (#20370259) Homepage Journal
        Read TFA:

        They're doing something where they're layering film so that the front and the back are in focus like a cartoon [...] so they actually have to treat the actors in some way so we can hold our own with the background.
        So first off, it's not what the Slashdot summary says. It's going to have multiple planes of focus, but the entire frame will not be in focus. Think of an old cartoon where you had a foreground plane, an action plane and a background plane. It may look something like that, but of course, the real world has more in it than those three planes, so some things won't be in focus. No camera has an infinite depth of field, but it can be simulated by using multiple images, digitally composited. This is something like a focus bracket, which you can see a good example of in Wikipedia's picture of the day from April 18, 2007 [wikipedia.org] (I just happen to have remembered this because it's where I learned about the technique).
        • by joto ( 134244 )

          Think of an old cartoon where you had a foreground plane, an action plane and a background plane. It may look something like that, but of course, the real world has more in it than those three planes, so some things won't be in focus.

          How many "planes" the real world consists of is irrelevant. Unless you're doing extreme close-ups, using tele lenses, or wide-aperture light-sensitive lenses, a small, fixed number of films for a small fixed number of "planes" will be just fine. Remember, a normal, cheap cam

        • Re:Focus is a tool (Score:4, Informative)

          by Sparohok ( 318277 ) on Monday August 27, 2007 @12:39PM (#20373211)
          No camera has an infinite depth of field

          A pinhole camera has infinite depth of field. Of course it has some other problems, diffraction, sensitivity, etc.

          If you have enough light, fast film, and shoot with a tight aperture, you can get very wide depth of field. Just two or three "layers" would be enough for effectively infinite depth of field even at film resolution. However compositing the layers would be a bit of a chore. For a feature length film, the compositing process would need to be automatic, perhaps assisted with something like a scanning laser rangefinder.

          Martin
      • by Hoi Polloi ( 522990 ) on Monday August 27, 2007 @10:10AM (#20371111) Journal

        they're going to have to use some other trick to draw the attention of the audience to what they want you to see

        I prefer to have the subject circled with a big red arrow pointing at it.

    • by mwvdlee ( 775178 )
      Focus is just one of the many tools to draw attention to parts of an image. There's also things like color, scale, placement, saturation, intensity, shape, etc. And that's aside visual effects (it's based on a cartoon; perhaps cartoon outlines?). With motion pictures you can probably do a lot of stuff with motion or other time-based effects too, but that's not my expertise.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by El Lobo ( 994537 )
      That's not the real problem The real problem is that in*real life*, you ayes don't focus everything like on a cartoon, so you will get a (maybe very cool film) but with a very unnatural view, that eventiually will get your eyes tired trying to absorb every bit of information on it. Focus exists naturally as a filter to select the needed info and get lower priority to the rest.
      • by JanneM ( 7445 )
        Only the part you're looking at will be in focus; the rest will be out of focus. Just like in real life, where you don't have any externally imposed blur, just your own eyes looking at one part at a time.

        You don't get tired watching a two-hour cartoon, after all. Or spend a whole day reading stuff on a flat, in-focus surface.
    • by lawpoop ( 604919 )

      Focussing on an object draws the people attention to it. It's used as an artistic tool. If everything is in focus, then the public will most likely not even notice (unless they specifically check for this).

      Yes, focus is a tool, and if you use it all the time, it creates a mood or atmosphere for the film. Sort of like how the original matrix was in all green, to set the mood for the whole film. In another film, say, _Great Expectation_, the color green ( in objects, the color of a room, the color of a dress ) is used to highlight and communicate certain aspects of the film. I would say it all depends on how they use it and how well they pull it off.

    • Re:Focus is a tool (Score:4, Informative)

      by jafac ( 1449 ) on Monday August 27, 2007 @03:02PM (#20374837) Homepage
      personally, I think she misunderstood the technology they're shooting for; I think what they're probably doing is HDR cinema - where they're not doing infinite depth of field, (which is actually fairly easy to obtain with a wide aperture), but rather, a high dynamic range, which is a fairly new technology in digital photography, and some automatic cameras with this feature are just starting to appear. It wouldn't surprise me if there weren't people experimenting with it in cinema. The color effect would very likely be very Anime-like, from some of the HDR photography I've seen.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 27, 2007 @05:23AM (#20369363)

    I'm sorry a chimpanzee - he doesn't like to be called a monkey.
    The thing I wonder is: who is the other guard they were talking about?
  • Great... (Score:5, Funny)

    by Avenel ( 603755 ) on Monday August 27, 2007 @05:24AM (#20369371)
    Now when the theater projector is slightly out of focus you won't be able to see ANYTHING.
  • Wow. (Score:4, Funny)

    by Shag ( 3737 ) on Monday August 27, 2007 @05:25AM (#20369375) Journal
    So if I take a photo at, say, f/10 instead of my usual f/1.8, resulting in greater depth-of-field, this is revolutionary?

    How can I patent this?
    • Re:Wow. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by suv4x4 ( 956391 ) on Monday August 27, 2007 @05:36AM (#20369419)
      So if I take a photo at, say, f/10 instead of my usual f/1.8, resulting in greater depth-of-field, this is revolutionary?
      How can I patent this?


      What's revolutionary is they shoot every scene with several cameras at the same time (or several times with the same camera), using different focus planes each time to cover the entire depth range.

      Then they assemble them post-production and boost the saturation, for that very special cartoony-colors, always-in-focus look... otherwise known as how the photos of throw-away consumer cameras look like.

      Yea, all the wasted effort... keep in mind the movie took at least twice longer to shoot because they had to use blue screens even for a scene with nothing special in it (only to assist the post-production assembling of the planes).
      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Miseph ( 979059 )

        Yea, all the wasted effort... keep in mind the movie took at least twice longer to shoot because they had to use blue screens even for a scene with nothing special in it (only to assist the post-production assembling of the planes).
        --

        That sounds like the MO alright. I almost have trouble calling these guys directors, because I have in my head this silly idea that when more than half the stuff in the shot is computer-generated, it's not a live action movie anymore. Who Framed Roger Rabbit doesn't even hav

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 27, 2007 @05:29AM (#20369383)
    Goodness. That revolutionary way of composing a shot called deep focus http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep_focus [wikipedia.org] and used as far back as 1922? Pull me up a chair and pour me one of those newfangled qahwat al-bnn all those crazy kids are drinking these days!
    • by Detritus ( 11846 )
      Is that the same thing as when they use a telephoto lens to compress a shot? Commonly used in action movies when the hero is running towards the camera, away from something that is about to disappear in a huge explosion. It makes the scene look more dangerous than it really is.
      • by Eivind ( 15695 ) <eivindorama@gmail.com> on Monday August 27, 2007 @07:43AM (#20370017) Homepage
        There's two ways of getting a larger focused area with a single camera and a single lens. Both involve getting less ligth, so both will give higher noise, or force you to film at brigther light.

        First, like you say, go farther away and use a tele-lens to pull the foreground to the wanted size. This has the side-effect that, as you say, the background becomes bigger and appears closer to the foreground. (because what matters is the *relative* distance, having the actors 5 meters away and the explosion 50 meters away means the actors are 10 times closer. Having the actors 50 meters away and the explosion 100 meters away means the explosion is only twice as far away, so if you compensate by zooming until the actors are same size on screen, the end-result is a explosion that is visually 5 times larger than in the first case)

        Second, use a smaller aperture. With an infinitely small aperture, you get everything in focus, with a small aperture you get a very large focused area.
        • There's a third, but it's only really useful at a small scale. Put another lens between the foreground subject and the background.
    • by tgd ( 2822 )
      I suspect its not -- deep focus needs a lot of light and doesn't work well when moving.

      I'd bet this is multiple image sensors at the end of a split light path focused at two or more planes, with some hefty math to composite them.

      Remember these guys get boners for new camera tech.
    • by hal2814 ( 725639 )
      Hey, at least this time when the Wachowski Brothers get credit for something original that's really not original at all, it won't be for raping and pillaging the best ideas from mid-20th Century science fiction novels and short stories. Philip K Dick practically deserved writing credits for the first Matrix movie. I'm a lot less upset about them resurrecting deep focus as something new.
  • hmm... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Phybersyk0 ( 513618 ) <phybersyko@NOspaM.stormdesign.org> on Monday August 27, 2007 @05:30AM (#20369391)
    If everything is going to appear two-dimensional I wonder if the actor/background details will be minimised at all. Not really cell-shaded, but something less detailed.

    Surely they will follow much of the original Speed Racer construction formula and have lots of close-up shots, re-used footage and the same 4 panels of background speeding by as Speed and Racer X do their thing.

    If the story villains don't have polygonal moustaches than I'm not going.
  • Hmm (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Shinra ( 1057198 ) on Monday August 27, 2007 @05:30AM (#20369393)
    I'll reserve a judgment until I at least see a trailer of the movie.
  • Deep Focus? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by MikeyNg ( 88437 ) <mikeyng&gmail,com> on Monday August 27, 2007 @05:32AM (#20369399) Homepage
    OK, what's the difference between this and "deep focus"? When I first read this, I thought, didn't Citizen Kane (circa 1941) do this?


    So it would appear that they're making some differences with color, etc., but yeah - I'd like to see a still or two at least.

    • Re:Deep Focus? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Oktober Sunset ( 838224 ) <sdpage103@ y a h o o . c o.uk> on Monday August 27, 2007 @05:39AM (#20369441)
      the difference is they add the words 'like a cartoon' at the end, instantly making it both revolutionary and really cool.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by gowen ( 141411 )
      The difference is that Welles used deep focus because of his overarching artistic vision for Kane. The Wachowskis use it because they're talentless hacks who really, really like visual gimmicks. (Note how bad the Matrix sequels got once the original gimmick had got a bit repetitive).
    • Re:Deep Focus? (Score:5, Informative)

      by PhunkySchtuff ( 208108 ) <kai@automatic[ ]om.au ['a.c' in gap]> on Monday August 27, 2007 @06:22AM (#20369629) Homepage
      From what I can understand of what they're going to be doing in this movie - they're using CGI to compliment deep focus effects.
      Deep focus will still give you a depth of field, you just play around with everything in the frame to ensure it's within the hyperfocal distance of the lens.
      With this new one, they're taking it one step further - if two things need to appear in the frame, but it's not possible to have them both in focus, they'll be filmed separately and stitched together so absolutely everything is sharp and crisp...
      • if two things need to appear in the frame, but it's not possible to have them both in focus, they'll be filmed separately and stitched together so absolutely everything is sharp and crisp...

        This is EXACTLY how several shots in Citizen Kane were done where deep focus with one camera wasn't possible. I don't remember the name of the technique used to accomplish this in 1939, but it worked seamlessly and they didn't need CGI.
  • Great. (Score:3, Funny)

    by pojo_rising ( 1050134 ) on Monday August 27, 2007 @05:35AM (#20369407)
    Now we can have Persephone in focus ALL the time.
  • Brothers? (Score:2, Funny)

    by jayminer ( 692836 )
    As far as I know, they are not literally "brothers" anymore..
    • Re:Brothers? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Phybersyk0 ( 513618 ) <phybersyko@NOspaM.stormdesign.org> on Monday August 27, 2007 @06:14AM (#20369587)
      Who cares. What's really cool is that:

      1.) Kym Barret (The Matrix,Reloaded,Revolutions) will be doing the costume design.
      2.) John Gaeta (The Matrix, inventor of Bullet Time..) is the visual effects supervisor.
      3.) Owen Patterson (The Matrix, etc) is the production designer.
      4.) Peter Fernandez (The original American voice of Speed Racer) will have an appearance in the film.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Seumas ( 6865 )
        Yeah, but too bad it's for a cartoon that nobody under 40 remembers. Jesus, why not do a Mr. Magoo or Magilla(sp) Gorilla movie while you're at it?

        Wait, I think they did a Mr. Magoo actually... nevermind.
        • by mwvdlee ( 775178 )
          I rented that Mr. Magoo movie and tried to watch it three times. In the end I never got beyond the first 10 minutes. And I've been able to sit through some utter crap like Delta Farce and Aliens vs. Predator. It is, without doubt, the worst movie I ever tried to watch.
        • by dbcad7 ( 771464 )
          Or maybe Underdog ? ... yeah have high hopes for that one,
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Chyeld ( 713439 )
          Wouldn't a Mr Magoo film need the exact opposite effect? Everything out of focus?
    • by 3waygeek ( 58990 )
      You're half right; Andy is still Lana/Larry's brother.
  • It's the exact same effect you get when you shoot with a consumer DV camera and a small CCD? Awesome, now I'm on par with the big boys!
  • Perhaps they use tilt-and-shift lenses such as inherently used in large format cameras, and which can be bought at a high price for (D) SLR's...

    B.
  • Interesting cast (Score:2, Interesting)

    by ArcadeX ( 866171 )
    Speed Racer [imdb.com]
    Christina Ricci ... Trixie
    Emile Hirsch ... Speed
    Susan Sarandon ... Mom Racer
    Matthew Fox ... Racer X
    John Goodman ... Pops Racer
  • The distinction between focus and out-of-focus areas is one of the two (!) new things that photography brought to art (the other one being motion blur). While there are some situations where you don't want OOF areas (e.g., landscapes), it is artistically stupid to deliberately focus everything. New, yes, and technically innovative, possibly, but it's dropping one of the most powerful tools in your toolchest. It's like a painter only using a broad brush -- yes, you can do some nice things, but there are m
    • Be that as it may, isn't it a deliberate and valid artistic choice to go out of your way to avoid using that tool? Punctuation is a valuable tool for poets and authors, but at least one person made himself very famous by avoiding its use.

      Now, the disclaimer is that I'm hardly artistic, but from my perspective it seems to be just another stylistic choice if done deliberately. Of course, any new student artist could make a mistake and misuse or ignore a creative tool, but aren't "good" artists always findi
    • it is artistically stupid to deliberately focus everything.

      When we look directly at something, everything else in our field of vision goes blurry. But we don't notice that, because our brains automatically filter it out. Subjectively, our entire world always stays in focus, because wherever we look, we focus.

      Now, used "artistically"... Yes, blurry backgrounds force me to miss details that the director doesn't want me to know yet - Who blurrily crept up on the protagonist? Did that car in the backgro
  • 3d too I hope. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by B5_geek ( 638928 ) on Monday August 27, 2007 @07:49AM (#20370035)
    I wish that makers of 3D films (primarily IMAX) would do this. Too often I would get a headache from trying to focus on the 'out-of-focus' background stuff. I always found it difficult to keep my eyes only on what the filmmaker wanted.

  • the entire frame will be in focus like a BAD cartoon.

    There... corrected that for you...

    ...didn't Disney, even circa Snow White, have some sort of elaborate tower system for simulating "depth of field" with cells? Actually, I take it back - even BAD cartoons will often just have blur in the background to save money and allow re-use of shots (e.g. the transformation scene in just about every Japanese TV cartoon).

    To be fair, maybe the answer to making something look like a cartoon is to exaggerate the fl

  • Wow, have you seen HDTV quality movies? You can see every hair clearly.

    So now is the time that all-focus will contribute to the wow-effect.
  • I've read that with big screens and hi def people don't take in a whole picture like on an old 19" analog TV, they scan the "view" like in real life. How annoying when part of the virtual world is out of focus.

    I've already noticed that myself but, instead of thinking big like the Brothers, I've just mused that our local TV stations might have to invest, as practical, in lenses with somewhat better depth.
  • A few things in the interview suggest that they've actually captured multiple depth frames so they can turn the actors and props themselves into drawn style. It sounds like the backgrounds *will* be cartoons. This could be very wierd to watch - real human (and chimp) motion as a cartoon.
  • by clickety6 ( 141178 ) on Monday August 27, 2007 @08:17AM (#20370207)

    A film where the script, the acting and now the image are all flat and two-dimensional !

    Woo-hoo! Next they'll invent super-xylem vision, so they can all be wooden as well!

  • by zero_offset ( 200586 ) on Monday August 27, 2007 @08:32AM (#20370293) Homepage
    I'm getting a huge kick out of these heated debates over such a tiny bit of crappy information. Sarandon says she doesn't understand it, then proceeds to give a really crappy description which amounts to "everything is in focus" ... and suddenly the /. readership are experts on the subject (and why it has been done before, and how they'd do it better, and why one of the Wachowski brothers chopping his nuts off makes him a sister, etc etc etc).

    Personally I couldn't glean almost anything useful from the article.
  • Ironic (Score:4, Interesting)

    by devnullkac ( 223246 ) on Monday August 27, 2007 @08:33AM (#20370303) Homepage

    It's ironic that they would choose this movie to highlight such an effect. As a cartoon watcher in the 1970s, I noticed that Speed Racer was one of the few that would on occasion actually use out-of-focus backgrounds in some scenes.

  • "Susan Sarandon
    SLUT!!

    ...sorry, reflex.
  • by mattr ( 78516 )
    What she was mentioning could also be interpreted as a layman's impression of some kind of a high dynamic range setup. Like this camera [hdr-cam.com] for "photo-realistic lighting of CG characters" (a still camera). And look at this example of HDR motion blur [debevec.org], which would make a lot of sense in speed racer, as it would let them put more detail and brighter, more vivid color into the blur, which they could use to blur landscapes they are racing through, or CGI cars that are racing by the camera.

    They could be combining HDR
  • I love movies that use a gimmick right from the start. Such movies almost always tend to have bad writing/directing, and thus stink on the whole. I wonder if they've written an ending for this? The brother have three other writers working with them. Not many writing credits on them. Best movie of the bunch is Dragonheart. Most of the other titles are kind of embarrassing.

    Sigh.

    We'll see.

    Hey, you all notice that any picture of Trixie has an M on her shirt? That's because Trixie's name is Mitchi.

BLISS is ignorance.

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