WEBVTT 00:00:00.790 --> 00:00:06.881 The filmmaker Georges Méliès was first a magician. 00:00:06.881 --> 00:00:13.641 Now movies proved to be the ultimate medium for magic. 00:00:13.641 --> 00:00:19.122 With complete control of everything the audience can see, 00:00:19.122 --> 00:00:23.479 moviemakers had developed an arsenal of techniques 00:00:23.479 --> 00:00:27.773 to further their deceptions. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:27.773 --> 00:00:32.588 Motion pictures are themselves an illusion of life, 00:00:32.588 --> 00:00:36.431 produced by the sequential projection of still frames, 00:00:36.431 --> 00:00:41.299 and they astonished the Lumière brothers' early audiences. 00:00:41.299 --> 00:00:43.995 Even today's sophisticated moviegoers 00:00:43.995 --> 00:00:46.915 still lose themselves to the screen, 00:00:46.915 --> 00:00:50.595 and filmmakers leverage this separation from reality 00:00:50.595 --> 00:00:53.142 to great effect. 00:00:53.142 --> 00:00:57.452 Now imaginative people have been having fun with this 00:00:57.452 --> 00:00:59.521 for over 400 years. 00:00:59.521 --> 00:01:03.322 Giambattista della Porta, a Neapolitan scholar 00:01:03.322 --> 00:01:08.924 in the 16th century, examined and studied the natural world 00:01:08.924 --> 00:01:12.571 and saw how it could be manipulated. 00:01:12.571 --> 00:01:15.987 Playing with the world, and our perception of it, 00:01:15.987 --> 00:01:19.277 really is the essence of visual effects. 00:01:19.277 --> 00:01:21.459 So digging deeper into this 00:01:21.459 --> 00:01:23.811 with the Science and Technology Council 00:01:23.811 --> 00:01:26.971 of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences 00:01:26.971 --> 00:01:31.459 reveals some truth behind the trickery. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:31.459 --> 00:01:36.803 Visual effects are based on the principles of all illusions: 00:01:36.803 --> 00:01:40.483 assumption, things are as we know them; 00:01:40.483 --> 00:01:44.556 presumption, things will behave as we expect; 00:01:44.556 --> 00:01:47.053 and context in reality, 00:01:47.053 --> 00:01:49.645 our knowledge of the world as we know it, 00:01:49.645 --> 00:01:51.247 such as scale. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:51.247 --> 00:01:55.324 Now a fourth factor really becomes an obsession, 00:01:55.324 --> 00:01:59.429 which is, never betray the illusion. 00:01:59.429 --> 00:02:02.532 And that last point has made visual effects 00:02:02.532 --> 00:02:05.884 a constant quest for perfection. 00:02:05.884 --> 00:02:10.611 So from the hand-cranked jump cut early days of cinema 00:02:10.611 --> 00:02:15.691 to last Sunday's Oscar winner, what follows are some steps 00:02:15.691 --> 00:02:20.898 and a few repeats in the evolution of visual effects. 00:02:20.898 --> 00:02:24.386 I hope you will enjoy. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:24.386 --> 00:02:29.349 Isabelle: "The filmmaker Georges Méliès 00:02:29.349 --> 00:02:33.725 was one of the first to realize that 00:02:33.725 --> 00:02:36.357 films had the power 00:02:36.357 --> 00:02:38.933 to capture dreams." NOTE Paragraph 00:02:38.933 --> 00:02:42.206 (Music) ["'A Trip to the Moon' (1902)"] NOTE Paragraph 00:02:42.206 --> 00:02:46.998 ["2011 Restoration of the Original Hand-Tinted Color"] NOTE Paragraph 00:02:55.045 --> 00:02:58.891 ["'2001: A Space Odyssey' (1968)"] NOTE Paragraph 00:02:58.891 --> 00:03:02.412 ["Academy Award Winner for Visual Effects"] NOTE Paragraph 00:03:09.746 --> 00:03:11.866 ["'Avatar' (2009)"] First doctor: How are you feeling, Jake? NOTE Paragraph 00:03:11.866 --> 00:03:13.320 Jake: Hey guys. 00:03:13.320 --> 00:03:14.322 ["Academy Award Winner for Visual Effects"] NOTE Paragraph 00:03:14.322 --> 00:03:17.710 Second doctor: Welcome to your new body, Jake.First doctor: Good. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:17.710 --> 00:03:21.029 Second doctor: We're gonna take this nice and easy, Jake.First doctor: Well, do you want to sit up? That's fine. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:21.029 --> 00:03:22.941 Second doctor: And good, just take it nice and slow, Jake. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:22.941 --> 00:03:26.597 Well, no truncal ataxia, that's good.First doctor: You feeling light-headed or dizzy at all? 00:03:26.597 --> 00:03:28.392 Oh, you're wiggling your toes. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:28.392 --> 00:03:30.801 ["'Alice's Adventures in Wonderland' (1972)"] NOTE Paragraph 00:03:30.801 --> 00:03:34.361 Alice: What's happening to me? NOTE Paragraph 00:03:38.329 --> 00:03:42.103 ["'Alice in Wonderland' (2010)"] NOTE Paragraph 00:03:42.103 --> 00:03:45.606 ["Academy Award Nominee for Visual Effects"] NOTE Paragraph 00:03:48.363 --> 00:03:51.684 ["'The Lost World' (1925)"] NOTE Paragraph 00:03:51.684 --> 00:03:54.453 ["Stop Motion Animation"] NOTE Paragraph 00:03:54.453 --> 00:03:58.713 ["'Jurassic Park' (1993)"] [Dinosaur roars] NOTE Paragraph 00:03:58.713 --> 00:04:02.031 ["CG Animation"] NOTE Paragraph 00:04:02.031 --> 00:04:05.613 ["Academy Award Winner for Visual Effects"] NOTE Paragraph 00:04:14.653 --> 00:04:18.476 ["'The Smurfs' (2011)"] NOTE Paragraph 00:04:18.476 --> 00:04:22.751 ["Autodesk Maya Software - Key Frame Animation"] NOTE Paragraph 00:04:22.751 --> 00:04:25.373 ["'Rise of the Planet of the Apes' (2011)"] NOTE Paragraph 00:04:25.373 --> 00:04:27.872 Chimpanzee: No! ["Academy Award Nominee for Visual Effects"] NOTE Paragraph 00:04:27.872 --> 00:04:31.326 ["'Metropolis' (1927)"] NOTE Paragraph 00:04:31.326 --> 00:04:48.157 (Music) NOTE Paragraph 00:04:48.157 --> 00:04:52.444 ["'Blade Runner' (1982)"] NOTE Paragraph 00:04:52.444 --> 00:04:57.777 ["Academy Award Nominee for Visual Effects"] NOTE Paragraph 00:05:00.233 --> 00:05:02.369 ["'The Rains Came' (1939)"] Rama Safti: Well, it's all over. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:02.369 --> 00:05:04.311 Maharaja: Nothing to worry about, not a thing. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:04.311 --> 00:05:07.379 ['Academy Award for Special Effects - (First Year of Category)"] 00:05:07.379 --> 00:05:15.934 (Explosion) NOTE Paragraph 00:05:15.934 --> 00:05:21.687 ["'2012' (2009)"]Governor: It seems to me that the worst is over. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:21.687 --> 00:05:25.825 ["CG Destruction"] NOTE Paragraph 00:05:32.557 --> 00:05:35.860 ["'Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King' (2003)"] NOTE Paragraph 00:05:35.860 --> 00:05:39.284 ["Massive Software - Crowd Generation"] NOTE Paragraph 00:05:39.284 --> 00:05:42.973 ["Academy Award Winner for Visual Effects"] NOTE Paragraph 00:05:42.973 --> 00:05:46.666 ["'Ben Hur: A Tale of the Christ' (1925)"] NOTE Paragraph 00:05:46.666 --> 00:05:50.500 ["Miniatures and Puppets Bring the Crowd to Life"] NOTE Paragraph 00:05:54.698 --> 00:05:58.087 ["'Gladiator' (2000)"] NOTE Paragraph 00:05:58.087 --> 00:06:01.906 ["CG Coliseum and Digital Crowds"] NOTE Paragraph 00:06:01.906 --> 00:06:05.493 ["Academy Award Winner for Visual Effects"] NOTE Paragraph 00:06:06.133 --> 00:06:11.437 ["'Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2' (2011)"] NOTE Paragraph 00:06:11.437 --> 00:06:14.853 ["Academy Award Nominee for Visual Effects"] NOTE Paragraph 00:06:23.895 --> 00:06:26.379 ["Produced in conjunction with the Academy's Science and Technology Council."] NOTE Paragraph 00:06:26.379 --> 00:06:27.453 (Applause) NOTE Paragraph 00:06:27.453 --> 00:06:30.744 ["'It is today possible to realize the most impossible and improbable things.' — Georges Méliès"] NOTE Paragraph 00:06:30.744 --> 00:06:34.460 Don Levy: Thank you.