James Cameron’s ‘Avatar’ creating tech buzz
Posted by: Chris Williamson in Movie Reviews, Advanced Computing3-D project using visionary new techniques
By Carolyn Giardina
Aug 6, 2008, 08:36 PM ET
With 17 months to go before the release of James Cameron’s sci-fi epic “Avatar,” his first narrative feature since 1997’s “Titanic,” anticipation already is enormous. The wildly ambitious project will be made in stereoscopic 3-D and combine live action and computer animation using visionary new filmmaking techniques.
Slated to open Dec. 18, 2009, the production already has been in the works for 2 1/2 years. When completed, Cameron expects “Avatar” to be about 60% CG animation, based on characters created using a newly developed performance capture-based process, and 40% live action, with a lot of VFX in the imagery.
“It is the most challenging film I’ve ever made,” Cameron said.
Still, the innovative filmmaker and digital 3-D pioneer and champion has never shifted his emphasis from storytelling.
“You have to make a good film that would be a good film under any circumstances,” he said. “You have to put the narrative first. The reality is no matter how many (3-D) screens we get, you are still going to have a large number of people — possibly the majority of people — who see the film in a 2-D environment.”
The live-action principal photography for “Avatar” was shot in New Zealand last fall and winter using the Fusion 3-D camera system. Cameron first used the Fusion to make his 2003 Imax 3-D film “Ghosts of the Abyss”; he and “Ghosts” director of photography Vince Pace invented the camera system for the project. more>>>
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