Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Performing for Motion Capture
View through CrossRef
Want to be the next Andy Serkis as Gollum in Lord of the Rings? Or Zoe Saldana in Avatar? How about Seth MacFarlane in Ted? Or do you want to star in video games such as Fortnite, Call of Duty or Halo?
If so, this book will tell you everything you need to know about acting for motion capture.
This is the first book to provide an invaluable resource for the education of the next generation of performers in this exciting medium. Over the last 10 years, a revolution has occurred in digital production – video games have overtaken the film and TV industries in terms of production and revenues. Many video games derive their digital animation from human performance by means of motion and performance capture. Actors such as Andy Serkis and Troy Baker have won critical acclaim for their digital performance in games and film.
The book includes contributions from practitioners working across the globe, including: actor Kezia Burrows; software developer Stéphane Dalbera; director Kate Saxon; a group of Japanese games directors; Jeremy Meunier, Head of Motion Capture at Moov studios, Montreal; Marc Morisseau, motion editor for Avatar; and a Chinese Motion Capture suit manufacturer.
Title: Performing for Motion Capture
Description:
Want to be the next Andy Serkis as Gollum in Lord of the Rings? Or Zoe Saldana in Avatar? How about Seth MacFarlane in Ted? Or do you want to star in video games such as Fortnite, Call of Duty or Halo?
If so, this book will tell you everything you need to know about acting for motion capture.
This is the first book to provide an invaluable resource for the education of the next generation of performers in this exciting medium.
Over the last 10 years, a revolution has occurred in digital production – video games have overtaken the film and TV industries in terms of production and revenues.
Many video games derive their digital animation from human performance by means of motion and performance capture.
Actors such as Andy Serkis and Troy Baker have won critical acclaim for their digital performance in games and film.
The book includes contributions from practitioners working across the globe, including: actor Kezia Burrows; software developer Stéphane Dalbera; director Kate Saxon; a group of Japanese games directors; Jeremy Meunier, Head of Motion Capture at Moov studios, Montreal; Marc Morisseau, motion editor for Avatar; and a Chinese Motion Capture suit manufacturer.
Related Results
Talking about MOTION in Middle English
Talking about MOTION in Middle English
Chapter 6 begins with an overview of the language contact situation with (Anglo-) French and Latin, resulting in large-scale borrowing in the Middle English period. The analysis of...
Jenkins’ Motion Pictures
Jenkins’ Motion Pictures
This chapter examines C. Francis Jenkins' photographic inventions that he used to demonstrate motion pictures in a variety of applications. Despite losing in the early battle with ...
Multilevel Optimization for Dense Motion Estimation
Multilevel Optimization for Dense Motion Estimation
This monograph offers design for fast and reliable technique in the dense motion estimation. This Multilevel Optimization for Dense Motion Estimation work blends both theory and ap...
Captured Futures
Captured Futures
Abstract
Environmental politics as we know it cannot deliver. Despite all efforts politics is unable to bend the ecological trends. This book argues this is because ...
Stop-motion Animation
Stop-motion Animation
Stop-motion Animation explores how all the elements of film-making – camera work, design, colour, lighting, editing, music and storytelling – come together in this unique art form....
Storytelling in Motion
Storytelling in Motion
Abstract
Storytelling in Motion: Cinematic Choreography and the Film Musical demonstrates how figure movement can serve as a versatile strategy of meaning-making, pa...
The Man Who Invented Motion Pictures
The Man Who Invented Motion Pictures
A Radio 4 Book of the Week
‘Fascinating … filled with lively historical digressions.’ New York Times ‘Best True Crime of 2022’
In 1888 Louis Le Prince shot the ...

