fani wrote:Hey Ben, before Brad Bird is in Pixar, isn't it slated to be a 2d feature? Would still be awesome either way, but I like the Incredibles the way it is
I love it as is, but seeing it done in 2D would be sweet, and it wouldn't affect the storyline.
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It's very obviously not flash. You don't think they can do that kind of animation in the 3D programs they use? What is it... Maya or something? South Park is done in an entirely 3D program.
Nah. They wouldn't have used Maya for that...the movie credit sequences I mean. Pixar doesn't even use Maya. They have their own software called Marionette.
There are other programs out there besides Flash and Maya that can produce the kind of animation you see in the credits.
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PixarVixen wrote:(...)Pixar doesn't even use Maya. They have their own software called Marionette. (...)
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Well... AFAIK Maya is quite extensively used in Pixar at least for modeling and some particles simulations. There are also many other 3d packages in use aside or in connection with main pipeline proprietary software like Marionette & RenderMan (for example: background in the scene with Mr Incredibles train-pushing workout was done with use of 3ds max). Marionette is their main soft for animation, but it's still more comfortable to use some of the shelf soft that actual artist used to for faster and easier modeling or other tasks.
Just in case some of you where looking for an official synopsis of Ratatouille from Disney rather than and unsourced (although correct) from Jim Hill.
Pixar, the creators of Finding Nemo, The Incredibles, and Cars, now cook up Ratatouille, a delicious new computer animated-adventure centering on an ambitious French rat named Remy who dreams of becoming a great chef. Because of his passion for cooking, Remy accidentally uproots his family from the French countryside to the sewers of Paris, and finds himself ideally situated beneath a restaurant made famous by his culinary hero, Auguste Gusteau. When Remy helps to create a soup that wins rave reviews from the world's most powerful food critic, he sets into motion a hilarious and exciting rat race that wreaks havoc on the entire city, allowing him to achieve the impossible and pursue his true gift. The screenplay, written by Academy Award®-winning Brad Bird (The Incredibles), is flavored with a colorful cast of characters and exquisite French backdrops making Ratatouille a tantalizing recipe for imaginative fun and unexpected delight.
I wouldn't say so. Maybe he had to edit a portion of the script and that was the trouble. Now they are just crediting him with it but in the credits we will see Jan and the others who worked on it. Maybe his name just looks good after the incredibles.
Yeah, makes you wonder just how smoothly Brad Bird's "adjustment" into Pixar is coming along.
Only speculating....
BTW, for some reason every time I read about this film now, and all the stuff about soup and French food I get really, really hungry....what's up with that??
You can’t just have your characters announce how they feel! That makes me feel angry!
I'd say Brad's transition is going about just fine. John Lasseter even said that the energy at Pixar was great after he arrived. I'm sure by now, everyone is accepting of him and his ways.
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Actually, IIRC scenes are build with help of various programs (maya, 3dsmax etc. etc.) then actors are placed in the scene with marionette and are programmed to do the scene, then everything is plugged into renderman who makes the whole scene act and look the way we see it on the screen.