Matte paintings were used before the dawn of competent computer graphics to simulate a larger/more dramatic/exotic location than can be achieved in a film studio. Paint was directly applied to glass, which then sat between the camera and the actors (leaving a clear section to capture them).

  • @Paradachshund
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    201 month ago

    I’ve known about matte paintings but I had no idea about the glass part! I just assumed it was composited together somehow. Very cool.

    • @craftyindividual@lemm.eeOPM
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      131 month ago

      I’m still amazed by how accurate some of the painting is, knowing it would be projected at cinema screen size!

      There was a neat trick backlighting the lightsabers frame by frame with a fluorescent tube and a scalpel. Painstaking though.

      • @Paradachshund
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        61 month ago

        I would imagine putting it on glass also made it possible to remove the paint easier if a mistake was made, wouldn’t it?

  • ivanafterall
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    91 month ago

    I love these. Corridor Crew on YouTube dives into this stuff and has some great content.

  • @mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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    61 month ago

    AFAIK mattes are still A Thing in filmmaking, but they’re obviously not done with actual paint on glass.

    The best use of CGI is when audiences are wrong about which parts are CGI.