Car Scenes in the Movies
Most recent answer: 10/22/2007
Q:
why in movies or shows when you have people in a car with the picture moving behind them it looks so fake?
you would think it would work... its just using a computer to put one picture behind another. but it always ends up not being realistic at all (espicaly in older films).
so why is it that way and what might help to make it more realistic?
- James
U.S
- James
U.S
A:
Movie equipment, particularly the good stuff used to make
theatrical-quality films (35 mm or 70 mm) is very heavy. You dont want
it to shake, blurring the picture, and since it has shaking parts
inside to move the film, the whole camera setup is very very heavy.
Things are less cumbersome these days, and you can shoot with a digital
camera now which helps to shrink the cameras.
In the old days, with the big, heavy cameras, the easiest kind of shooting that could be done was inside in a big soundstage. That way you can control the lighting, noise, and all the other variables.
People put cars in the soundstages, took the windshields out, and filmed actors sitting in the cars. To make it look a bit as if the car was moving, some scenery was projected on a screen in back of the car. This gives a really really hokey effect as you well notice. The main problems are that the actors are a little too stationary as the scenery bounces up and down. Or worse yet, the actors are told to bounce up and down, and their bouncing has nothing to do with how the scenery moves. If the scenery indicates a turn is happening, and the actors dont seem to show the effects in how their hair blows or moves, or their bodies move, you notice the problem right away. I dont think using computer image compositing would help, if it were done with the same kind of thing in mind.
Even worse tricks were used in some of the lower-budget movies of yesteryear. Sometimes if you look at the background scenery, you can see it repeat and repeat and repeat. Yick. Or the magnification wouldnt be right -- say the background was shot with a lens with a different zoom setting than the people in the car.
You can make more realistic car scenes by selecting a lighter weight movie camera and attaching it to the car as it moves. Usually you have to remove the windows or the windshield (which introduces its own problems). Then theres motion blur to worry about. Also, its well known that panning scenery around as cars turn can make audience members feel sick.
Watch a few movies and TV shows, and see how you like the car scenes, and try to figure out how they did it!
Tom
In the old days, with the big, heavy cameras, the easiest kind of shooting that could be done was inside in a big soundstage. That way you can control the lighting, noise, and all the other variables.
People put cars in the soundstages, took the windshields out, and filmed actors sitting in the cars. To make it look a bit as if the car was moving, some scenery was projected on a screen in back of the car. This gives a really really hokey effect as you well notice. The main problems are that the actors are a little too stationary as the scenery bounces up and down. Or worse yet, the actors are told to bounce up and down, and their bouncing has nothing to do with how the scenery moves. If the scenery indicates a turn is happening, and the actors dont seem to show the effects in how their hair blows or moves, or their bodies move, you notice the problem right away. I dont think using computer image compositing would help, if it were done with the same kind of thing in mind.
Even worse tricks were used in some of the lower-budget movies of yesteryear. Sometimes if you look at the background scenery, you can see it repeat and repeat and repeat. Yick. Or the magnification wouldnt be right -- say the background was shot with a lens with a different zoom setting than the people in the car.
You can make more realistic car scenes by selecting a lighter weight movie camera and attaching it to the car as it moves. Usually you have to remove the windows or the windshield (which introduces its own problems). Then theres motion blur to worry about. Also, its well known that panning scenery around as cars turn can make audience members feel sick.
Watch a few movies and TV shows, and see how you like the car scenes, and try to figure out how they did it!
Tom
(published on 10/22/2007)