Archive for February, 2006

Wright man for deciding ‘Witch’ Visual Effects lineup

Tuesday, February 28th, 2006

Visual effects supervisors aren’t normally what springs to mind when the word “dealmaker” comes up, but “The Chronicles of Narnia” probably wouldn’t have been the success it has been if vfx supervisor Dean Wright hadn’t struck a delicate arrangement between rival effects shops to work together on the film.

Wright and helmer Andrew Adamson reviewed test reels from a handful of vfx houses and narrowed their choice down to three finalists: Rhythm & Hues, Sony Imageworks and Industrial Light & Magic.

With CG characters so important in “Narnia,” says Wright, the choice was difficult, not just a matter of a low bid.

“We’re talking about casting the movie, because these houses were going to create characters that were going to work alongside our human cast. So it was a much more emotional question.”

Initially, they chose R&H to do the entire show. Then, even before principal photography started, it became clear the movie was too big for any one shop to handle all the CG work. Wright decided to divide the work.

He went back to Sony and ILM, but their bids were several million dollars high.

“I had to go back and talk to them and say, ‘I’m not trying to do a bidding war, but here’s the number I need you to hit.’”

Wright had to balance his own budget with the needs of the vfx houses. “If they’re not comfortable with the number and they have to stretch to reach it, it’s going to hurt you later.” He chose Sony, and when the show continued growing, ILM came on, too.

So all three finalists worked on the film, sometimes even all contributing to the same shot. It’s a rare collaboration, but the film nabbed an Oscar nom for its vfx.

The Third Austin C. S. Lewis Conference – Registration Open

Tuesday, February 28th, 2006

Peter Kreeft, William Lane Craig and Frederica Mathewes Green will lead the journey as we explore the heart and depth of the Christian faith. These internationally known speakers will give us a rich day of thought provoking insight. Artistic performances scattered like shimmering islands throughout the day will give us time to enjoy the God-given creativity of the Body of Christ. We will also enjoy meals outdoors under tents with live music and a play in the evening on the life of C.S. Lewis created and performed by the author, David Payne, An Evening with C.S. Lewis.

Our regional team is once again organizing a feast for the heart, mind, and soul. We invite you to be part of the fun, excitement, and reasoned consideration of our faith, all stimulated by the author of The Chronicles of Narnia. With Lewis as our guide, these contemporary speakers and performers will give us thoughtful spiritual food to digest.

The day will begin with Celtic worship music by the band Wear That Shoe from San Marcos. Joel Heck, Chief Academic Officer of Concordia University at Austin and a Fellow of the Institute, will deliver the opening meditation. We will sing hymns to waken our spirits.

William Lane Craig will present “Are There Objective Truths About God?” Bill Craig is a leading Christian apologist on the core of the faith: the reliability of the resurrection and the accounts of the miraculous in Scripture.

An artistic interlude featuring Wear That Shoe will follow. The band has 8 terrific musicians and features a wide variety of stylistic influences.

From Celtic and folk to jazz, they will entertain and bring us “in step” with the rhythm of the day.

Peter Kreeft will present “The Only Apologetic Guaranteed to Win the World.” Prof. Kreeft is a prolific author and entertaining speaker with a rare talent of turning a phrase that both enlightens and entertains.

Lunch will follow outdoors with live music. Meal time performers include Paul Finley, Keith Atkinson and Scott Hawley.

Frederica Mathewes Green will present the third talk “A Golden Bell and a Pomegranate.” Frederica’s talk on beauty as an apologetic will be a delight.

After an artistic interlude, the Panel Discussion will then be moderated by Bill Taylor, Executive Director of the World Evangelical Alliance Mission Commission and a Fellow of the Institute. Bill and the three speakers will be joined by Joel Heck and David Taylor, Arts Pastor of Hope Chapel and Artistic Advisor to the Institute.

Dinner will be outdoors under tents with live music–an old fashioned Texas barbeque and a chance to reflect on the day with friends, both old and new.

David Payne will then perform his original creation An Evening with C.S. Lewis, which is an intriguing and fun way to get to know Lewis as a person.

REGISTRATION is online at www.hillcountryinstitute.org. Online payments are through PayPal and are secure and safe. The cost is $60 through February 28, $75 through April 25, and $85 beginning April 26–if any tickets remain. Seating is limited, so register soon.

The speakers will also speak in sponsoring churches on Sunday. Visit the web site for additional details.

PS-an idea and challenge: Bring a friend or family member who is not a Christ follower, and give them a day of thought provoking Christian speakers and the glory and beauty of artistic expression in the faith. After all, Lewis himself was “a prodigal,” brought into the kingdom “kicking, struggling, and darting his eyes in every direction for a chance of escape.”

Your favorite seeker, skeptic, and/or atheist may have much in common with Lewis. But stand ready! Once exposed to goodness, truth, and beauty, (aka, the “deeper magic”), your guest may experience what Lewis experienced after he fully embraced Christianity: “It was more like when a man, after a long sleep, still lying motionless in bed, becomes aware that he is now awake.”

We hope to see you in Austin for this glorious weekend. All friends of Narnia are welcome!

Isis Mussenden Wins Costume Design Guild Award

Tuesday, February 28th, 2006

Isis Mussenden, the costume designer for The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, won the Costume Design Guild Award for Excellence in Fantasy Film award. The awards ceremony took place at the Beverly Hilton on Saturday night, February 25th. This was the 8th annual Costume Design Guild awards ceremony and the first to feature a separate award for excellence in fantasy film, a category that had been combined with period film.

Narnia-Themed Chair at “Chair-ity” Auction

Thursday, February 23rd, 2006

The Chronicles of Narnia Chairity AuctionFranciscan Cre-Act School 4th annual “Chair-ity” Auction
Friday, February 24th
The Franciscan Cre-Act (Creative Acting) School invites everyone to ‘Take a Seat’ for the 4th annual “Chair-ity” Auction Friday, February 24th from 6-9pm at 526 S. Grant in Pocatello. There will be over 25 themed chairs filled with fantastic items from local businesses and organizations to be auctioned off to the highest bidder. Plus, a full buffet prepared by Red Lion executive chef Frank Hartlieb plus live lusic will be provided. There will be a silent auction as well. Tickets are $15 per person. For tickets, or to donate an item to either auction…or for more information, please call 233-4747.

We are proud to have had the opportunity to donate some materials for this auction, and hope and pray that this event has a wonderful turnout this year.

Description of Event:
The Franciscan Cre-Act (Creative-Acting) School is holding its fourth annual “Chair”-ity Auction.

The Chronicles of Narnia Chairity AuctionThere will be over 25 themed chairs filled with fantastic items from local businesses and organizations that will be auctioned off to the highest bidders, plus a full buffet prepared by Red Lion Executive Chef, Frank Hartlieb.

Live musical entertainment will be provided. Please support this unique arts-based local school where learning with “all of one’s being — the physical body, the mind, the sense, the imagination, the emotions and the power of speech and concentration” is the guiding educational philosophy. There will also be a silent auction of other donated items.

Price of Admission:
$15 per person

Where To Receive Information or To Buy Tickets:
Tickets available from Cre-Act at 526 S Grant or at door evening of event.

Date and Times:
Friday, February 24, 2006
6:00 pm to 9:00 pm

Location:
Pocatello
1555 Pocatello Creek Road
Red Lion Hotel

[Learn more about Franciscan Sisters of the Eucharist]

CC celebrates ´Narnia,´ C.S. Lewis with tea, talk on Feb. 27

Thursday, February 23rd, 2006

The life and writings of C.S. Lewis, the acclaimed British author whose work ranges from fantasy to spiritual treatises, will be celebrated at Connecticut College on Monday, Feb. 27, with afternoon tea, a lecture and discussion.

The event marks the 50th anniversary of the publication of the last book in Lewis´ Chronicles of Narnia series in 1956. The first of those seven books, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, was made into a popular film released last December.

The tea and talk will begin at 4 p.m. in the Ernst Common Room of the Blaustein Humanities Center. Daniel J. Varholy of Mystic will speak and lead the discussion. His talk is titled, “Literary Studies: The Labor of Scholarship and the Labor of Faith in the Works of C.S. Lewis.”

Varholy holds a doctoral degree in English language and literature from Oxford University. A native of Connecticut, he has a bachelor´s degree from Middlebury College.

Varholy was a member of Oxford´s Magdalen College, where C.S. Lewis (1898-1963) was a fellow and tutor from 1925 to 1954. It was at Oxford in 1931 that Lewis was converted to Christianity by his close friend, J.R.R. Tolkien. Lewis is the author of such classics as The Screwtape Letters, Mere Christianity and A Grief Observed.

Varholy brings with him a wealth of personal experience. At Oxford he tutored children through a program sponsored by the college´s Joint Action Committee against Racial Intolerance. He also has directed a film for Catholic Solitudes, a contemplative community based in Texas.

Ranked among the most selective private liberal arts colleges in the nation, Connecticut College enrolls 1,900 men and women from 42 states and 41 countries. The college is known for putting the liberal arts into action through interdisciplinary studies, international programs, funded internships, student-faculty research and service learning. Founded in 1911, the college operates under an 84-year-old honor code. The college is located at 270 Mohegan Ave, New London, about two hours by car from Boston and New York. The 750-acre campus is an arboretum overlooking Long Island Sound.

For more information, visit www.connecticutcollege.edu.

Vote for Narnia for Two Awards

Thursday, February 23rd, 2006

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe has been nominated by play.com for Best TV & Film of the Year in the British Book Awards.

Use this link to vote:

http://www.britishbookawards.co.uk/bba/pnbb_vote.asp

Also, remember to vote for Tilda Swinton in the 11th Annual Moviefone Moviegoer Awards:

Moviefone Moviegoer Awards

Voting is only open until February 24th!

Vilest Villain
Current Leader (As of February 21): Ralph Fiennes, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
Other nominees:
Hayden Christensen, Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith
Tilda Swinton, The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
Ian McDiarmid, Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith
Elijah Wood, Sin City

Narnia Wins BAFTA, James McAvoy Wins Orange Rising Star Award

Monday, February 20th, 2006

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, directed by New Zealander Andrew Adamson, has won a Bafta Award.

The film picked up the British prize for Hair and Make-Up ahead of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, Memoirs of a Geisha and Pride & Prejudice.

However the film went home empty handed in the other categories it was nominated for: Achievement In Special Visual Effects and Costume Design.

James McAvoy (Mr. Tumnus) took home the The Orange Rising Star Award. The award celebrates a young actor or actress of any nationality who has already begun to capture the imagination of the British public as a film star in the making and is the only Award at The Orange British Academy Film Awards to be voted for by fans!

Gregory Peck: The First Aslan

Friday, February 17th, 2006

In the beginning, there was Gregory Peck.

Long before Liam Neeson was cast as the voice of Aslan, the noble lion in “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe,” the film’s visual effects team had to get to work.

“We needed to find a way to model the performance to create the essence of the noble, all-powerful lion,” explained Dean Wright, the film’s Oscar-nominated visual effects supervisor, “So we used Gregory Peck in ‘To Kill a Mockingbird.’ His Atticus Finch performance has some of the same regal qualities we wanted, so we used frames of Peck from that film to create movements for Aslan. That helped us build our library of movements, emotions and expressions so that when Liam gave his performance, it gelled perfectly with our Aslan.”

According to Wright, Aslan is “the single most remarkable achievement in CG character animation and technology.” Not only does Aslan deliver a wide range of emotions equal to any human actor but he also looks real, indistinguishable from a live lion in every scene, right down to his matted and always-moving fur.

And the one “Narnia” scene Wright is constantly asked about is the one in which Lucy Pevensie grabs Aslan’s fur as they’re walking through the woods.

“That was one of those surreptitious moments in filming when Lucy [Georgie Henley] reaches out and naturally grabbed ‘Stuffy’ [the stuffed Aslan head] just the right way and we were able to blend that with our CG counterpart,” Wright explains. “These kids did such an amazing job acting with ping pong balls and stuffed heads. The kids are always hugging Aslan in the film and it looks wonderful onscreen but from a technical viewpoint, it’s daunting. So to be able to make them interact that closely with a digital creation was just amazing.”

For Berger, his makeup and puppetry challenge was creating fantasy puppet critters that belonged in Narnia, not Middle Earth.

“We didn’t want to do orcs,” he explained. “When Lewis and Tolkien wrote their books at the same time in the mid-’50s, they carefully compared notes and made sure there were no crossovers. And as Tolkien’s grandson told me, ‘Goblins do not exist in Narnia and there are no elves.’ So I was very careful never to cross the borders between Narnia and Middle Earth.”

But there are 23 different species of Narnia-specific mythical critters including fauns, satyrs, minotaurs, ogres, giants, red dwarves, ankle-slicers, beavers, wolves, bears, leopards, centaurs, gorillas, etc.

And if you want to see Mr. Tumnus, one of Berger’s favorite Narnians, with his real human legs, you’ll have to get the DVD. “I gasped the first time I saw the film because it was the first time I’d seen Mr. Tumnus with his faun legs,” Berger recalled. “I’d lived with him [James McAvoy] with bright green legs with white marks on them.”

All the Narnia creative dudes are still Oscar-shocked. And their heads are still rooted in Narnia because they’ve been working on the upcoming DVD. Plus they’re flying to London this weekend for the Feb. 19 BAFTA Awards, where they’re also nominated for the same achievements.

“It’s been an amazing few weeks,” said Wright. “We were all so nervous the night of the bake-off when so much great work was presented to the academy from so many talented people. It was a heck of a year for visual effects.”

And their journey is far from over. “Narnia” director Andrew Adamson has just signed on to direct “The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian” and while no contracts are signed, his creative team will probably regroup. Fast.

“They haven’t announced yet how many films they’ll do,” said Wright. “I think they’d love to do them all. At least six or seven is the goal. All the kids will come back for ‘Caspian’ and two of them, the two youngest, will return for ‘The Voyage of the Dawn Treader.’ Right now, Andrew is taking time off in New Zealand and then he’ll write treatments, we’ll get the script and dive right into it. I imagine we will start production based on the kids’ schedules, but it’s all going to happen relatively soon.”

Which is great news for “Narnia” fans.

By Elizabeth Snead

FX Team Talks Next Narnia

Thursday, February 16th, 2006

Earlier today IGN attended the Academy Awards brunch on behalf of The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. At the event, Visual Effects Supervisor Dean Wright and Rhythm and Hues Effects Supervisor Bill Westenhofer spoke about the upcoming DVD of Lion, Witch and the Wardrobe. The two FX wizards also discussed their Oscar-nominated work on the film and their preparation for work on Prince Caspian now that the sequel has been announced. While LWW was an undeniably large undertaking, Prince Caspian promises to one-up the stakes.

Visual Effects Supervisor Dean Wright: “Andrew [Adamson] (director of LWW) just actually signed on to do Prince Caspian just about two weeks ago; and literally took off on the next plane to New Zealand just to get out of L.A. just to recharge his batteries, recharge his creative energy, because it was a marathon. I did read the book and more of the creatures that you saw – and there’s new ones – are back. There’s new hero creatures… There’s huge battle sequences. I know from talking to Andrew before he left, he wants to make this bigger and better than The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, so I can only imagine what’s in store. Any of us that are lucky enough to be involved. We all love working with Andrew. I can say that on behalf of everyone here, and would enjoy working on all seven books if we could.”

Rhythm and Hues Effects Supervisor Bill Westenhofer comments on the evolution of Aslan’s physical look: “Reading the books, there are some evolutions. One of the challenges is that it is described in the text that he does increase in size. At one point, he’s referenced as the size of an elephant. So I think that’s where interpretations of the filmmakers are going to come into play and how to pull that off. In this film, he changes size slightly, but I doubt anyone would notice. He’s actually five percent bigger after he comes back to life, but even to start with, he was at the top end of the scale of average lion sizes… So, he is a big lion, even at the start. But yeah, I think that’s going to be one of the challenges… What creative licenses you carry and how believable that is to have that big a character…”

[IGN FilmForce]

Wright said the effects team will begin computer “pre-visualization” of scenes from Prince Caspian “probably in a couple of months, and then full on into preproduction. You know, the film is going to kick off before you know it, and we’ll be going like gangbusters, probably, I would say, within the next two to four months.”

And there’s one other challenge, Westenhofer said: “We successfully avoided Aslan getting doused in water in this. But as soon as we get into the Dawn Treader [a ship that figures in Caspian] and that sort of stuff, it’s going to be harder to avoid.”

[SciFi Wire]

LWW Nominated for 8 Saturn Awards

Wednesday, February 15th, 2006

The Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror films announced the nominations for the 32nd annual Saturn Awards on Feb. 15, and leading the pack is George Lucas’ Star Wars: Episode III—Revenge of the Sith, with 10 nominations. The awards will be presented May 2 in Universal City, Calif.

Batman Begins came in a close second, with nine nominations. The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire each received eight nominations.

In the television categories, ABC’s Lost and The WB’s Smallville received a total of six nominations each. SCI FI Channel’s original series Battlestar Galactica garnered four nominations, while SCI FI’s Stargate SG-1 and its original miniseries The Triangle each received three nominations.

This year the academy established categories to honor and recognize video-game releases. Games that received nominations include Psychonauts, Timesplitters: Future Perfect, Guild Wars, F.E.A.R., Indigo Prophecy, Star Wars Battlefront II and Peter Jackson’s King Kong.

Best Fantasy Film

•Batman Begins (Warner Bros.)
•Charlie & the Chocolate Factory (Warner Bros.)
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (Buena Vista)
•Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (Warner Bros.)
•King Kong (Universal)
•Zathura (Sony)

Best Actress

•Jodie Foster
Flightplan (Buena Vista)
•Laura Linney
The Exorcism of Emily Rose (Screen Gems / Sony)
•Rachel McAdams
Red Eye (DreamWorks SKG)
•Natalie Portman
Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith (20th Century Fox/Lucasfilm)
Tilda Swinton
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
(Buena Vista)
•Naomi Watts
King Kong (Universal)

Best Performance by a Younger Actor

•Alex Etel
Millions (Fox Searchlight)
•Dakota Fanning
War of the Worlds (Paramount)
•Freddie Highmore
Charlie & the Chocolate Factory (Warner Bros.)
•Josh Hutcherson
Zathura (Sony)
William Moseley
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
(Buena Vista)
•Daniel Radcliffe
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (Warner Bros.)

Best Director

Andrew Adamson
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
(Buena Vista)
•Peter Jackson
King Kong (Universal)
•George Lucas
Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith (20th Century Fox/Lucasfilm)
•Mike Newell
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (Warner Bros.)
•Christopher Nolan
Batman Begins (Warner Bros.)
•Steven Spielberg
War of the Worlds (Paramount)

Best Writer

•Steve Kloves
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (Warner Bros.)
•David Koepp
War of the Worlds (Paramount)
•Christopher Nolan
David S. Goyer
Batman Begins (Warner Bros.)
Ann Peacock
Andrew Adamson
Christopher Markus
Steven McFeely
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
(Buena Vista)
•George Lucas
Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith (20th Century Fox/Lucasfilm)
•Fran Walsh, Philippa Boyens, Peter Jackson
King Kong (Universal)

Best Costume

•Trisha Biggar
Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith (20th Century Fox/Lucasfilm)
•Lindy Hemming
Batman Begins (Warner Bros.)
Isis Mussenden
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
(Buena Vista)
•Gabriella Pescucci
Charlie & the Chocolate Factory (Warner Bros.)
•Terry Ryan
King Kong (Universal)
•Jany Temime
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (Warner Bros.)

Best Make Up

Howard Berger
Nikki Gooley
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
(Buena Vista)
•Howard Berger
Greg Nicotero
Land of the Dead (Universal)
•Howard Berger
Greg Nicotero
Sin City (Buena Vista)
•Nick Dudman
Amanda Knight
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (Warner Bros.)
•Dave Elsey
Lou Elsey
Nikki Gooley
Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith (20th Century Fox/Lucasfilm)
•Richard Taylor
Gino Acevedo
Dominie Till
Peter Swords-King
King Kong (Universal)

Best Special Effects

•John Knoll
Roger Guyett
Rob Coleman
Brian Gernand
Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith (20th Century Fox/Lucasfilm)
•Joe Letteri
Richard Taylor
Christian Rivers
Brian Van’t Hul
King Kong (Universal)
•Jim Mitchell
Tim Alexander
Tim Webber
John Richardson
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (Warner Bros.)
•Dennis Muren
Pablo Helman
Randal M. Dutra
Daniel Sudick
War of the Worlds (Paramount)
•Janek Sirrs
Dan Glass
Chris Corbould
Paul Franklin
Batman Begins (Warner Bros.)
Dean Wright
Bill Westenhofer
Jim Berney
Scott Farrar
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
(Buena Vista)

It’s also the last day to vote for James McAvoy for the BAFTA Awards.