How does virtual production and StageCraft help actors?

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It’s all very well us endlessly extolling the virtues of virtual production, specifically StageCraft which we do discuss regularly on Making Tracks, but essentially the technology – like any tech – is a tool, and how does that tool help the actors who have to inhabit roles in and around that technology? Backstage tackle these questions.

How is virtual production helping actors?
Jon Favreau followed up The Lion King by working on another major Disney project – and it’s one that truly brought actors into the virtual production fold. That project was Star Wars: The Mandalorian, a live-action TV series that has already aired its first season on the Disney+ streaming service.

This time, Favreau worked with Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) and Epic Games on special effects, and together they built a powerful virtual production tool which allowed actors to see otherworldly environments all around them during shooting. This was achieved with a series of massive LED screens, collectively known as “The Volume,” which could display pre-prepared backdrops in a scene during filming.

At 21 feet tall and 75 feet in diameter, the Volume is a ground-breaking virtual soundstage. It provides a detailed digital background to complement and inform the actors with real props that are working in the foreground. As an added advantage, the filmmakers can tinker with environments – for example, remove a mountain, rotate a room or make a sunrise last for ten hours – in order to get the perfect shot on the day.

It’s easy to imagine the advantages for actors when they can actually see the planets, spaceships, and other spectacular things that are mentioned in the script. Compared to working against a green or blue screen (or a tennis ball on a stick), the Volume provides actors with a greatly enhanced sense of engagement with their surroundings. This, in turn, enables actors to generate more natural and convincing performances, with more spontaneity and reactiveness.

How have actors reacted to the Volume?
ILM’s Richard Bluff, Visual Effects Supervisor on The Mandalorian, tells Backstage that actors got substantial benefits from working with the Volume: “Feedback from our actors has been overwhelmingly positive, and despite everyone knowing they’re walking onto a stage surrounded by LEDs, the illusion quickly allows them to forget the artifice of filmmaking, and they are immediately immersed in the world we have created for them.”

He explains: “You often hear that ‘acting is reacting,’ and just as dressing an actor in a costume influences their movement, immersing them in a fully photoreal environment has a measurable impact on their performance as a whole, allowing them to bring the character and the story to life on an emotional level.”

This, Bluff agrees, is a lot better than some of the alternatives: “When actors are surrounded by green screen, they have nothing to play off of – it simply doesn’t give them anything to work with, and all too often they are unaware of what their surroundings will ultimately look like in the finished scene.

“With ILM StageCraft, our ability to immerse the actors in any imaginable location allows us to provide a magic window into the world they’ve rarely been exposed to during production outside of concept artwork.”

Compared to simply “using your imagination” to try and picture an environment, a rig like the Volume symbolises a true leap forward for acting in CGI-heavy productions. Bridging the gap between the real and the imagined, it could be the future of how actors work on blockbuster productions. Actors just need to arrive on set prepared to react to what they can see – surely that is so much better than pretending to see it?

SourceBackstage
Mark Newbold
Mark Newbold
Exploring the galaxy since 1978, Mark wrote his first fan fiction in 1981 and been a presence online since his first webpage Fanta War in 1996. He currently contributes to ILM.com, SkywalkerSound.com and Star Wars Insider, having previously written for StarWars.com, Star Wars Encyclopedia, Build The Millennium Falcon, Starburst Magazine, Geeky Monkey, TV Film Memorabilia and Model and Collectors Mart. He is a four-time Star Wars Celebration Stage host, the only podcaster to have appeared on every Celebration podcast stage since it began in 2015, the Daily Content Manager of Fantha Tracks and the co-host of Making Tracks, Canon Fodder and Start Your Engines on Fantha Tracks Radio.
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

It’s all very well us endlessly extolling the virtues of virtual production, specifically StageCraft which we do discuss regularly on Making Tracks, but essentially the technology – like any tech – is a tool, and how does that tool help the actors who have to inhabit roles in and around that technology? Backstage tackle these questions.

How is virtual production helping actors?
Jon Favreau followed up The Lion King by working on another major Disney project – and it’s one that truly brought actors into the virtual production fold. That project was Star Wars: The Mandalorian, a live-action TV series that has already aired its first season on the Disney+ streaming service.

This time, Favreau worked with Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) and Epic Games on special effects, and together they built a powerful virtual production tool which allowed actors to see otherworldly environments all around them during shooting. This was achieved with a series of massive LED screens, collectively known as “The Volume,” which could display pre-prepared backdrops in a scene during filming.

At 21 feet tall and 75 feet in diameter, the Volume is a ground-breaking virtual soundstage. It provides a detailed digital background to complement and inform the actors with real props that are working in the foreground. As an added advantage, the filmmakers can tinker with environments – for example, remove a mountain, rotate a room or make a sunrise last for ten hours – in order to get the perfect shot on the day.

It’s easy to imagine the advantages for actors when they can actually see the planets, spaceships, and other spectacular things that are mentioned in the script. Compared to working against a green or blue screen (or a tennis ball on a stick), the Volume provides actors with a greatly enhanced sense of engagement with their surroundings. This, in turn, enables actors to generate more natural and convincing performances, with more spontaneity and reactiveness.

How have actors reacted to the Volume?
ILM’s Richard Bluff, Visual Effects Supervisor on The Mandalorian, tells Backstage that actors got substantial benefits from working with the Volume: “Feedback from our actors has been overwhelmingly positive, and despite everyone knowing they’re walking onto a stage surrounded by LEDs, the illusion quickly allows them to forget the artifice of filmmaking, and they are immediately immersed in the world we have created for them.”

He explains: “You often hear that ‘acting is reacting,’ and just as dressing an actor in a costume influences their movement, immersing them in a fully photoreal environment has a measurable impact on their performance as a whole, allowing them to bring the character and the story to life on an emotional level.”

This, Bluff agrees, is a lot better than some of the alternatives: “When actors are surrounded by green screen, they have nothing to play off of – it simply doesn’t give them anything to work with, and all too often they are unaware of what their surroundings will ultimately look like in the finished scene.

“With ILM StageCraft, our ability to immerse the actors in any imaginable location allows us to provide a magic window into the world they’ve rarely been exposed to during production outside of concept artwork.”

Compared to simply “using your imagination” to try and picture an environment, a rig like the Volume symbolises a true leap forward for acting in CGI-heavy productions. Bridging the gap between the real and the imagined, it could be the future of how actors work on blockbuster productions. Actors just need to arrive on set prepared to react to what they can see – surely that is so much better than pretending to see it?

SourceBackstage
Mark Newbold
Mark Newbold
Exploring the galaxy since 1978, Mark wrote his first fan fiction in 1981 and been a presence online since his first webpage Fanta War in 1996. He currently contributes to ILM.com, SkywalkerSound.com and Star Wars Insider, having previously written for StarWars.com, Star Wars Encyclopedia, Build The Millennium Falcon, Starburst Magazine, Geeky Monkey, TV Film Memorabilia and Model and Collectors Mart. He is a four-time Star Wars Celebration Stage host, the only podcaster to have appeared on every Celebration podcast stage since it began in 2015, the Daily Content Manager of Fantha Tracks and the co-host of Making Tracks, Canon Fodder and Start Your Engines on Fantha Tracks Radio.
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