“Hey Jeff….I’ve got a project right up your alley!!”
That was the initial start, when Don Lee from the Horizon Companies called to inquire if I would be interested in shooting and animating a stop-motion animation Holiday spot for the AAA company.
What else was I gonna say? J
Chris Weber conceived this charming Holiday spot and illustrator Bart Browne visualized the story into a set of really beautiful storyboards.
Much of the set were standard store-purchased Christmas trees, lights, decorations, but the crucial ingredients were the figures of the family and the AAA Guy…the AAA truck also became somewhat of a challenge to locate.
We searched for generic designed toy human figures, of a workable size of over 5” high, with some limited articulation. I could have custom sculpted and cast foam latex figures with a machined ball & socket armature [like we have done in the past], but the style and look of this animation was to be more rudimentary “LEGO” style with obvious plastic figures and I chose to shoot the animation on “two’s” instead of more smooth “one’s” [film runs at 24 frames per second, so you would normally shoot 24 separate motions in animation per 1 second of screen time, that is called “one’s”; we choose to shoot 12 movements per second instead to not only save time, but to make it look a bit more “rough” and slightly amateurish, so for each movement of the animation, we shot 2 frames. The Christmas classics RUDOLPH THE REDNOSED REINDEER was shot on “two’s” & “Four’s”].
These figures had limited articulating joints, such as their shoulders could move but not their elbows, their neck/heads could only rotate about 10 degrees per direction...but this actually added to the charm of the animation [in my opinion]. We ended up purchasing a “nuclear” family with a mom, dad, son, daughter, grandmother & grandfather….we used the family [minus the daughter] and we turned the grandfather into a much younger AAA Guy buy repainting his gray hair black and adding a painted AAA vest and logo...grandmother joined the ranks of “non-essential personnel” and stayed out of this production along with the daughter. We hear they are currently vacationing in Barbados.
The AAA truck was a standard radio-controlled toy truck that had the motorized transmission removed and received a new red paint job and AAA graphics.
The set was an elevated set, based atop of 3 large folding heavy-duty tables, with 2 layers of foamcore taped to the tabletops, the carpet was taped atop of the foamcore. The reason for the foamcore was to give us a method to physically “pin” the stop-motion figure’s feet to the floor surface for stability…I drilled tiny holes in each figure’s feet and utilizing T-pins, we were able to stabilize each figure to the floor surface.
As you can see, the set dressing was standard Christmas stuff and we tried to work out ways to stabilize the wrapping paper, giftboxs and other toys in the immediate area of the animation as the repetitive hands-on animation might lead us to bump into and move some of these items.
Bart Browne did an incredible job art directing the set and asked if he could help animate some of our scenes….to be honest, I was skeptical as I had no experience working with him in this capacity, but since we had several characters together in several scenes, it seemed like a good idea to try him out on one of the characters….and since we could instantly play back the take, we could see how his animation looked. Well, I was VERY happy to see that he knew what he was doing and injected a bit more personality into a plastic and extremely stiff dolls! So we went ahead and shared the animation chores. It turns out that Bart is not only a very gifted artist [check out his storyboards] but has a lot of experience with CG character animation! Check out his website: www.bartbrowne.com
Usually when you approach any animation shoot, you make up animation “dope” sheets out ahead of time...well, this time we simply winged it!
We did some in-camera effects during the animation such as focus racks and camera pans… simple really, I marked off 1mm dashes on a piece of tape and using a pointer made from a scrap of plastic, articulated the tripod head or the focus wheel.
Editor Steve Bruns assembled the footage, slid the VO track and music to fit, occasionally ramped the animation speeds to help everything fit.
SFX editor Bill Scholik added some very nice embellishments to the piece: headlights and flashers to the truck & car, smiles on the toy robot & stuffed bear, steam on the hot coco in the tag, etc…
Steve also had to deal with the opening atmospheric montage sequence of the various pans/tilts/diagonal shots I shot [in real time] of the Holiday icons: Nutcrackers, toys, ornaments, colored lights, etc…. we were not sure how much we needed of this stuff so I just hosed down the entire set for about 10 minutes J
Director Don Lee supervised everything and made suggestions when we would talk through the animation before each shot. We would act out the figure’s movement and time those motions with our iPhone stopwatches. If I remember correct, the only shot that we did 2 takes was the ending shot where the yellow car filled with the family speeds away as we rack-focus the lens from the family to a waving AAA Guy! We initially setup the shot to reflect Bart’s storyboards with the kid sitting up on the convertible section of the car [between a seated mom & dad] and waving to the AAA Guy…but once Don saw that footage, he advised us that the child’s placement on the car might not fly with the client as it is a bit too risky...so in order to make the boy “fit” in between mom & dad we had to take a saw and dismember our young lad at the waist! With a bit of poster putty to hold him in place, he waved away to the AAA Guy...but we had finished shooting his other scenes anyway, so a little bi-section was Okay!
I am very thankful that Don Lee called me to shoot this charming Holiday spot for him! He has an incredible facility and sound stages and we really had a blast playing with toys [and getting paid to do so!!]
Shot with classic Cooke Speed Panchro primes [and a little bit of SupraFrost filters] on my Red Scarlet.
CREW:
Director/EP: Don Lee The Horizon Companies
Writer: Chris Weber
DP/Head Animator: Jeff Barklage
Production Designer/Co-Animator: Bart Browne
Gaffer: Dave Lee
Editor: Steve Bruns
CG/FX: Bill Scholik