The youngest movieÂgoÂers today do not, of course, rememÂber a time before visuÂal effects could be creÂatÂed digÂiÂtalÂly. What may give us more pause is that, at this point in cinÂeÂma hisÂtoÂry, most of their parÂents don’t rememÂber it either. ConÂsidÂer the fact that Steven SpielÂberg’s JurasÂsic Park, with its once imposÂsiÂbly realÂisÂtic (and still wholÂly passÂable) CGI dinosaurs, came out 32 years ago. That may put it, we must acknowlÂedge, into the realm of the “clasÂsic,” the kind of picÂture whose enterÂtainÂment valÂue holds up despite — or because of — the qualÂiÂties that fix it in its time. EqualÂly specÂtacÂuÂlar but longer-canÂonÂized clasÂsics pose a greater chalÂlenge to the imagÂiÂnaÂtions of young viewÂers, who can hardÂly guess how they could have been made “before comÂputÂers.”
After seeÂing the notable examÂples proÂvidÂed in the new PriÂmal Space video above, they’ll cerÂtainÂly underÂstand one thing: it wasÂn’t easy. Even a seemÂingÂly simÂple effect like the pen floatÂing loose through the zero-gravÂiÂty cabÂin in 2001: A Space Odyssey required no small degree of ingeÂnuÂity. We might natÂuÂralÂly assume that filmÂmakÂers in 1968 would have accomÂplished it with a couÂple of pieces of Scotch tape and fishÂing line, but that would have resultÂed in unacÂceptÂable tanÂgling probÂlems, to say nothÂing of the trickÂiÂness of ensurÂing, quite litÂerÂalÂly, that the strings didÂn’t show. Instead, KubrickÂ’s team endÂed up attachÂing the pen to a sheet of glass — meticÂuÂlousÂly cleaned, no doubt, to elimÂiÂnate the posÂsiÂbilÂiÂty of streaks — large enough to occuÂpy the entire frame and thus go unnoÂticed by the viewÂer. It was then slowÂly rotatÂed by a crank-turnÂing assisÂtant.
A few difÂferÂent effects from 2001 come in for explaÂnaÂtion throughÂout the course of the video, includÂing the mulÂtiÂple-expoÂsure phoÂtogÂraÂphy that made posÂsiÂble shots of spaceÂcraft passÂing planÂets as well as the psyÂcheÂdelÂic “Star Gate” sequence toward the end. Though some of the devices used in these processÂes were put togethÂer just for the proÂducÂtion, the underÂlyÂing techÂniques had already been evolvÂing for more than 60 years. Indeed, many were pioÂneered by Georges MĂ©liès, preÂviÂousÂly feaÂtured here on Open CulÂture for A Trip to the Moon from 1902, the very first sciÂence-ficÂtion film. This video goes behind the scenes of a work from the year before: L’Homme Ă la tĂŞte en caoutchouc, or The Man with the RubÂber Head, in which MĂ©liès manÂaged a shot in which his own craÂniÂum inflates to huge proÂporÂtions withÂout the use of so much as a zoom lens.
OthÂer examÂples, drawn from a range of beloved films from MetropÂoÂlis to Mary PopÂpins, illusÂtrate the invenÂtiveÂness born of sheer techÂniÂcal limÂiÂtaÂtion in the days when filmÂmakÂing was a wholÂly anaÂlog affair. In some casÂes, the effects these proÂducÂtions pulled off with miniaÂtures, prisms, and mirÂrors 60, 80, 100 years ago look as good as anyÂthing HolÂlyÂwood puts on the screen today — or rather betÂter, since the innate physÂiÂcalÂiÂty behind them makes them feel more “real.” PerÂhaps unsurÂprisÂingÂly, this video’s artiÂfiÂcial-intelÂliÂgence course sponÂsor makes refÂerÂence to the endÂless range of visuÂal posÂsiÂbilÂiÂties availÂable to those who masÂter that techÂnolÂoÂgy. And it’s not imposÂsiÂble that we now stand on the cusp of a revÂoÂluÂtion in visuÂal effects for that reaÂson, with at least as much of an upside and downÂside as CGI. If so, we should preÂpare ourÂselves to hear the quesÂtion, from chilÂdren born today, of how anyÂone ever made movies before AI.
RelatÂed conÂtent:
The Art of CreÂatÂing SpeÂcial Effects in Silent Movies: IngeÂnuÂity Before the Age of CGI
How StanÂley Kubrick Made 2001: A Space Odyssey: A SevÂen-Part Video Essay
How 2001: A Space Odyssey Became “the HardÂest Film Kubrick Ever Made”
Why Movies Don’t Feel Real AnyÂmore: A Close Look at ChangÂing FilmÂmakÂing TechÂniques
Based in Seoul, ColÂin Marshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂter Books on Cities and the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles. FolÂlow him on the social netÂwork forÂmerÂly known as TwitÂter at @colinmarshall.
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