It was poorly edited; maybe they reuploaded? I can't remember the name of the publication though.
Anyone got a backup? :/ On Thu, Jan 30, 2014 at 11:09 AM, Cristobal Infante <[email protected]>wrote: > Links gone, was it a leak? > > > On 30 January 2014 15:15, Alan Fregtman <[email protected]> wrote: > >> It also varies by studio. Laika <http://www.laika.com/films.php>, for >> example, is famous for really fluid (and dare I say beautiful) animation, >> like in their awesome *ParaNorman >> <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hgwSpajMw3s>* film, which was all >> painstakingly shot on 1's (from what I heard.) >> >> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UUISX8qs5Oc >> >> [sidebar: One time I got to hold in my hands the puppets of Norman and >> one of the zombies. The attention to detail was incredible! They had all >> the mouthshapes presculpted (3dprinted, actually) and his lower face just >> pops off and you snap another in. Tiny magnets hold his face bits together.] >> >> >> >> On Thu, Jan 30, 2014 at 6:06 AM, Ahmidou Lyazidi >> <[email protected]>wrote: >> >>> Cell animation isn't 2's, it's just a varying rate depending of the >>> motion speed, it can be 1,2,3's sometimes more. >>> >>> And for stop motion, it really depends, for example when aardman and >>> dreamworks did Flushed Away, >>> they freeze 1 frame every 4 frames to mimic their stop motion look. >>> It might also be an economic choice. >>> >>> >>> ----------------------------------------------- >>> >>> Ahmidou Lyazidi >>> Director | TD | CG artist >>> http://vimeo.com/ahmidou/videos >>> http://www.cappuccino-films.com >>> >>> >>> 2014-01-29 Matt Lind <[email protected]> >>> >>> Stop motion is typically shot on 1's, cel animation on 2's. >>>> >>>> Haven't seen the Lego movie, but what usually gives stop motion that >>>> jerky quality is the lack of motion blur, and the depth of field not quite >>>> mimicking the real world. >>>> >>>> >>>> Matt >>>> >>>> >>>> -----Original Message----- >>>> From: [email protected] [mailto: >>>> [email protected]] On Behalf Of Eric Thivierge >>>> Sent: Monday, January 27, 2014 10:11 AM >>>> To: [email protected] >>>> Subject: Re: The Lego Movie: Behind the Scenes and How They Made the >>>> Movie >>>> >>>> I left Animal probably 1/3 of the way into Lego after I finished on WWD >>>> and I didn't see any stop motion going on from that side of the studio. >>>> Not sure what was done after I left. If you wait like 3-4 hours Raf >>>> should be awake and have downed a nice Australian coffee and will be able >>>> to shed more light. >>>> >>>> I do remember them animating on 2's at one point to give that stop-mo >>>> look though. >>>> >>>> Eric T. >>>> >>>> On Monday, January 27, 2014 1:05:11 PM, Luc-Eric Rousseau wrote: >>>> > >From what I've seen around the web, the director has been going >>>> > >around >>>> > saying it's a mixed of stop-motion and CGI. Are there any frames that >>>> > are actually stop motion? >>>> > >>>> > On Mon, Jan 27, 2014 at 10:13 AM, Alan Fregtman < >>>> [email protected]> wrote: >>>> >> >>>> >> Nice!! Great work, animals. :) >>>> >> >>>> >>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>> >> >

