if you look at the front of Cruella's car, it looks just like her, the lights look like eyes and the grill looks like her mouth! its really amazing how they designed the car to look like her.
They built mini models of the car and drew black lines on every edge, to imitate where the outlines would be if the car was a drawing. They then shot footage of the model doing what the script called for. Then they used a special process to transfer just those black lines that had been drawn on the edges of the model onto the cels, just like the way the regular cartoon drawings were xeroxed onto the cels. Then they just painted in the car drawings they way they would anything else.
It actually wasn't the first time they'd done that. A similar process had been used for the scenes of Stromboli's wagon in Pinocchio, for example. That was over 20 years earlier. Although this was the first use of those black lines on the edges of the model, making it fit in seamlessly with the black-outlined characters in the film.
True rotoscoping had been used since the 1920s by a veriety of studios. What was special about 101 Dalmatians though was that they used Xerox processing to mechanize the line transfer process. Whereas early rotoscoping methods required an animator to roto each frame by hand based on the original video frames. With Xeroxing, the images could go right to transparent cels for painting and skip the need for paper lightbox tracing all together.
Excellent film Fine--Artwork throughout the film especially the whimsical intro to the movie. I remember this movie when Drive Ins were.. Wish they'd bring both home! )
If any of you could see the crash in slow motion, you'll get to see the colours during the collision. Yellow in front of black background, orange in front of white background and yellow in front of blue background. Think any of you could watch it carefully?
So a small Model cars its made out of cardboard to make a stop-motion animation, wow it just like animated computer cars. Is it just like Mary Poppins black backgrounds to make live-action.
y'know even as a kid i didnt like the scene where cruella is driving up the hill out of the ravine - i hated how the snow looked cuz it was weird. now i no it wasnt snow at all that they drew but real sand! that makes me muchless judgmental lol. thx disney
Yes, a kind of motion capture! It's incredible!
if you look at the front of Cruella's car, it looks just like her, the lights look like eyes and the grill looks like her mouth! its really amazing how they designed the car to look like her.
I'm really impressed how they used rotoscope (live-action reference for animation) on the model cars. GENIUS!!! Really added realism to the car chase.
Informational
They built mini models of the car and drew black lines on every edge, to imitate where the outlines would be if the car was a drawing. They then shot footage of the model doing what the script called for. Then they used a special process to transfer just those black lines that had been drawn on the edges of the model onto the cels, just like the way the regular cartoon drawings were xeroxed onto the cels. Then they just painted in the car drawings they way they would anything else.
It actually wasn't the first time they'd done that. A similar process had been used for the scenes of Stromboli's wagon in Pinocchio, for example. That was over 20 years earlier. Although this was the first use of those black lines on the edges of the model, making it fit in seamlessly with the black-outlined characters in the film.
True rotoscoping had been used since the 1920s by a veriety of studios. What was special about 101 Dalmatians though was that they used Xerox processing to mechanize the line transfer process. Whereas early rotoscoping methods required an animator to roto each frame by hand based on the original video frames. With Xeroxing, the images could go right to transparent cels for painting and skip the need for paper lightbox tracing all together.
And for characters they had been using human references and rotoscoping footage of actors since Snow White.
@@mediaikonz I'll say.
I like the pictures of Lisa Davis with the dogs-she was really pretty when she was young, she looks just like her!
The cruella car scenes were the best!
Excellent film Fine--Artwork throughout the film especially the whimsical intro to the movie. I remember this movie when Drive Ins were.. Wish they'd bring both home! )
If any of you could see the crash in slow motion, you'll get to see the colours during the collision.
Yellow in front of black background, orange in front of white background and yellow in front of blue background.
Think any of you could watch it carefully?
it has good visual effects in this films
Aah so that's how these spots were done. I kept wondering for this for years.
Lisa Davis is SO pretty and gorgeous. Especially in her younger years.
It's a Amazing!
So a small Model cars its made out of cardboard to make a stop-motion animation, wow it just like animated computer cars. Is it just like Mary Poppins black backgrounds to make live-action.
Esto fue detras de camaras de la pelicula del 61
perfect
Whoa! Whoa! Whoa!
4:30
*cars crash*
Cruella: Yooooou IDIOTS!
lmfao.
The car crash scene used to scare me when I was a kid.
Yes
Akira toriyama's inspiration was this movie
DOG COATS! the old fur-snatchin', battle-axe!
y'know even as a kid i didnt like the scene where cruella is driving up the hill out of the ravine - i hated how the snow looked cuz it was weird. now i no it wasnt snow at all that they drew but real sand! that makes me muchless judgmental lol. thx disney