Thursday, June 24, 2010

Mosaic Cinemas Productions: Welcome!

Mosaic Cinemas Productions: Welcome!: "Welcome to the Mosaic Cinemas production blog. The purpose of this blog is to brainstorm, critique, and expand ideas for Mosaic Cinemas. Any..."

testing 123

Thursday, June 10, 2010

This Is An Image Test

Here is one of the test pictures for the ‘look’ of Monster World. If you can’t see it…well, I hope you can.

Before:

Test Image 2 (Forest).png

 

After:

Test Image 2 (Forest).png

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Marshall's Costume

Okay, so, I was thinking over Marshall's costume, and I came up with several variations to work with. Let me know what you guys think. Especially you, Mr. Director. As a side-note, these costumes were me just playing around, so, for instance, the techie variant, is really not something I'd personally go for, but I'm still throwing it out there. However, something like that might be good for Jack's costume.

P.S. Do we need foundation/make-up test on Marshall?

These are the first three variants that I came up with. I have maybe around two more in my head, and I'll make a short video showcasing all the weapons/props I've got for us.

Option 1 (Drifter Variant)




Option 2 (Techie Variant)




Option 3 (Hero Variant)




Okay that's all for now, let me know what you think Director.

-Matt

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Makeup - the conversation continues

Please pardon my friend Joshua there. He hasn't been paying much attention to the movie-making world lately.

I'm just messing with y'all...Josh knows his stuff. But most actors in professional films do spend 2-3 hours every day of production in hair and makeup. There's an entire team of people for that. As of now...we have two - one for special effects (wounds and scars, mostly), and one for regular makeup.

"Regular makeup," in the movie sense, means a lot. There has to be several layers of different kinds of foundation, simply to make the actor's "skin" look natural. Minute adjustments are made to make the actor more attractive, slightly older, etc. And all of it has to be done so that anyone meeting the actor in real life would not be able to tell that he even had any makeup on at all. It's a tough job, but worth it if your sunburn or acne will be hidden from the high-def camera.

My friend once joked at calling his movies "No-Budget Productions." It's true for us, too. For right now, all we can do is grab one or two layers of normal foundation (none of the fancy stuff they use in movies), and a touch of eyeliner. We use nose putty instead of latex, even. We work with what we've got.

Thanks to digital editing, much of the hard work that goes into making an actor look like someone else can be done via computer. However, Josh is usually the first one to say this: "If you can do it for real, do it for real." Always full of good advice.

So that's what we're going for: doing as much of it for real as we can.

Friday, June 4, 2010

Make-up Test

Before yesterday, I had no idea what make-up was. I'm being honest here. I'm a boy, obviously. I thought make-up was for clowns.
So when my comrades in the film team wanted to do a make-up test, I was like...
...
Yeaah, like that.
But to my extravagant surprise, it went really well. Pictures coming up soon!