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What do you call a Matrix-like slowdown and camera movement effect?
What is a word for “very slow”?word request (name for an MP3 file)Does 'flavor' work for types of 'non-eatable' things?An idiom for a person who always says “yes” to someone they are in awe of?What do you call “A space dedicated to people for doing some certain works in offices” in English? (Especially in the banks)When a cartoon character talks to its creatorWhat do you call refreshments seeds, like pumpkin seeds?What do you call this?The amount added to a student's actual score on paper for no reasonWhat do you call a coined term like “Cobra effect”?
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I think there's a scene in The Matrix where Neo does a bullet dodge in slow-motion and you also see the camera rotate around Neo, what do you call this effect?
For example:
The ____ when Neo dodges bullets in slow-mo was cool.
word-request
add a comment |
I think there's a scene in The Matrix where Neo does a bullet dodge in slow-motion and you also see the camera rotate around Neo, what do you call this effect?
For example:
The ____ when Neo dodges bullets in slow-mo was cool.
word-request
add a comment |
I think there's a scene in The Matrix where Neo does a bullet dodge in slow-motion and you also see the camera rotate around Neo, what do you call this effect?
For example:
The ____ when Neo dodges bullets in slow-mo was cool.
word-request
I think there's a scene in The Matrix where Neo does a bullet dodge in slow-motion and you also see the camera rotate around Neo, what do you call this effect?
For example:
The ____ when Neo dodges bullets in slow-mo was cool.
word-request
word-request
asked 17 hours ago
frbsfokfrbsfok
510111
510111
add a comment |
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
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oldest
votes
It's known by various terms, though the one I've heard used most often is bullet time. There are other names listed there - frozen moment, dead time, flow motion. It's even used in adverts on TV, these days.
2
Bullet time is spot on.
– Scooter
15 hours ago
add a comment |
The camera rotation part of the effect is known as an "arc shot." The first five results on on this search results page will give you information on "arc" shots. SamBC has already given you a link for the bullet slowdown effect.
add a comment |
It's MoCo, or motion control.
The slowdown is created by filming at high speed but the camera tracking is called "motion control". The term "bullet time" was popularized due to the use of the effect in the movie The Matrix, most uses of motion control (MoCo) don't involve firing bullets or CGI and multiple cameras. Modern MoCo uses one high speed camera mounted on a robotic arm.
MrMoco Rentals
TV Commercial: "Citroën Cactus Milo Commercial".
Demo on Vimeo: "Bolt Stiller Show Reel Behind the Scenes".
Demo on YouTube: "Bolt On Track Showreel at Stiller Studios".
Production Company: Digital Air
Chanel Commercial: Chance (.MOV)
Intel Commercial: Core2 Duo (.MOV)
Ruffles Commercial: Hockey (.MOV)
It's more about being able to move the camera precisely along a predetermined course at a predetermined speed in a repeatable manner, than it is about bullets.
Frozen moment
Motion control can be used to match camera array shots. Camera Array shots are also known as frozen moment or time-slicing or bullet-time (made famous in The Matrix). Because the camera array represents a moving camera path the same path can be defined in a motion control move. This allows all of the other effects that are possible with motion control to be combined with frozen moments. For example, a live action pass filmed with motion control allows for the insertion of a moving person into a frozen scene.
Motion control can also be used to get into and out of frozen moment shots seamlessly. A camera move can begin with a motion control move and switch at some point to the camera array. The motion control system moves the motion picture camera's position from a start position to the first position of the camera array, at which point the camera array is triggered. In post production a straight cut joins the two shots.
Using one take, one bottle, they were able to obtain three shots and refocus the depth of field for each one. This clip was extracted from the Mr. MoCo "Bolt Stiller Show Reel" and was cropped and trimmed to fit within the upload parameters.
See also: Mark Roberts Motion Control: "The Seven Uses of Motion Control":
Repeat Moves – Making elements appear and disappear, crowd replication, changing backgrounds and foregrounds, filming action at different speeds, putting elements together.
Scaled Moves – Shooting miniatures, rotating camera moves, matching scales.
Controlled Moves – For controlled filming and lighting on products.
CGI Export – Combining live-action to CGI.
CGI Import – Complex moves, unusual shapes, impossible moves, Pre-visualisation.
Frozen Moment Integration – For mixing live-action and time-slicing or “bullet-time”.
Specific Music Video Effects – Audio timecode triggering.
1
The bullet time effects in The Matrix were created a different way, though. They were created using an array of DSLR photo cameras mounted along the intended arc and triggered in sequence.
– Jörg W Mittag
7 hours ago
@JörgWMittag Did I clearly explain that in the first paragraph? Were links offered?
– Rob
6 hours ago
add a comment |
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3 Answers
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active
oldest
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
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It's known by various terms, though the one I've heard used most often is bullet time. There are other names listed there - frozen moment, dead time, flow motion. It's even used in adverts on TV, these days.
2
Bullet time is spot on.
– Scooter
15 hours ago
add a comment |
It's known by various terms, though the one I've heard used most often is bullet time. There are other names listed there - frozen moment, dead time, flow motion. It's even used in adverts on TV, these days.
2
Bullet time is spot on.
– Scooter
15 hours ago
add a comment |
It's known by various terms, though the one I've heard used most often is bullet time. There are other names listed there - frozen moment, dead time, flow motion. It's even used in adverts on TV, these days.
It's known by various terms, though the one I've heard used most often is bullet time. There are other names listed there - frozen moment, dead time, flow motion. It's even used in adverts on TV, these days.
answered 16 hours ago
SamBCSamBC
17.5k2565
17.5k2565
2
Bullet time is spot on.
– Scooter
15 hours ago
add a comment |
2
Bullet time is spot on.
– Scooter
15 hours ago
2
2
Bullet time is spot on.
– Scooter
15 hours ago
Bullet time is spot on.
– Scooter
15 hours ago
add a comment |
The camera rotation part of the effect is known as an "arc shot." The first five results on on this search results page will give you information on "arc" shots. SamBC has already given you a link for the bullet slowdown effect.
add a comment |
The camera rotation part of the effect is known as an "arc shot." The first five results on on this search results page will give you information on "arc" shots. SamBC has already given you a link for the bullet slowdown effect.
add a comment |
The camera rotation part of the effect is known as an "arc shot." The first five results on on this search results page will give you information on "arc" shots. SamBC has already given you a link for the bullet slowdown effect.
The camera rotation part of the effect is known as an "arc shot." The first five results on on this search results page will give you information on "arc" shots. SamBC has already given you a link for the bullet slowdown effect.
answered 16 hours ago
Don B.Don B.
1,808315
1,808315
add a comment |
add a comment |
It's MoCo, or motion control.
The slowdown is created by filming at high speed but the camera tracking is called "motion control". The term "bullet time" was popularized due to the use of the effect in the movie The Matrix, most uses of motion control (MoCo) don't involve firing bullets or CGI and multiple cameras. Modern MoCo uses one high speed camera mounted on a robotic arm.
MrMoco Rentals
TV Commercial: "Citroën Cactus Milo Commercial".
Demo on Vimeo: "Bolt Stiller Show Reel Behind the Scenes".
Demo on YouTube: "Bolt On Track Showreel at Stiller Studios".
Production Company: Digital Air
Chanel Commercial: Chance (.MOV)
Intel Commercial: Core2 Duo (.MOV)
Ruffles Commercial: Hockey (.MOV)
It's more about being able to move the camera precisely along a predetermined course at a predetermined speed in a repeatable manner, than it is about bullets.
Frozen moment
Motion control can be used to match camera array shots. Camera Array shots are also known as frozen moment or time-slicing or bullet-time (made famous in The Matrix). Because the camera array represents a moving camera path the same path can be defined in a motion control move. This allows all of the other effects that are possible with motion control to be combined with frozen moments. For example, a live action pass filmed with motion control allows for the insertion of a moving person into a frozen scene.
Motion control can also be used to get into and out of frozen moment shots seamlessly. A camera move can begin with a motion control move and switch at some point to the camera array. The motion control system moves the motion picture camera's position from a start position to the first position of the camera array, at which point the camera array is triggered. In post production a straight cut joins the two shots.
Using one take, one bottle, they were able to obtain three shots and refocus the depth of field for each one. This clip was extracted from the Mr. MoCo "Bolt Stiller Show Reel" and was cropped and trimmed to fit within the upload parameters.
See also: Mark Roberts Motion Control: "The Seven Uses of Motion Control":
Repeat Moves – Making elements appear and disappear, crowd replication, changing backgrounds and foregrounds, filming action at different speeds, putting elements together.
Scaled Moves – Shooting miniatures, rotating camera moves, matching scales.
Controlled Moves – For controlled filming and lighting on products.
CGI Export – Combining live-action to CGI.
CGI Import – Complex moves, unusual shapes, impossible moves, Pre-visualisation.
Frozen Moment Integration – For mixing live-action and time-slicing or “bullet-time”.
Specific Music Video Effects – Audio timecode triggering.
1
The bullet time effects in The Matrix were created a different way, though. They were created using an array of DSLR photo cameras mounted along the intended arc and triggered in sequence.
– Jörg W Mittag
7 hours ago
@JörgWMittag Did I clearly explain that in the first paragraph? Were links offered?
– Rob
6 hours ago
add a comment |
It's MoCo, or motion control.
The slowdown is created by filming at high speed but the camera tracking is called "motion control". The term "bullet time" was popularized due to the use of the effect in the movie The Matrix, most uses of motion control (MoCo) don't involve firing bullets or CGI and multiple cameras. Modern MoCo uses one high speed camera mounted on a robotic arm.
MrMoco Rentals
TV Commercial: "Citroën Cactus Milo Commercial".
Demo on Vimeo: "Bolt Stiller Show Reel Behind the Scenes".
Demo on YouTube: "Bolt On Track Showreel at Stiller Studios".
Production Company: Digital Air
Chanel Commercial: Chance (.MOV)
Intel Commercial: Core2 Duo (.MOV)
Ruffles Commercial: Hockey (.MOV)
It's more about being able to move the camera precisely along a predetermined course at a predetermined speed in a repeatable manner, than it is about bullets.
Frozen moment
Motion control can be used to match camera array shots. Camera Array shots are also known as frozen moment or time-slicing or bullet-time (made famous in The Matrix). Because the camera array represents a moving camera path the same path can be defined in a motion control move. This allows all of the other effects that are possible with motion control to be combined with frozen moments. For example, a live action pass filmed with motion control allows for the insertion of a moving person into a frozen scene.
Motion control can also be used to get into and out of frozen moment shots seamlessly. A camera move can begin with a motion control move and switch at some point to the camera array. The motion control system moves the motion picture camera's position from a start position to the first position of the camera array, at which point the camera array is triggered. In post production a straight cut joins the two shots.
Using one take, one bottle, they were able to obtain three shots and refocus the depth of field for each one. This clip was extracted from the Mr. MoCo "Bolt Stiller Show Reel" and was cropped and trimmed to fit within the upload parameters.
See also: Mark Roberts Motion Control: "The Seven Uses of Motion Control":
Repeat Moves – Making elements appear and disappear, crowd replication, changing backgrounds and foregrounds, filming action at different speeds, putting elements together.
Scaled Moves – Shooting miniatures, rotating camera moves, matching scales.
Controlled Moves – For controlled filming and lighting on products.
CGI Export – Combining live-action to CGI.
CGI Import – Complex moves, unusual shapes, impossible moves, Pre-visualisation.
Frozen Moment Integration – For mixing live-action and time-slicing or “bullet-time”.
Specific Music Video Effects – Audio timecode triggering.
1
The bullet time effects in The Matrix were created a different way, though. They were created using an array of DSLR photo cameras mounted along the intended arc and triggered in sequence.
– Jörg W Mittag
7 hours ago
@JörgWMittag Did I clearly explain that in the first paragraph? Were links offered?
– Rob
6 hours ago
add a comment |
It's MoCo, or motion control.
The slowdown is created by filming at high speed but the camera tracking is called "motion control". The term "bullet time" was popularized due to the use of the effect in the movie The Matrix, most uses of motion control (MoCo) don't involve firing bullets or CGI and multiple cameras. Modern MoCo uses one high speed camera mounted on a robotic arm.
MrMoco Rentals
TV Commercial: "Citroën Cactus Milo Commercial".
Demo on Vimeo: "Bolt Stiller Show Reel Behind the Scenes".
Demo on YouTube: "Bolt On Track Showreel at Stiller Studios".
Production Company: Digital Air
Chanel Commercial: Chance (.MOV)
Intel Commercial: Core2 Duo (.MOV)
Ruffles Commercial: Hockey (.MOV)
It's more about being able to move the camera precisely along a predetermined course at a predetermined speed in a repeatable manner, than it is about bullets.
Frozen moment
Motion control can be used to match camera array shots. Camera Array shots are also known as frozen moment or time-slicing or bullet-time (made famous in The Matrix). Because the camera array represents a moving camera path the same path can be defined in a motion control move. This allows all of the other effects that are possible with motion control to be combined with frozen moments. For example, a live action pass filmed with motion control allows for the insertion of a moving person into a frozen scene.
Motion control can also be used to get into and out of frozen moment shots seamlessly. A camera move can begin with a motion control move and switch at some point to the camera array. The motion control system moves the motion picture camera's position from a start position to the first position of the camera array, at which point the camera array is triggered. In post production a straight cut joins the two shots.
Using one take, one bottle, they were able to obtain three shots and refocus the depth of field for each one. This clip was extracted from the Mr. MoCo "Bolt Stiller Show Reel" and was cropped and trimmed to fit within the upload parameters.
See also: Mark Roberts Motion Control: "The Seven Uses of Motion Control":
Repeat Moves – Making elements appear and disappear, crowd replication, changing backgrounds and foregrounds, filming action at different speeds, putting elements together.
Scaled Moves – Shooting miniatures, rotating camera moves, matching scales.
Controlled Moves – For controlled filming and lighting on products.
CGI Export – Combining live-action to CGI.
CGI Import – Complex moves, unusual shapes, impossible moves, Pre-visualisation.
Frozen Moment Integration – For mixing live-action and time-slicing or “bullet-time”.
Specific Music Video Effects – Audio timecode triggering.
It's MoCo, or motion control.
The slowdown is created by filming at high speed but the camera tracking is called "motion control". The term "bullet time" was popularized due to the use of the effect in the movie The Matrix, most uses of motion control (MoCo) don't involve firing bullets or CGI and multiple cameras. Modern MoCo uses one high speed camera mounted on a robotic arm.
MrMoco Rentals
TV Commercial: "Citroën Cactus Milo Commercial".
Demo on Vimeo: "Bolt Stiller Show Reel Behind the Scenes".
Demo on YouTube: "Bolt On Track Showreel at Stiller Studios".
Production Company: Digital Air
Chanel Commercial: Chance (.MOV)
Intel Commercial: Core2 Duo (.MOV)
Ruffles Commercial: Hockey (.MOV)
It's more about being able to move the camera precisely along a predetermined course at a predetermined speed in a repeatable manner, than it is about bullets.
Frozen moment
Motion control can be used to match camera array shots. Camera Array shots are also known as frozen moment or time-slicing or bullet-time (made famous in The Matrix). Because the camera array represents a moving camera path the same path can be defined in a motion control move. This allows all of the other effects that are possible with motion control to be combined with frozen moments. For example, a live action pass filmed with motion control allows for the insertion of a moving person into a frozen scene.
Motion control can also be used to get into and out of frozen moment shots seamlessly. A camera move can begin with a motion control move and switch at some point to the camera array. The motion control system moves the motion picture camera's position from a start position to the first position of the camera array, at which point the camera array is triggered. In post production a straight cut joins the two shots.
Using one take, one bottle, they were able to obtain three shots and refocus the depth of field for each one. This clip was extracted from the Mr. MoCo "Bolt Stiller Show Reel" and was cropped and trimmed to fit within the upload parameters.
See also: Mark Roberts Motion Control: "The Seven Uses of Motion Control":
Repeat Moves – Making elements appear and disappear, crowd replication, changing backgrounds and foregrounds, filming action at different speeds, putting elements together.
Scaled Moves – Shooting miniatures, rotating camera moves, matching scales.
Controlled Moves – For controlled filming and lighting on products.
CGI Export – Combining live-action to CGI.
CGI Import – Complex moves, unusual shapes, impossible moves, Pre-visualisation.
Frozen Moment Integration – For mixing live-action and time-slicing or “bullet-time”.
Specific Music Video Effects – Audio timecode triggering.
answered 10 hours ago
RobRob
42729
42729
1
The bullet time effects in The Matrix were created a different way, though. They were created using an array of DSLR photo cameras mounted along the intended arc and triggered in sequence.
– Jörg W Mittag
7 hours ago
@JörgWMittag Did I clearly explain that in the first paragraph? Were links offered?
– Rob
6 hours ago
add a comment |
1
The bullet time effects in The Matrix were created a different way, though. They were created using an array of DSLR photo cameras mounted along the intended arc and triggered in sequence.
– Jörg W Mittag
7 hours ago
@JörgWMittag Did I clearly explain that in the first paragraph? Were links offered?
– Rob
6 hours ago
1
1
The bullet time effects in The Matrix were created a different way, though. They were created using an array of DSLR photo cameras mounted along the intended arc and triggered in sequence.
– Jörg W Mittag
7 hours ago
The bullet time effects in The Matrix were created a different way, though. They were created using an array of DSLR photo cameras mounted along the intended arc and triggered in sequence.
– Jörg W Mittag
7 hours ago
@JörgWMittag Did I clearly explain that in the first paragraph? Were links offered?
– Rob
6 hours ago
@JörgWMittag Did I clearly explain that in the first paragraph? Were links offered?
– Rob
6 hours ago
add a comment |
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