in , , ,

The truth about Darth Maul’s Clone Wars return – Exclusive

intro 1586885071 (via Primetweets)

Not that bringing Park’s performance into The Clone Wars was easy, of course. The team at Lucasfilm had only tried integrating motion-capture data with their regular workflow once, and Kellogg says it produced mixed results. “It was when the Wookiees were fighting the Trandoshans,” Kellogg says, referring to the episode “Wookiee Hunt” from season 3. “We did use motion-capture for that, because we wanted to try it out at the time.”

Before he joined Lucasfilm, Kellogg worked with Robert Zemeckis on films like Beowulf and A Christmas Carol, so he has plenty of experience with mo-cap. Still, the technology wasn’t necessarily the right fit for The Clone Wars. “We ended up using some of it, we ended up throwing some of it out, because it kind of locked us in a little bit more than we wanted,” he says.

Check This:  The untold truth of Nick Gordon

The same goes for Park’s performance as Maul. “Motion capture, for us, is not necessarily the easiest thing for us to incorporate into our pipeline,” Kellogg admits. “We don’t really have the ability right now to do that with our rigs.”

In addition, animation taken directly from a motion-capture performance doesn’t mesh perfectly with The Clone Wars‘ animation, which is exaggerated and moves faster than normal human movement. “We actually did a little test, where we saw what it looked like with straight mo-cap, and it felt very odd to see that compared to everything else,” Kellogg says.

As such, instead of implementing the data directly, Kellogg and his team mostly used Park’s performance as a reference while animating The Clone Wars‘ final season: “We really ended up using it as a guideline. We had video reference of it, and we were able to take it into our story package and use it.”

In a way, that gives fans the best of both worlds. Park gets to play Maul again, while the animators who’ve kept the character alive on TV all these years get to put their stamp on what could be his final appearance. According to Kellogg, it worked, too: “The Maul-Ahsoka fight in Mandalore…. It’s up there. It’s really great. Hopefully that goes down as one of the best lightsaber fights that we’ve done.”

Only a couple of weeks left until we can find out for ourselves.

Star Wars: The Clone Wars‘ final season currently airs every Friday on Disney+.

intro 1586885071 (via Primetweets)Written by: Looper

Report

What do you think?

1.2k Points
Upvote Downvote

Leave a Reply

Avatar

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *