STAR WARS EPISODE V: THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK Asteroids & AT-AT Walkers Featurettes

STAR WARS EPISODE V: THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK Asteroids & AT-AT Walkers Featurettes

Star Wars YouTube page has released two vintage Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back featurettes. One features the use of stop-motion and miniatures to make the AT-AT Walkers move, and another revealing storyboards of the thrilling asteroid field chase sequence.

Feature Opinion
By nailbiter111 - Dec 14, 2013 03:12 AM EST
Filed Under: Star Wars
Source: STAR WARS



Dennis Muren looks back on how Industrial Light & Magic animated the AT-AT Walkers from The Empire Strikes Back's Battle of Hoth sequence -- and the inspiration for the techniques used.

Originally, Muren and his team were unsure of how they would bring the AT-ATs to life. The first idea was to build an actual robot that could move by itself, but that was deemed too complicated and costly. Instead, Muren pushed for stop-motion, citing the influence of King Kong and the realization that the staccato look of stop-motion would be appropriate for machines. Models were manipulated a frame at a time, animated in front of painted backgrounds instead of blue screen, with baking soda was used in place of snow.

It was shot at 24 frames per second, resulting in about 5 seconds of footage per day of work. For explosions, high speed photography was used, and cutouts were used for background walkers.

One of the early ideas was to build an actual robot version that would walk on its own, but that would prove too costly and complicated. Muren, whose background was in stop-motion animation, pushed to have the sequence done using that technique -- since the AT-ATs were machines anyway, the staccato look of stop-motion would be appropriate. So stop-motion models were built and manipulated in front of paintings, as opposed to blue screen, and baking soda was used for the snowy landscape. The set itself had trap doors so that animators could pop up, animate the model, go back down, and shoot a frame of film. Photo cutouts were used for walkers in the background, and smaller models were created to convey a sense of scale and depth in the shots.



This vintage featurette for The Empire Strikes Back takes viewers through the film's famed asteroid field sequence, overlayed with the original storyboards. Storyboards are essential to the preproduction of a movie, as they map out how scenes will visually appear.

As seen here, interior cockpit shots, TIE fighters colliding with asteroids, and the Millennium Falcon docking inside a larger asteroid all appear as storyboards almost exactly as they would be seen in the final film.

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SuperCat
SuperCat - 12/14/2013, 6:17 AM
"Empire" was the best out of all the sequels.
Rndm2013
Rndm2013 - 12/14/2013, 6:32 AM
The Empire Strikes Back is what Star Wars movies need to be! Anything else will just get contrasted/compared to it. It set the bar for which everything else is measured, I Double Dog Dare them to do better :)
NerfHerder
NerfHerder - 12/14/2013, 7:22 AM
 photo image-2.jpg
Wildaniel
Wildaniel - 12/14/2013, 8:22 AM
@McFarlaneFan

J.J. scene with Khan crying is one of the best scenes of any movies this year. It really shows a great director and actor at work.
TheOneAboveAll
TheOneAboveAll - 12/14/2013, 2:27 PM
@Mc
that is a good scene though
ds9epicfan
ds9epicfan - 12/14/2013, 8:42 PM
Empire Strikes Back should be a lesson in great film-making to these young uninspired film directors of today!Combining story and special effects that compliment each other and moves the story forward in a steady pace leaving the audience wanting more!A true classic!
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