Catwoman VFX Claw Past Comic Book Conventions
Likewise, at Tippett Studio, which was responsible for four vfx shots of the feline fatale Midnight, vfx supervisor Joel Friesch explains: All the cats in the film are real except four shots with Midnight. In order to capture the correct motions of Midnight, I flew up to Vancouver to photograph and video the cat. Then it was just a matter of tweaking for my fx team. Perplexingly enough, most of the cats in the film permeate a synthetic nature, yet only Midnight is CG in some scenes.
The greatest visual effect in Catwoman comes not from a computer, but from Catwomans new signature costume itself. Conceived by Australian designer Angus Strathie, whose work on Moulin Rouge won him the Academy Award for Best Costume Design, the costume fuses titillatingly torn leather with scintillating quasi-sadomasochistic chains, and of course, a lot of skin. Although the costume has been the subject of some controversy, it is not distracting; it embodies the Catwoman mystique of both mischievousness and eroticism. According to Jones, the amount of skin present as a result of the costume posed a number of problems when modeling the CG Catwoman. There is rarely much skin shown on CG characters. It is hard to achieve. Spider-Mans costume, for example, covers everything except his chin. Catwoman probably shows the most skin of any CG character to date. It was difficult to make the CG Catwoman be a close enough match to Berry. The costume, nevertheless, further demonstrates the 21st century zeitgeist of sexuality in Hollywood. Michelle Pfeiffer looked purfect in Batman Returns, which is not to say that Berry does not. Yet Hollywoods continuing obligation to transform women into strippers while masquerading it as female empowerment because the actresses feel confident being scantily clad is a grave fallacy, which merits its own discussion at a later time.
Frenchman Pitof, Catwomans director, is also noteworthy since he is formerly a vfx guru. Catwoman represents Pitofs American directorial debut, yet his vfx mastery has accrued him a reputation over the last decade, including his technical grand prize in Cannes for Grosse fatique in 1994. Coming from a visual fx background, Pitof knew exactly what he wanted, commented Tippetts Friesch. Jones concurred, saying, Pitof has an eye for detail. The little things mean a lot for him. He wanted everyone on the crew to examine Catwoman from the outside in. He made everyone consider the film as if through his wide-angle lens. Some of the crew admits that there are remnants of a language barrier between them and the director, but his natural ease and body language convey his thoughts aptly. [Pitof] wanted the camera to have a catlike quality to it, elucidates Jones. So he used this safari camera to follow Halles movements. He wanted these big cityscape sweeps that we could only do in CG because there is no way to make a helicopter move like that. He made us think about what it would be like if we were going over Catwoman in a plane. Hes a pilot after all. Speaking of the all-CG cityscapes surrounding the main office building filmed in Vancouver, using all-CG cities detracts from the realism of the film. They break the illusion that such a Catwoman might exist. Jones disagrees, but cites the break in realism as desirable: Although this movie takes place in a real world, its not a real world. Theres a certain amount of fantasy involved.
Catwoman is ultimately a product of false advertising. The film has nothing to do with the DC Comics character whose identity is Selina Kyle, not Patience Phillips; nothing to do with the 60s TV roles played by Julie Newmar, Lee Meriwether and Eartha Kitt; and nothing to do with Pfeiffers lucrative role. The only resemblance is that there is a woman in a leather cat suit carrying a whip. Although Jones defends the notions of introspection for Berrys character, he argues that the Gotham City heritage is distracting from the story being told. The bedrock of the film is a sham. Imagine if the upcoming Batman film had a protagonist named Arthur Smith instead of Bruce Wayne or if the upcoming Superman were named Hal Richardson; viewers would feel both confused and ripped off. Batman and Catwoman creator Bob Kane once wrote: We felt that [Catwoman] would appeal to the female readers and that they would relate to her as much as to Batman. We also thought that the male readers would appreciate a sensual woman to look at. So, she was put into the strip for both the boys and the girls, as a female counterpart to Batman. Kane created Catwoman to be a foil to Batman. The current films errant departure into Egyptian mythology surrounded by a BeauTox-gone-bad plot is the point of greatest scrutiny because it is weak. Radical changes are acceptable when they work, but they seldom do. Catwoman is yet another example of a film with a talented and gorgeous actress, marvelous vfx and a poor story.
A graduate student in Global Media and Communications in a joint program between the London School of Economics and the University of Southern California, Gerard Raiti has been analyzing the animation and comic book industries since 1996 for various publications, including KidScreen. Formerly, he interned as a media analyst at DUCK Studios in Los Angeles and aspires to work in childrens programming and development. He is also the creator of Adventures of Periwinkle Twinkle.

























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