Some Kick-Ass VFX

Double Negative supplies the VFX ammo for Matthew Vaughn's adaptation of the Millar/Romita comic book.
Posted In | Magazines: VFXWorld

Check out the Kick-Ass trailer at AWNtv!

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For the opening, Double Negative stitched together stills of the New York skyline to create cyclorama backgrounds to composite into the shots. All images courtesy of Lionsgate.

Based on the popular comic book by Mark Millar and John Romita, Kick-Ass is about a high school superhero wannabe. However, he inspires a subculture of copy cats and they get their chance to thwart a local mob boss. Directed by Matthew Vaughn (Stardust, Layer Cake), who raised the financing independently, Kick-Ass features vfx by Double Negative, LipSync Post, The Senate VFX, Ghost VFX and Fido. Double Negative's Mattias Lindahl served as overall visual effects supervisor. In fact, Lindahl has relocated to his native Sweden to work at Fido.

Lindahl, who previously worked with Vaughn on Stardust, suggests this wasn't an in-your-face vfx film, even with nearly 850 shots. The idea was to be gritty and realistic and not to venture into the fantastical, so the vfx needed to be understated in keeping with the feel of the story. However, the shot count escalated throughout the shoot so Double Negative couldn't handle it all.

"The graphic novel was always referenced on the set," Lindahl says. "In terms of our work, all we had to look at was the blood effect. The graphic novel is very gory. The way we did that is instead of shooting practical blood on set, which would've been very time consuming, we shot lots of practical elements on greenscreen later on and composited all the blood. We had the benefit of having a fairly finished cut by the time we got to the effects shoot so we could figure out what angles and action we needed of the blood -- everything from bullets exiting people's heads to knives going through bodies and legs being cut off. Blood is such an important part because there is so much of it. Matthew had an idea at one point of considering a comic book feel to it as it was spurted out into the air. So we did quite a lot of testing on that as far as treating our elements like they were hand-drawn. We also did some other tests on hand-drawn blood. But it looked kind of weird to have this comic book-looking blood in a [live-action] scene so we went for a hybrid of real-looking blood but the amount of blood was enhanced more than you'd normally get.

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Further cyclorama backgrounds were done by Double Negative for the mob boss' apartment, but whenever you looked through windows there are more modern buildings around it.

Double Negative started out the opening sequence, which appears to show Kick Ass standing atop a skyscraper looking out over New York. The team created previs based on the storyboard and a couple of pages from the script. In fact, this previs was used as pitchvis to help sell the film to prospective financiers.







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