Something very new in the world of animation is getting
ready to unveil at Universal Studios Islands of Adventure (USIOA) this May.
The massive theme park combines five areas of entertainment and pop culture
myth into one extravagant adventure that brings things to animated and animatronic
life in a way never done before. "If you look at the park as a whole,
the concept of Islands of Adventure is solely about adventure in all of its
different styles and forms," said Scott Trowbridge, show producer USIOA.
"We wanted to find the best ways to express this idea, the best mediums
to tell the stories, to bring adventure to life while combining it with the
thrills and entertainment of a theme park." Comic Book Paradise
Some of these thrills will be found at Marvel Super Hero Island, an entertainment
property that has been created at USIOA. One of popular culture's most endearing
modern myths are those of the super hero, and the Marvel Age of Comics (1960-1970)
was considered one of the most fertile times for these extraordinary men and
women. Thanks to the creative genius of men like Stan
Lee [2], Steve Ditko and Jack Kirby sequential art fans were wowed by characters
like The Fantastic Four (1961), The Incredible Hulk (1962), The Uncanny X-Men
(1963), The Mighty Thor (1962) and an angst ridden, web slinging teenager,
Spider-Man (1962).
For the animation and pop culture fan a full day must be given to the Marvel
Super Hero Island, a metropolis of mayhem, mutants and maniacs. "Very
early on the concept of the battle between good and evil was evident in our
planning," said Trowbridge. "Marvel Super Hero Island is, if nothing
else, dynamic, with a sense of energy, fast, hard-hitting and in your face.
It is something that you experience, that puts you in the middle of the mix,
that brings the four-color pages of the comic book to real life."
Walking down Stan Lee Blvd. visitors will be stunned by the much larger than
life images of such heroes as Magneto, Captain America and, of course, Spider-Man,
along with the villains Doctor Octopus, Hobgoblin and Hydro-Man. For readers
of the comics, it all seems very familiar and just the way it should be. For
the uninitiated, the adventures of the living super heroes is immediately
awe-inspiring.
The Coup d'Etat
For anyone who likes to have fun, The Amazing Adventures of Spider-Man
attraction will quickly be recognized as the next generation in moving vehicle
rides and motion picture entertainment. "This story more than any other
is a groundbreaking kind of attraction," Trowbridge said. "We have
decided to not push the envelope, but invent a whole new sand box to play
in by combining rear-projected 3-D effects in a way never done before and
in a way we were told by the experts was impossible."
It took the creative team more than three years to create an experience that
encompasses 1.5 acres of space. Climbing into a specially designed proto-type
vehicle, the Scoop, guests become a part of the story as they find themselves
helping the webbed superhero retrieve The Statue of Liberty from a group of
unsavory villains.
An epic battle between Spidey and the Sinister Syndicate, which includes
Hobgoblin, Electro and Doc Ock, rages on every side of the vehicle. Throughout
the battle between good and evil will be fire effects, 3-D film and a "sensory
drop" when Doc Ock aims at the Scoop with his Doomsday anti-gravity gun.
"Using visual images, sound and large fans the rider experiences the
illusion that they are rising more than 400 feet into the air and we have
the impression of activities going on all around us," Trowbridge said.
"Then we are plummeting toward the ground and people are screaming, and
this trampoline comes out and catches us. All along we have only moved a few
feet into the air."
The New Trick
The, excuse the pun, marvel of this ride is that the projected 3-D film
image is all around the vehicle. The use of three-dimensional film projection
has always left the viewer with an image that seemed to come right at them.
If they moved across the room, it would follow them. While this does provide
a real-time, real feel to a film, it is obviously a projected image, a trick.
In The Amazing Adventures of Spider-Man, Trowbridge and his crew have come
up with the technology necessary to allow: a very three-dimensional image
of Spider-Man to sit on the hood of the Scoop vehicle; the pumpkins that Hobgoblin
throws to fly past the car; and Doc Ock's tentacles to come not only toward
passengers but also grab onto the car. The result is almost a Starship Enterprise
Holodeck type of experience. The edges between reality and film quickly become
blurred and the rider is in for a whole new entertainment experience.
"In the film world they say the camera adds ten pounds so if you see
someone on TV they look a little bit different than they do if you were to
meet them in person. We are taking that idea and applying it to this attraction,"
Trowbridge said. "Here you are in the same space as Spider-Man. He is
three-dimensional. He has substance. He projects a shadow when standing in
front of a light, but he is a projected image because the actions that he,
Doc Ock or the Hobgoblin do, such as web slinging, flying or moving mechanical
tentacles, could not be done by an animatronic or person in costume. It would
only work if we could do it with film."
Trowbridge and his team set off to find the film and animation experts who
would help them to achieve their goal, only to be told it had not been done
before and could not be done to give the illusion that they wanted. Not only
did they not take no for an answer, they became even more determined to find
the solution that would lead to a new era in animated storytelling. Kleiser-Walczak
Construction Company [6] was the well known digital effects house that took
on the job, producing all of the animation with Jeff Kleiser and Diana Walczak
directing. The Kleiser-Walczak team had to create new production methods on
the fly to meet the needs of this never-before-done project. The end product
is technically called "moving point of convergence," or, more casually,
"squinching," and it incorporates the dynamics of a 3-D movie with
the surround screen technology of a thrill ride like Back to the Future or
Star Tours, where riders sit in a car that shakes to give the impression of
movement. The kick here is that while the car is bucking like a bronco it
is also moving through the 1.5 acres of space which is filled with sets and
3D projection screens.
Finishing Touches
The surround screen projection adds to the feeling of movement from flying
to falling. The results of the new squinching effect is that guests will see
3-D images that appear to have singular space and mass standing, sitting,
or flying in front of them. "What we wanted to do was create an environment
that married the physical with the virtual," says Trowbridge. Most 3D
films have an item at a time dangle in front of the audience. Here the Universal
team wanted to create an entire 3D environment, meaning backgrounds needed
to behave in a 3D way too...as the ride was moving past! Due to the very nature
of 3D images, this had been considered near impossible. "As you move
through the ride, the backgrounds can't rotate, because buildings don't move,
so the problem was that we had to develop a way to fix that and to give the
illusion of 3-D images in this stationary environment. Using computers we
figured out that we could calculate the distortion that the eye would see
... and basically pre-distort the images so that when they are viewed from
the right place, moving at the right speed and in the right direction, it
all looks normal."
Sound also plays an important role and each Scoop vehicle contains 32 speakers
and has 10 discreet audio channels. As the vehicle moves through the attraction,
small speakers behind the guests project sound toward a bowl-shaped movie
screen in front of them. The sound is then reflected back into the car to
provide a surround sound experience.
The moving ride is the climax to the comic book story sprung to life. Prior
to clambering into the vehicle, riders will have been totally immersed in
the story of Spider-Man and Peter Parker. Walking through the Daily Bugle
building, the audience will be introduced to the evil characters of the Sinister
Syndicate and learn, even if they have never heard of the web-slinger before,
Spider-Man's origins. As visitors move through the front lobby and offices
of the Daily Bugle, they can read front pages of the newspaper highlighting
Spidey's heroic deeds and introducing some of the villains they will meet. It is almost assured that the line to ride The Amazing Adventures of Spider-Man
will be queued up on even the quietest day in the park, but the tour through
the Bugle office and presentations by J. Jonah Jameson will keep even the
most impatient from becoming bored. And once it's time to board the Scoop,
this will be one almost 5 minute adventure that will be well worth the wait.
Looking into Peter's office, which is actually a broom closet, they will see
him on a Parisian honeymoon with his wife Mary Jane. Walking into the dark
room, visitors see photos of villains hanging from the ceiling, a picture
is developing in the solution and another tray has been knocked over and glowing
green stuff has spilled all over the floor. The room is black-lit and on the
walls and ceiling you can see Spider-Man/Peter's foot prints as he has knocked
over the tray, stepping into the fluid and then ran up the wall, over the
ceiling and out the window. "Right away, visitors know that something
important is up," Trowbridge said.
Joseph Szadkowski writes on various aspects of popular culture and is a
columnist for The Washington Times.
Links:
[1] http://www.awn.com/imagepicker/image/4322
[2] http://www.awn.com/../../issue2.4/awm2.4pages/2.4goldmanlee.html
[3] http://www.awn.com/imagepicker/image/4323
[4] http://www.awn.com/imagepicker/image/4324
[5] http://www.awn.com/imagepicker/image/4325
[6] http://www.awn.com/kenyonspiderman.php3
[7] http://www.awn.com/imagepicker/image/4326