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Published By Holly-Wood on Wednesday, March 07, 2007 - 02:44 PM
Along with creating entirely computer-generated images for the LDraw Scene of the Month contest, I create stop-motion films with LEGO bricks, sometimes called brickfilms. In the summer of 2006 I made a recreation of a scene from The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers in which Saruman is giving a speech to a vast army of thousands of orcs below. The clip was only 27 seconds long, but it took about 2 months of work, most of it spent on a single wide shot created using the LDraw parts database and related software. For my February 2007 Scene of the Month entry, which ultimately won the contest, I decided to create an entry derived from a CGI shot used in the video. Read on and find out how to build an army.
Building The Models
The components of the tower: The two sides of the
tower, the balcony, and curiously happy renditions of Saruman and
Wormtongue. Sarumun's hair and beard were added in Carrara.
With the exception of the Tower of
Orthanc, the models used in the image were small and low in detail. For
the tower, I constructed a balcony and two sides of the tower in MLCad;
the result was a large model which was duplicated and flipped to create
the other half of the building. Not all of the tower is shown in the
shot, so I only built what was shown in frame. I wanted what was
visible to be as close to the real thing as possible; I used sloped
bricks to create the columns on the sides. I wanted it to be absolutely
clear that it was built out of bricks, so I designed it such that the
studs are on the sides. The balcony was built as a separate model and
placed in the middle. There are low-detail representations of Saruman
and Wormtongue on the balcony, though they're barely visible in the
finished image.
The banner, the high-poly orc, and the low-poly orc.
A single orc model was used, created with MLCad's minifigure
generator. I used LeoCad to export the model to a .3ds format, and
imported this into my 3D application of choice, Carrara Studio. One I
had the model in Carrara, I created a high detail orc and a lower
polygon count version. (Less polygons means less data and faster
processing, but it also can result in rougher edges and less detail.)
The five or six rows closest the camera were filled in with the
high-polygon orc, and the low-polygon one was used for the vast
expanse of orcs in the distance. Even with these optimizations, the
thousands of orcs were still very taxing on the computer, and I had to
work with the scene in bounding-box mode, which represents each object
in the scene with a wireframe box of the same color. I realized that
the pikes the orcs were holding were too short to reach the correct
height in-camera, so I extended them. I also extruded the ridge on the
helmet to make it resemble the helmets the Uruk-Hai wear in the
film. The flags were spears with a textured flag object attached to
the end, designed to look like fabric with a crudely painted White
Hand of Saruman. I gave the armor a shiny, plastic-looking sheen. The
courtyard has a number of large pieces of machinery in the distance,
which were simple structures built in MLCad.
Composing the Scene
Once I had imported and textured all the models in Carrara, I set out
to re-create the composition of the original scene. I carefully
compared my scene to the original, and after many, many camera
adjustments got it to be close to the original. I played with the
perspective some; the tower is not to scale with the orc army, but it
appears to be due to the angle. It took some time to figure out the
focal length of the lense used in the real shot, but this was
essential in order to make the angles match up how they should. Using
stock photographs, I cobbled together a sky and mountain background
that resembles the background seen in the original footage. I used a
smoke function in Carrara to simulate the smoke on the
horizon. Lighting the scene was also a complicated ordeal due to the
overcast day lighting of the scene. The final scene contained 11
lights of various colors and intensities.
Finishing the render
Due to the complexity of the scene, the rendering process for the
still image took about half an hour. I used the highest quality
settings on everything, because in scenes like this with lots of
repeating textures and details (for example, the studs on Orthanc)
lower quality anti-aliasing tends to result in ugly webbing
effects. Anti-aliasing is a process which smooths the edges of objects
to make them blend together in the scene. After rendering the image, I
wanted to give it a more realistic, gritty, film look, so I adjusted
the coloring and added some motion blur in Photoshop Elements
Wireframe view used during the composition process.
Final unprocessed rendered image.
Final processed image.
And that is the process I used to create this image. I enjoyed making
it. It would not have been possible without the extensive LDraw
database, which is an invaluble resource for creating these
scenes. There are many people who use LDraw software for the purpose
of modelling alone, but it can also be a great tool for creating
art. I hope that others will be inspired to create scenes using the
LDraw software; I'm excited that there have been some great entries to
the LDraw Scene of the Month contest recently, but there is always
room for more. Keep building!
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