Posted by twilight-movie on November 24, 2009

Making the New Moon wolves

MTV was able to interview Phil Tippet, owner of Tipper Studio who was in-charged for the special effects in New Moon. They were also in-charge for creating the wolf-size werewolves, who represents the boys of the Quileute tribe. Here is an excerpt of their interview:

MTV: You worked on Chris Weitz’s “The Golden Compass.” So, did he just call you up and ask you to do “New Moon” as well?

Tippett: No, actually we didn’t deal with Chris that much. We were involved in “The Golden Compass,” then everything came our way right at the very end [of the "New Moon" production] in a 911 call [from a producer]. She realized that she had a bunch of wolves to do, so she gave us a call and said, “Hey, this is right up your alley, what do you think?” And we said, “Yeah, we’re onboard.”

MTV: What were the greatest challenges on “New Moon”?

Tippett: With the werewolves, the big deal from Chris and from Stephenie Meyer’s books was that these things are horse-sized wolves, not traditional beastly, werewolf-y, quasi-human type things. They are, for all intents and purposes, timberwolves. And so, that’s the trick; you get into that uncanny valley — the land usually occupied by computer-generated canines and cats, which are so much a part of our world that when you’re trying to do a duplication of the character that’s not fantasy, it’s so common to everybody’s observation that it gets a lot more tricky to make them digital, yet photographically representational.

MTV: So, real things are harder to make than made-up things?

Tippett: Very much. If you have a bug from another planet, or a giant robot, or something like that, you can get away with murder — but when it’s something recognizable, then the onus is on you.

MTV: Did you do a lot of research into wolves?

Tippett: Yes, they’re required to do very specific things, to move certain ways, and to that end we do an incredible amount of research — the co-supervisor on the show, Matt Jacobs, led an exposition down to a wolf preserve in Los Angeles. He brought a bunch of the animators and art department guys, and they observed a bunch of timberwolves to commune with them and their behavior and get their vibe.

MTV: This is one of the most eagerly anticipated movies of 2009. Were there a lot of top-secret measures you had to take as you worked on the effects?

Tippett: There were things that were amusingly irritating. Like, the paparazzi got so bad following the stars everywhere that in some instances we were going to these godforsaken locations out in the middle of nowhere, and sometimes the production would put up signs pointing to a different location to confuse the paparazzi. Of course, that would totally confuse us as well, which would make us show up late to the set. [Laughs.]

To read the rest of the interview, click on the link above.

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