Thursday, December 8, 2011

Laws of Physics in an Animation Universe Term Paper


A Term Paper on the Incredibles

The 2005 Disney Pixar film The Incredibles imagines what it would have been like for an American family with secret extraordinary abilities to suppress its identity under the guise of a normal suburban family. It is the nineteen fifties; the only difference from the world we remember is that some people are born with super powers and are classified as Supers, especially when they don outfits and give themselves superhero names. When the Supers are forced to give up heroics and go underground, they have to try to live mundane lives that never reveal their above average abilities. Fifteen years later, a family of supers finds that the constant relocating and pretending to be normal puts a huge strain on the family dynamics. The patriarch Bob can’t help finding ways of use his ability of superhuman strength to help people. It is only when they use all of their abilities, be they supernatural or interpersonal, that they can happily work together as a family.

An elastic super being is not just stretchy, but also can add or subtract body mass.
Helen at one points become paper-thin against a wall to avoid being hit by a moving pod-vehicle. Like a paper doll, Helen’s dimension of height stays the same (100% of her regular dimension). If we estimate that her regular depth dimension is in the ballpark of 20 inches, it appears that she becomes flat or nearly flat against the wall.  Even if she was as thick as 2 inches, 10% of her regular depth, her width should have increased ten times her regular width (1 * 0.1 * 10 = 1). Her width barely increases at all; her arms gain the most noticeable width (which you can see best when her arms look like they become “skinnier” as she peels off the wall) but her hips at head look to the naked eye like the exact same size they are when she is not squished flat.

Arcs
The paths of objects and super beings through the air have parabolic arcs.
A lot of objects and people are propelled through the air, sometimes with incredible speed or momentum, or in Helen’s case with mass of the object increasing or decreasing during flight. When playing catch with his son, Bob can throw a football over a hill and off into the horizon, but the football still flies in a parabolic arc that visibly descends at about 45 degrees.  Helen can stretch and leap over and across buildings when she flirts with Bob, but she still slows in to the apex of the arc and slows out as she starts to fall.
There is a lot of action in this movie that seems to contradict this rule; when the Supers leap about occasionally it looks like their abilities let them defy physics as we know them. It raises the question if the Supers do not always travel through the air in parabolic arcs, and this is part of them being super. The scene where this is most obvious is when Bob is on the island for the first time doing battle with a smart robot. Bob starts to leap over the robot as it is coming towards him, and we see the computer calculate his path of action to determine where it can hit him out of the air. The path that the robot shows is a flat circular path that clearly doesn’t follow the 1 to 4 ratio let alone the proper arc. But closer observation shows that the actual slow motion images of Bob starting to jump actually observe a proper arc with his center of gravity, and it is only the computer’s analysis of it that is incorrect. 

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Character Animation

This is a very quick and dirty test I did using a pipe cleaner stick figure. Against a metal board, pipe cleaners turned out to be even easier than I thought because the metal in the pipe cleaner sticks easily to tiny magnets. Yes, I accidently got my hand in one of the frames, but since I'm using the SAM application, it would involve redoing the whole thing to fix it, since the computer had been moved by the time I noticed.

One major thing I learned from doing this with SAM and my laptop's webcam is the lightsource becomes a problem. The lighting changes dramatically with how close my (relatively pink and red) face and my blue shirt got to the screen. I think the next time I try this I will use a different camera, or add side and fill lighting. But this works fine for a small submission for this assignment.


Thursday, October 13, 2011

Outline of Term Paper

I. Introduction

A. The Incredibles

B. Premise of super people in a real time period in our real world

C. Hypothesis

II. Gravity

A. Correct timing of elevator

B. Correct “falling” around axis of giant stone tiki

C. Extended hang-time or beginning of slowing out of people (dash on the water, Helen off of the rooftop)

III. Stretch and Squash: Helen’s elasticity and mass

A. Correct stretch: parachute Helen

B. Incorrect stretch: additional mass, cylinder arms lack of “ribbon” effect

C. Incorrect squash: paper-doll thin against a wall

IV. Arcs: Supers jumping, throwing, and getting thrown

A. Objects being thrown have correct arcs: small coconuts, giant pods

B. Supers jumping don’t consistently follow correct arcs

1. Picture of robot calculations of Bob’s arc also inaccurate

V. Conclusion

A. Sleek stylized storytelling

B. Examples where correct depiction of physics would be jarring or take the mind longer to process

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Video analysis of path of action


video of me jumping a lot. the noise in the background is jousters practicing swordfighting. please excuse the really weird clothes.







Saturday, September 10, 2011

Tracker Video Analysis of falling (attempt 1)

ok i THINK this will still work. if the image is "right clicked" there is an option to open the image in a new tab, and in that new tab it is possible to zoom in and see the data. I will redo it (and download some free image editing software) if this doesn't quiet pass.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Video Reference



Ball dropping 5 times at approx. 30 fps
If the focus on any of these drops is a problem, I have more footage.

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Mini-Portfolio






My name is Liana Madison and I am NOT an animation/illustration major. When I first transfered to SJSU I was a Theatre major but switched to Creative Arts so that I could take glass blowing and have the credits count for something. The major allows you to choose classes from any creative department (writing, dance, music, film, etc) and learn things like the general Management of the Arts, and the Creative Process.

Despite my habit of collecting creative skills and knowledge, 2D art has never been my strong suite. I have only beginner/decent art skills; my doodles tend to be abstract and impressionistic. Although I couldn't draw you a great comic/animation, I do have a really strong sense of composition and visual storytelling.

I have a confession: I have never taken physics. I attended six schools from middle school through high school, so I always missed the year they gave physics (but ended up taking biology three times). I'm already loving in class the approaching of new physics concepts through an artistic medium; It's sparking interesting ideas for mediums I have more practical experience with. For instance, breaking apart the physics of falling could then be applied to a simulated fall, like a clown or actor tripping himself or doing a pratfall with a safe landing. Knowing when the eye expects to see the motion have a slow point, then speed up consistently to an impact, can make the fall look more real or exaggerated correctly. Instead of an animator drawing it, in theatre you would have to find the capabilities of a person's body.


Picture 1: a cartoon version of me, drawn by my best friend Chris Carter. My own art tends to be more abstract; if i ever take the time to do a self portrait I shall post it.




Picture 2: Preparing for a performance of A Midsummer's Night's Dream at SJSU in
2007.
Picture 3: A serious production shot of the actual performance (with Joshua
Zwifler as Theseus,) The photos were taken by Mike Adams, chair of the deptartment, and can be found at the TRFT website or at the following link
http://www.tvradiofilmtheatre.com/tour96.html



I have made some films, but they are all on VHS. -_- So here is something I quickly whipped up to post here. If you understand ASL, my apologies for the quality of my signing: I haven't tried to tell this story in years.

Friday, August 26, 2011