'Titanic' Director Cameron Plots CG Extravaganza

Saturday, July 08, 2006

James Cameron arrives with girlfriend Suzy Amis

LOS ANGELES - Nine years after the launch of his last feature film, 
James Cameron is targeting a summer 2008 release for his next project, 
20th Century Fox's Avatar, and he hopes to start shooting a cast of 
unknown actors on a stage in Los Angeles by February.

Cameron is plotting a high-concept comeback film for his return to 
mainstream features, well in the wake of his king-making helming of 
1997's Titanic. His new project, which also has gone under the cover 
title Project 880, follows a paraplegic war veteran who is brought to 
another planet inhabited by a humanoid race at odds with Earth's citizens.

"Believe it or not, the shooting is a very small part of it," Cameron 
says. "It's a very, very big project where the shooting is like a month 
and a half--not really very much. There's just so much CG 
(computer-generated), and the visual effects are a huge component. A lot 
of it is performance capture. We use different techniques (from Sony 
Pictures' upcoming Monster House, for example), but it's the same 
general idea."

Cameron takes pains to make a distinction between his use of performance 
capture versus the more popular motion-capture techniques that often 
heavily modify recorded gestures in postproduction.

"With performance capture, you're capturing exactly what the actor does 
and translating it to the CG character without the interpretation of 
animators," he says. "So it's not performance by committee, it's 
performance by the actor. I'm an absolute stickler about this, and I 
wanted to make a director-centric performance-capture process. We've 
spent literally since August of last year creating this and now we're 
ready to go."

TALENT SEARCH

Now that his next-generation production technologies have been hammered 
out, Cameron is focusing on auditioning actors.

"We're very active right now in terms of casting," Cameron says. "We're 
not looking at anyone, we're looking at everyone. There are a number of 
characters that we can cast from that up-and-coming talent pool. They're 
not going to be well-known names--until after the movie, hopefully."

Cameron says he much prefers discovering new talent than relying on the 
known quantities of established stars.

"It's more of a thrill to find people who are just about ready to break 
and recognizing what they have and then moving them to the next level," 
the director says. "That's more exciting, I think, than just hitching my 
wagon to Tom Cruise or John Travolta or whatever. They're great guys, I 
know them, but it's not as interesting to me."

But Cameron doesn't shun celebrities, either.

"There are what, 10-15 bankable stars?" he says. "There are a lot more 
movies than that, and there have to be other ways to make movies. We may 
end up with stars in Avatar, but it's not a requirement."

Cameron openly jokes about the digital HD 3-D digital camera rig he has 
been developing for six years with the help of Vince Pace.

"Vince and I have worked since 2000 developing this camera system," 
Cameron says. "And the irony is it was developed for me to use. And I've 
been going off and doing all these expeditions and doing expedition 
films in 3-D. We've really flogged the camera, made sure it works, 
upgraded it, re-engineered it, but now other people are using it, which 
is good, which I also like."

Four Cameron/Pace 3-D HD camera rigs are being used in production. Three 
are out on Eric Brevig's Journey 3-D for New Line Cinema in Vancouver 
and Giant Screen Films is using a rig in South Africa on the Imax 
feature Ocean Frenzy. Next it will be Cameron's turn to put his own 
technology to use.



Reply with a "Thank you" if you liked this post.
_____________________________

MEDIANEWS mailing list
medianews@twiar.org
To unsubscribe send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to