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This book is the first dedicated edited collection that explores the virtualization of screen-making processes from pre-production to post-production, while attuning to the aesthetic, ideological and performative contexts upended by these integrated technologies.
Sommario
Introduction: Virtual Production: What is Real?
Section One: It's Always Been Real: Contemporising Virtual Production 1. 'This is the Way': ILM's Stagecraft, Disney's
Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Constructing the Rhetoric of Virtual Production 2. Virtual Production and the History of Attractions 3. Reengineering Rear Projection? A Genealogy of Virtual Production Spaces and their Aesthetic and Logistical Potential 4. Unreal Spaces, Real Peripheries: Exploring the Materialities of Virtual Production 5. Redefining Perceptual Reality: A Cinematic Phenomenology of Virtual Production
Section Two: The Body Becomes You: Performing Virtual Production 6. Facilitating an Immersive Performance Environment in Virtual Production 7. Virtual Production and the Future of Live Performance - intermedial trajectories of expanded animation in the immersive production
Dream (Royal Shakespeare Company, 2021) 8. Animated Presence in Virtual Production 9. Immersive Staging Techniques in Virtual Production: The Profilmic Phase of
Avatar, Miriam Meriam Ouertani
Section Three: Skin Deep: Gazing with Virtual Production 10. Race, Identity and Virtual Production:
Passing through the Technology 11. Photogrammetric Race-Making in the MetaHuman Creator 12. Decolonising Virtual Production? - Optimising Skin-tone Representations and Aesthetics in an LED Volume with Personal Colour Analysis 13. Virtual Screens and the Human Gaze
Section Four: Whose Work? Labouring with Virtual Production 14. Performing Pandora: Virtual Production and the Profilmic Event in 'Avatar' 15. Sound Design and Virtual Production: Implementing Sound in a Pre-Production Workflow 16. Lost in the virtual abyss: female participation and experience in Virtual Production industry and educational contexts in Australia 17. Intimate Frames: Intimacy and performance in virtual production 18. Towards the Engine Cinema: The Virtual Production in Chinese Film Industries
Info autore
Sean Redmond is Professor of Cinema at RMIT University, Australia.
Colin Perry is a Film and Television lecturer at Deakin University. His background as a director, editor, sound engineer and academic all contribute to the breadth of knowledge he brings to this subject.
Sian Mitchell is Senior Lecturer in Film, Television and Animation at Deakin University, Australia. She is also the Festival Director and co-founder of the Melbourne Women in Film Festival.
Lienors Torre is a Senior Lecturer in Animation at Deakin University.