NEWBURY PARK, CA — Maxon’s Cinema 4D modeling and animation software was recently used by
director Ethan Shaftel to create Extravaganza (http://www.ethanshaftel.com), a new virtual reality short film satire. The project made use of both Cinema 4D software and its CV-VR Cam plug-in for rendering virtual reality content.
Extravaganza stars Paul Scheer (The League, 30 Rock), John Gemberling (Broad City, Santa Clarita Diet), Will Greenberg (Wrecked), and Annie Tedesco (Bella and the Bulldogs), and debuted at the Tribeca Film Festival’s Immersive Virtual Arcade back in April. It makes its European premiere during the Cannes Film Festival this month.
For Extravaganza, the viewer puts on a VR headset and becomes a programmed puppet, forced to perform in a ludicrous show for a clueless executive (Paul Scheer). But things aren’t exactly what they seem, and the viewer might yet break free of their programming.
“In Extravaganza, the viewer finds themselves in the novel position of being 'consumed' by an audience, subjected to their insults and confronted with many of mainstream entertainment’s blind spots and prejudices,“ explains Shaftel. “Using Maxon’s 3D and virtual reality filmmaking tools allowed us to create an immersive environment so that we could bring assumptions to the surface we have about how stories are told that couldn’t otherwise be told in a traditional film medium.”
For the past five years, Shaftel’s EasyAction production studio and lead animator Frank Stringini have relied on Cinema 4D as a visual effects and animation content creation tool for film projects, video installations and screen content for recording artists, including Rhianna, as well as for a number of experimental or unfinished VR projects.
“One of the cool things we did with Extravaganza is to combine our live-action actor Paul Scheer, filmed with a traditional non-VR camera, within a fully 3D-animated world. When Scheer lifts up the VR puppet show where the viewer is 'inside' and straps it to his face, he is fully a part of their environment, staring down at them and the other VR puppets,” says Shaftel. “This required us to work out some tricky projection-mapping style techniques in Cinema 4D to blend the real footage and the animation. We also relied on the Xref tools to instance our mechanized instruments to better synch with our musical score, the Point Level Morph for our inflatable ballerinas, and various Character Constraint tags to rig-up all our puppets and the mechanized moving stage together.”
Virtual reality film content creation is challenging explains Shaftel because of the huge resolutions required in order to get a good quality render anywhere the viewer looks.
“Before we discovered CV-VR Cam from the Maxon Cineversity site, we had actually developed our own completely home-brewed reflection-based VR camera system in Cinema 4D but were limited to monoscopic spherical outputs that didn’t support particles and we also experienced visual errors and glitches above and below the horizon.
“Using CV-VR Cam completely solved all the stereoscopic problems we were struggling with allowing for flawless equirectangular outputs,” added Shaftel. “The most powerful aspect of using the plug-in was that we could use the same animation and design workflow we were already comfortable with using in Cinema 4D for non-VR projects and focus on the storytelling challenges (and opportunities!) inherent in this completely new medium.”