A Stunning CGI film
-
Check out this incredible undertaking by Alex Roman
-
thanks for showing this, very inspiring
-
Saw this the other day. Absolutely breathtaking.
The Milwaukee Art Museum scenes, to me, are the best. It's such a powerful scene. (Too bad the real thing doesn't do it that quickly)
If someone could render that well on Sketchup...
-
I agree, this is incredible work.
Put this on the wish list for +/- GSU ver. 27.3 -
@stevebo said:
If someone could render that well on Sketchup...
The modeling is obtainable with SU. It's the rendering and post production work that is killer difficult.
-
it is really amazing , but I guess that cornerbar would be a proper place to share this
-
Quiet Art!
-
@unknownuser said:
I agree, this is incredible work.
Put this on the wish list for +/- GSU ver. 27.3I hope CG would be as common/easy as typing in a near future , maybe on GSU ver. 15 ,with more smart/intelligent/powerful computers.
BTW, Alex Roman is a name to be in mind, it is a real piece of art. -
Wow! I think I could sit through a feature length version of that in a theatre.
I did notice the wind turbines were rotating backwards but maybe that was an indication of time running in reverse.
-
By the way boys and girls. . . look where he got some of his basic models for those that had any doubts SU could cut the mustard.
.
-
I kinda meant rendering from SU would be more difficult rather than the actual modelling. Vf3ds is more powerful than VfSU. Plus using lots of high quality textures on SU would probably kill it very quickly.
-
@stevebo said:
I kinda meant rendering from SU would be more difficult rather than the actual modelling. Vf3ds is more powerful than VfSU. Plus using lots of high quality textures on SU would probably kill it very quickly.
I don't know that that is necessarily the case. Both Vray for SU and Vray for Max function on the same core infrastructure. One just operates around a stronger platform than the other. The modeling, animating and rendering is only half the story here. The real brilliance is in the compositing and After Effects work that Alex did. The scene transitions and score of music evoke a sense of peace and harmony that is hard to put into words. Brilliant work of art. A year of Alex's life summed up in a little over 12 breathtaking and meditative minutes.
-
@earthmover said:
The modeling, animating and rendering is only half the story here. The real brilliance is in the compositing and After Effects work that Alex did. The scene transitions and score of music evoke a sense of peace and harmony that is hard to put into words. Brilliant work of art. A year of Alex's life summed up in a little over 12 breathtaking and meditative minutes.
Very well said!
-
Short bio and interview with Alex Roman with a few more images:
http://area.autodesk.com/inhouse/bts/publications_by_alex_roman
Advertisement