Episode II: Unlocking the
DVD
October 08, 2002
Disc One: The Feature
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Winning
numerous awards for its presentation of its feature film, and the quality of
its extras, the Episode I DVD set a precedent for what the Star Wars
DVD experience should be. The same team that developed that two-disc set
returns to bring Star Wars: Episode II Attack of the Clones to
DVD.
"A DVD takes about a
year-and-a-half or so to produce," says Jim Ward, Lucasfilm's Vice
President of Marketing and Executive Producer, who led the DVD project.
"As early as 2000, when we were shooting principal photography in
Sydney, we were already trying to figure out what the configuration of the
DVD would be." While Director George Lucas and
Producer Rick
McCallum were busily shooting Episode II, Lucasfilm's Marketing
Department was developing the Episode I DVD, and also earmarking content and
areas to explore for the Clones DVD. "The Episode I disc gave us
a really good benchmark. We had a very good blueprint so that we could
multi-task everything and get it done," says Ward. "My contribution to
the DVD is the movie itself," says George Lucas. "Because Episode
II was shot with a digital camera and created digitally, you can almost say
it was made for the DVD format." Attack of the Clones will be the first major live
action feature mastered direct from the digital source. Because the image
stays within the digital medium from start to finish, the feature itself has
unprecedented clarity. Lucas credits THX, under the leadership of Rick Dean,
Head of Special Projects, for assuring the quality of the transfer. "They did a phenomenal
job making sure that there was no loss of definition to the digital images
that were so full of motion and detail," says Lucas. "Their
expertise in image and sound replication preserved the creative work that so
many artists and sound designers had put into making this movie." "We spent millions
carefully developing and mixing the soundtrack and creating infinitely
detailed visuals, and it breaks my heart that many theaters out there aren't
equipped to show it the way we intended," laments Rick McCallum.
"But with home theaters now fully digital and getting better and better
every year, DVD is now a real safe haven for people who really love films and
want to see it as the creators intended." While the DVD format is
known for its enormous storage capacity, it comes at a price that must be
carefully balanced in the mastering process. The more material packed onto a
single disc, the poorer the quality for all of it. As a result, Disc One
optimizes the presentation of the feature by keeping such extras as deleted
scenes and documentaries on Disc Two. "It's always a
challenge. We sit down and understand what the bit-rate budget is,"
explains Ward. "Our first and foremost priority is to make sure the bit
rate budget for the film is the highest it can possibly be. Other people will
take a lower bit rate on the film in order to cram some other content in
there." Like the
Episode I disc, Episode II uses the fantastic environments of the Star
Wars galaxy to deliver the menu information and navigation options.
Producer Van Ling worked with digital resources direct from Industrial Light
& Magic to create worlds to explore. Each time Disc One is inserted
into a DVD player, one of three planetary themes is randomly selected for the
menu interface. Viewers may find themselves inspecting the clone hatcheries
of Kamino,
the towering skyscrapers of Coruscant,
or the treacherous conveyer belts of the Geonosian
droid
factory to select their viewing options. The movie
is divided into 50 chapters, which makes homing into a favorite scene easy.
Sound options on domestic discs include an English 5.1 Surround EX track,
delivering audio experiences such as the reverberating twang of seismic
charges, the wailing howl of Zam
Wesell's speeder, or the layered chaos of the Clone War in THX-certified
clarity and balance. Spanish and French-dubbed Dolby 2.0 audio are available
on separate tracks. The second English audio
setting is a commentary track assembled by Gary Leva, the same editor who put
together Episode I's commentary. The Clones track features Lucas,
McCallum, Editor Ben
Burtt, Animation Director Rob Coleman, and
Visual Effects Supervisors John Knoll, Ben Snow and Pablo Helman.
"We take it for granted that these guys are inventing the process every
step of the way," says Ward. "Everyone else follows their lead when
they're finished, but these guys are the ones that are inventing it. I think
it's wonderful to allow people to understand and learn more about the process
through such commentaries." Star Wars fans fortunate enough to have seen
Episode II in a digital theater will be happy to know that the D-cinema
version of the movie -- which differed from the standard film print version
-- formed the basis of the DVD master. "The digital version of the film
is on this DVD, but there are also some additional, minor changes. You're
going to have to figure those out for yourself," says Ward. |
Disc Two: The Extras
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"Obviously,
the movie itself should be the driving force, and the reproduction of the
movie's sound and picture quality should be exactly as the filmmaker
originally created it. The opportunity to include 'extras' is just one of the
added benefits that the DVD format allows," says Lucas. Disc Two of the
DVD set is a trove of extras, called "value-added material" in the
business. Van Ling has again
transformed the Episode II locales into menu screens, turning the Jedi
Archives, the Coruscant
nightclub, the Naboo
spaceport docking piers, Dex's
Diner and elsewhere into areas of navigation for Disc Two. As with
Episode I, the supplemental material delivers a mix of informative and
entertaining goods that illuminate the filmmaking process from start to
finish. "We have a working
mandate when we make these DVDs to include value-added material that people
actually want to watch, and to leave out games, and make-your-own-scenes and
other gimmicks. We're not about that," explains Ward. A long-form documentary,
"From Puppets to Pixels: Digital Characters in Episode II," tracks
the trailblazing journey that ILM's
talented artists had to undergo in creating computer-generated co-stars.
"That's where the news was in the making of this particular film, so
that's where our cameras went," says Ward. Hundreds
of hours of documentary footage shot by Lucasfilm's documentary group were
viewed and distilled into the 52-minute piece, crafted by Jon Shenk in a
"fly-on-wall" narrator-less style. Several stories are tracked from
beginning to end, the centerpiece being the development of a digital Yoda.
It starts with Rob
Coleman and his crew working on early proof-of-concept tests of the new
Yoda, then follows what was shot on-set, and covers the broad strokes and
subtle details of the finished animation -- including the most deceptively
difficult shot the animators dubbed "The Widowmaker." The film also examines the
making of CG supporting cast members Dexter
Jettster and Taun We,
from clay maquette to finished, living form. Rare behind-the-scenes footage
shows the interaction that actors Ron Falk and Rena Owen provide before
their digital alter egos are inserted into the scene. Also documented is the
perfection of digital doubles, computer-generated stuntmen used for Obi-Wan
Kenobi, Jango
Fett and Count
Dooku during some of Episode II's most dynamic action sequences. A team
of artists worked on the simulated physics of computer-generated clothes and hair
to deliver convincing doppelgangers of the human form. Lucas isn't worried about
disrupting the illusion that so many artists have worked carefully to craft.
He instead sees these documentaries as important educational tools. "The
visual effects artists at ILM and sound design teams at Skywalker Sound are
not magicians giving away their secrets," he explains. "They are
artists sharing their expertise and passion for filmmaking." A second
documentary, "State of the Art: The Previsualization of Episode II"
shines a spotlight on the Animatics Department. Pre-Visualization Effects
Supervisor Dan
Gregoire and his crew developed remarkably sophisticated low-resolution
computer-animated versions of scenes to plan and refine them in a quick and
efficient manner. The Speeder Chase, the
Droid Factory, and the Clone War are covered in the 23-minute documentary,
complete with examples of the sparse, bluescreen-filled plate photography,
and the Art Department's concept paintings and animatics that fleshed them
out. The Clone War sequence in particular has several concepts and shots that
never got past the animatics stage in the documentary. In
"Films are Not Released: They Escape," the documentary cameras
follow Sound Designer Ben
Burtt and his crew in the capturing, building, and layering of Episode
II's sound universe. Everything from the drone of a Jedi
starfighter engine, to the percussive machinery of the droid
factory, to the soft smooches of forbidden kisses for the finished
picture is covered. "It takes teams of sound recordists, sound
designers, foley artists, effects editors and even alien language creators
working together in blending all the sound elements to create the final sound
mix," says Lucas of the 25-minute documentary. These three documentaries
are joined by three featurettes ("Story," "Love" and
"Action") and all 12 parts of the Making Episode II web documentaries,
offering valuable educational material to aspiring filmmakers. "If
you're a kid, and you want to be in the movie business, but you're in a state
that has no film school, and you have no concept of what's involved, it's
very hard to demystify the process," says McCallum. "I want people
who don't have the ability to enter the system to be able to see how it's
done, so they can understand. This DVD offers that opportunity." Further
illuminating the filmmaking process is a collection of eight scenes deleted
from the final cut of Episode II. Optional introductions by Lucas, McCallum
and Burtt explain why the scenes were cut. The original plate photography for
these scenes were filled with areas of bluescreen, and ILM was busily
delivering the 2,000 shots that would make it into the film. For these
scenes, the digital environments and elements were crafted by the Animatics
Department at Skywalker Ranch, led by Pre-Visualization Supervisor Dan
Gregoire. The DVD also collects a
lot of the marketing material that went into telling the world about Attack
of the Clones. Fans may have recorded some of these off television, or
seen them here at starwars.com, but the DVD presents this video in the
highest possible quality: the Across the Stars music video, the
character- and story-based television commercials, and the theatrical teaser
and launch trailers. The "Mystery" trailer, which only played
online, now gets its largest incarnation through the DVD. There's more of course
(never-before-seen photos, an ILM effects reel, R2-D2:
Beneath the Dome trailer, a few carefully stashed "Easter
eggs") -- even after finally viewing every last shred of content, the
DVD will continue to be a gateway to further Episode II material in the
months to come through a web-link to dvd.starwars.com. To preorder and comparison
shop for the Episode II DVD click this link. Stay tuned to starwars.com for continued
in-depth coverage of this upcoming release. |
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