Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - The production process of live-action animation

The production process of live-action animation

The production process of live animation is as follows:

Create a layer, name it Sun, insert a key frame at the first frame position, select the key frame, and draw a sun on the stage , and convert the sun into a component, place it at the end of the stage, insert a key frame at frame 50, drag the sun to the right end of the stage, and create a tween animation between frames 1 and 50. At this time, there are Line animation effect from left to right.

Select this layer and create a new guide layer (the button with a curve composed of small red dots next to the new layer button is used to create a guide layer.), draw a curve on the guide layer, and It's the path the sun takes. Select the first frame and drag the sun component to one end of the curve. (The middle origin of the sun component coincides with the curve endpoint and must be placed on the line.) Then select the position of the 50th frame and drag the sun to the other end of the curve. At this point the animation is finished. Press Enter to test the animation.

"Live action animation" is an informal name for "tokusatsu" in China. Tokusatsu refers to film and television works that shoot stunt performances with special effects in special costumes. Tokusatsu is the abbreviation of special photography, which originally refers to films made using special photography techniques. Due to the special shooting methods of the Japanese, tokusatsu films since the 1950s specifically refer to films shot in Japan such as "Godzilla", "Gamera", "Ultraman", "Super Sentai", and "Kamen Rider". ", "Metal Heroes" and a series of films represented by it.