Creating Special Effects for TV and Film

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Last edited by Vinnie Rattollee
July 3, 2018 | History

Creating Special Effects for TV and Film

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ILLUSION IS THE STUFF of which television and film drama is made. Explosions, flying bullets, smoke and fire are not easily controlled, but when they take place in a studio or outdoor set, their effects have to be totally predictable. The special effects designer and his staff have to know exactly what they are doing and the most suitable methods for doing it. Bernard Wilkie calls on his long experience in the field to deal comprehensively with a wide range of effects and techniques.

Gunshots, explosions and fire are obvious applications for special effects but there are innumerable less obvious scenes on the screen that are not what they seem. The dials of instruments, molten metal, rocks, snow, breaking bottles and crockery, even faces can be products of the special effects department. Bernard Wilkie deals with them all, as well as models and miniatures, scoring devices, seas and storms, rain and swamps, knives, swords and daggers. Special effects do not only concern imitation products. They include techniques for combining scenes from different sets, animation, making corks pop and scenery collapse, creating a foggy night and making a car radiator boil. So Bernard Wilkie tells you about the techniques of matte and glass shots, chroma key, puppet construction, mirror shots, plastics fabrication and moulding, glass fibre lay-ups, mould-making, mixing and turning plaster, and so on.

The text is basic and practical, fully illustrated with simple, easy-to-follow diagrams. The subjects have been carefully chosen to illustrate principles that can be applied to a variety of problems or that can give alternative solutions to the same problem. This is a book of ideas as well as instruction.

BERNARD WILKIE has been producing special effects for the BBC for nearly 30 years. He is now the Corporation's Manager of Visual Effects and is responsible for all the special effects on BBC Television. As television is such a prodigious user of visual effects and special props, his large section is kept busy on all types of programme. Bernard Wilkie's experience is backed up by an easy writing style and an ability to produce first-class sketches of equipment and processes. His earlier book, The Technique of Special Effects in Television, first published in 1971, is an established reference work. Now he provides a detailed notebook for producers, directors and designers in film and television as well as those more directly concerned with the subject and those aspiring to a special-effects career.

Publish Date
Publisher
Focal Press
Language
English
Pages
158

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Creating special effects for TV and film
Creating special effects for TV and film
1977, Hastings House
in English
Cover of: Creating Special Effects for TV and Film
Creating Special Effects for TV and Film
1977, Focal Press
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Bibliography: p. 153.

Published in
London, New York
Series
Media manuals

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
791.43/025
Library of Congress
TR858 .W54 1977

The Physical Object

Pagination
158 p. :
Number of pages
158

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL4481841M
Internet Archive
creatingspeciale1977wilk
ISBN 10
0240509471
LCCN
79310295
Library Thing
1619305

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History

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July 3, 2018 Edited by Vinnie Rattollee Edited without comment.
July 3, 2018 Edited by Vinnie Rattollee Update covers
April 8, 2018 Edited by ImportBot import new book
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