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Just announced: How the Unreal Games Engine could change the way we make films

6 minute read

Epic GamesRendered in realtime: The car is effectively a realtime skin over an adaptable chassis

‘The Human Race’ is a new short film created by Epic Games, The Mill and Chevrolet, which celebrates the 50th birthday of the Camaro but whose realtime CG techniques could go on to revolutionise filmmaking.

It was always going to happen. Games engines get better and more photo realistic. Films require increasing amounts of CGI. Filmic CGI takes a long time to render. Games engines render in realtime. What’s not to like? 

Well, quite a lot. Computer games don’t look like real life, and they often have different goals and priorities to filmmakers. Games are interactive and largely unpredictable (although they operate within closed worlds). Films are the opposite of realtime. Almost every pixel is planned to the nth degree. Rendering can — within limits — take as long as is needed to give a rich and convincingly photorealistic result. This is how it was possible to make a completely CGI film in the 90s without it looking terrible — it just took a very long time on the computing kit available at the time. 

Meanwhile, computer games are approaching photorealism. They do this in a number of ways and it’s not just a matter of more pixels. Good games take into account lighting (there’s a million different aspects to this) and physics: the ability for a CGI object to have real-world properties and to act according to those characteristics when interacting with other objects. So, for example, if a speeding car crashes into a bus shelter, the street furniture would fall over or break in a realistic manner.  

It’s very hard to write a game, still less a successful one. While there’s no sure-fire way to guarantee that a game will make money, there are ways to make it easier to create one. Chief amongst these is the games engine. 

A games engine is a software component that does much of the heavy lifting needed to create a 3D environment in a game. It handles the shading and the physics. Engines take years to develop, and evolve slowly over time to become something quite incredibly powerful. With a good engine, developers can bring new material into games much faster than if they had to develop the whole technology from scratch. 

Modern games are now pretty incredible. They’re remarkably more sophisticated than their predecessors. Sometimes you can even think you’re watching a film. 

And that’s the point. Film and games are two areas of technology that are made for each other. The ability to render cinema quality objects and scenes in realtime will transform movie production. 

And it’s starting to happen. 

Unreal from Epic Games is one of the most detailed and convincing gaming engines available on the planet. Each iteration brings new imaging capabilities.

The engine is very adaptable and relatively easy to interface with the outside world. Which is what appeared to internationally renowned post and VFX facility The Mill. 

The Mill has been working for a long time on a project to make it possible to simulate any car in a scene, mixing a CGI car with reality. Apparently it’s really hard to get cars for shoots. They might be unavailable, or might simply be too valuable to be put at risk in a film.

Their initial (but limited) success encouraged them to look at ways to make the process better, which is to say more automatic; needing far less manual intervention. 

Their idea, in outline, was to create a “mule” car that could drive on real roads, and which had adjustable properties. It’s not pretty to look at: somewhat like a Batmobile with tracking markers and some strange appendages sticking out above the roof. 

The markers allow VFX artists to understand the movement and orientation of the car, accurately enough to superimpose a “skin” of a CGI model. Ideally, this needs to create a photographically accurate moving image — in realtime. 

Less than a year ago, the Mill started talking to Epic Games about using Unreal as their realtime engine. Epic immediately saw how it could help and in the process create an original and ground-breaking technique that was likely to send ripples through the fabric of filmmaking. 

Unreal is able to create photorealistic images of cars, complete with physics and lighting, in realtime. But in order to do this it needs information. Lots of it. Gigabits per second, in fact. 

The motion tracking mule is called, not without some dramatic intent, ‘Blackbird’. It’s a fully working vehicle that’s adjustable by up to four feet in length and ten inches in width. 

shot_03_blackbird_exterior.jpg

The 'raw' Blackbird

That part was relatively simple, but the challenge remained: how do you create cinematic quality augmented reality (i.e. mixing a CGI element with the real world in real time). 

The proboscis sticking out of the top of the Blackbird houses 360 degree data capture equipment, including depth-sensing LIDAR (like you find in self-driving cars) and four RED cameras (which you don’t typically find in self-driving cars, although it would be cool). 

The combination of the 360 degree depth information from the LIDAR and the incident lighting information from the REDs is enough for Unreal to work on shading and lighting the car as a function of the surrounding environment. This is all transmitted wirelessly to a chase car. Directors and cinematographers can see the CGI car in realtime, comfortably in context in a real location. 

The volume of data transmitted from Blackbird, and the amount of computing needed to do all this in realtime is mind-blowing but not unreasonably so, because Unreal runs on even consumer-grade PCs as long as they’re fast enough and have a good enough GPU. 

What does this mean for the film industry? Ultimately, a lot. While the Blackbird/Unreal demonstration is a tour-de-force, it is still a rather special case. But there is absolutely no reason why this technology (i.e. a tracking “mule” and a system to feed back realtime depth and lighting data to Unreal) shouldn’t be adapted and applied in many other cases. 

At the very least, it’s an incredibly good way for Directors to visualise CGI elements in real-world contexts in realtime. You can imagine feeding the Pro AR images to a handheld monitor that effectively becomes the viewfinder of a “virtual camera”. 

And beyond that, as the use of CGI in films continues to grow, there will be more and more need to see the results in realtime. It’s even possible that games engines will be the primary technology for making animated and mixed reality films. 

Ultimately the threshold is: does it look convincing to a typical filmgoer?

It looks like, in this instance, that threshold has already been crossed. 

Have a look at the short below and you can read the full press release over the page.

Epic Games, The Mill and Chevrolet Unveil Real-time Film

The Unreal Engine, Virtual Production Technology, and an Iconic Brand Come Together in “The Human Race”, a Real-time Short Film and AR Presentation

San Francisco—(March 1, 2017)—Epic Games, The Mill and Chevrolet have joined forces to revolutionize the conventions of digital filmmaking with “The Human Race”, (<-hyperlink title to finished film) a short film and augmented reality (AR) presentation debuting today at the Game Developer’s Conference (GDC) in San Francisco, Calif, as part of Epic Games Founder and CEO Tim Sweeney’s opening presentation.

Combining an advanced implementation of Epic’s Unreal Engine with The Mill’s proprietary virtual production toolkit, Mill Cyclops™, “The Human Race” merges real-time visual effects and live-action storytelling. The combined technologies were pushed beyond the limits of existing real-time rendering capabilities to produce a futuristic film that features the 2017 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 in a heated race with the Chevrolet FNR autonomous concept car.

The only physical vehicle filmed for “The Human Race” was the Mill BLACKBIRD®, a fully adjustable rig that enables filmmakers to insert almost any car model into any filmed environment. Until now, CG cars were added by visual effects artists in post-production, requiring days of rendering to produce high-quality imagery. During this shoot, however, live video feeds as well as positional data from the Arraiy™ tracking system were fed directly into Unreal Engine. The Camaro was then rendered and composited seamlessly into the footage in real-time AR, allowing the directors to instantly see the final look and composition of each shot.

The same real-time technology was used to create, alter and produce the short film, blurring the lines between production and post. The ability to create ‘final pixels’ in real time will ultimately change the way filmmakers create content and make critical decisions.

A live recreation of the AR visualization was also shown during Epic’s presentation, offering an up-close view of the real-time tech used to produce the project.
 
‘“The Human Race’ blends cinematic storytelling and real-time visual effects to define a new era of narrative possibilities,’ said Angus Kneale, Chief Creative Officer at The Mill in New York. “This is a pivotal moment for film VFX and the coming era of augmented reality production. Using Unreal’s cutting-edge game engine technology, filmmakers are able to see their photoreal digital assets on location in real time. It also means the audience can effect change in films in ways previously unimagined, giving interactive control over vehicles, characters and environments within a live action cinema experience. With Mill Cyclops™, The Mill’s proprietary virtual production toolkit, we are able to render and integrate digital assets into the real world to a level never seen before.”

“Find New Roads is more than just a tagline at Chevrolet. We embrace that mission in the advanced engineering of our cars, and also in the way we service and communicate with our customers,” said Sam Russell, General Director of Global Chevrolet Marketing. “’The Human Race’ brings a lot of those ideals together. The technology involved in producing this film provides a glimpse into the future of customer engagement and could play a unique role in how we showcase car model options with interactive technologies like AR and VR.”

“We’re always thrilled to showcase the levels of innovation our customers can achieve in Unreal Engine,” said Kim Libreri, CTO, Epic Games. “Today’s presentation demonstrates what’s possible when combining live action with the power of Unreal Engine’s real-time photorealistic rendering capabilities—essentially taking the ‘post’ out of post-production.”

The film was conceived by The Mill and Chevrolet to kick off a multi-platform campaign marking the 50th anniversary of the Camaro. For more information about the making of “The Human Race” visit:

Tags: Post & VFX

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