Frankly, I watched about forty minutes of this and it bombed. Characters attempting to be eccentric appeared simply dull. I happened to have been born in the 50's. Even with poetic license, people didn't behave that way. I was bored with it and shut it down.
Simon Weisse is a genius and a master at what he does. Wes Anderson on the other hand is equally smart for actually wanting people to recognize that he's using miniatures for his films and at the same time they're conveying a sense of realism. I salute them both!
i love love miniatures. it excites me to see the whole process on how these artists put all those tiny little details to make every piece look and feel realistic.
My name is Nigel Carren and I am a professional miniature medieval armour maker. I typically working in 1/6th and 1/12th scale and each hand-forged steel knight is typically comprised of 73 separate parts. WE enjoyed this video immensely thank you! Best wishes from me and all the mice in the workshop. ⚒️🐭🐁🐭🐁
Yes it’s so wonderful to see a resurgence in the art form overall. And your hobby and passion can truly become a career if that’s your goal. I just enjoy making my Miniature houses, rooms, and all the things that go inside. And now that I’m no longer working I enjoy the company and knowledge of fellow miniaturists at my local miniature society. ❤
We Anderson is a brilliant filmmaker with a vast color palette. His films are willing to go the extra mile. The cinematographies and stories all work together seamlessly to create masterpieces onscreen.
The thing that had me fall in love with Wes Anderson's filmmaking is the fact that I feel like I'm constantly pulled in through the screen onto the set, most of the time by the miniatures but also by the feeling that the film sets, and then I get into this sort of swaying back and forth, back onto the seat in the movies as a spectator watching a film, and then back inside of the set, and so back and forth, it makes me enjoy his films on a whole another level. And the miniatures themselves make a part of that feeling, being made in such a glorious way that they don't interrupt that feeling, yet still making themselves apparent - I know they're miniatures, but they're made so good that it doesn't matter, the momentous "okay, it's a miniature, but it's a part of the story so it's just another way for Anderson to convey his storytelling" is there for a second and it just makes the miniature blend in and feel as a natural part of the story. It's apparent that it's a miniature, but it's not tacky, B-movie style, but rather gloriously made sculpture, put there to help with telling the story.
Asteroid city was excellent and all the projects this amazing Simon Weisse worked on Anderson's movies !!! Love his way to talk about his work you can feel the passion !
i was lucky and got to see the grand budapest model in weisses workshop before it was even used. such stunning work done by these guys... feels surreal somehow.
I was waiting for this commentary. LOTR was groundbreaking in every special and visual effect technique available, including miniatures. The camera movements are fantastic!
Miniatures feel real not because they fully authentic to our world but because they are fully authentic to their own. They are a 'real miniature'. And there's a charm to that which can't be understated.
His work with Wes Anderson is just amazing. It has to be I suppose with Anderson's incredible attention to detail. He tells such great stories on so many levels.
Always love to hear about model building for movies and set building in general. There are a lot of us tabletop wargamers who work in scale models all the time and it is fascinating to see what other model builders do. Especially people who have limitless budgets ;-) compared to a game that is.
Can you do a video on matte paintings? So many movies from the 80s and 90s had amazing detailed paintings. Do they still exist? Do people collect them?
makes me respect directors like wes anderson & christopher nolan all the more for how much they know about & show their love for filmmaking :') loved this insightful vid!
I am glad that people like Simon Weisse are still around and doing the work allowing the likes of Wes Anderson to make the movies in the style and techniques he would wish, especially as a movie every 2 years from Wes probably doesn't offer Simon enough work to live off.
Thank you so much for showing this! These artists are the epitome of talent! Would be an incredible video to go to a model shop and show all the departments and artists working through a large scale model, start to finish.
Disclaimer: Just because tightening the 'aperture' 5:38 "decreases how much light you let into the camera" does not mean that by "reducing the light" you'll end up with a wider depth of field ("every part of the model" in focus). There are a bunch ways for you to decrease light: ND filters, faster shutter speed, light absorbers/black flags and so on... It's not about decreasing light. It's about the >aperture< and the way it filters and shapes the light passing through the lens. Also, the bigger the sensor or film format, more shallow the depth of field. Aperture doesn't (just) mean less light. 🇧🇷
It’s unfortunate that miniatures aren’t used as often as they once were as they are an amazing art form. Practical effects just made films so much better.
I remember being suitably impressed, when that space ship (Star Wars) passed overhead, it was huge! I had never seen anything so big an it took so long to pass...
The novelty of computers and perfection is wearing off and we are now moving towards a place where the character and artistic style of a film is once more the most applauded aspect. It’s the same with camera lenses, cinematographers want hand built anamorphic lenses over the ‘perfect’ new lenses because they have more character and add to style of the film
I remember the original Star Wars trilogy and how they used mostly miniatures for alot of the ships. It was a great example of making more out of less in film.
I love that a lot of the old stuff is not dying yet and maybe still has a bright future ahead. Like vinyls. Thrifting. Etc. Might not be super commercial / popular but will keep an important place.
Weirdly brought up Game Night and I worked on that film. I drove through that neighborhood that you referenced as use of models. I’m pretty sure we used Tilt Shift to create that look and not models. Don’t remember ever seeing models in our Art Department.
There is this old show in Discovery Channel Movie Magic, I love it so much they explain the movie techniques and made me understand how movies were shot.
The size of the APERTURE defines the depth of field - not how much light you let in. The amount of light can be less or more with aperture but this can also be controlled with cutters/screens, ND filters and shutter speed.
Creí que hablarían del estilo pausado y caricaturesco tan característico que tienen sus películas Stop motion Al presentar el ambiente no satura la pantalla de tantos elementos, ésa simpleza es increíble
It so amazing what you can do. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge ans experiences. I adore your work. I could listen to you for hours and hours.
Love the video! A small correction: 5:39 - You say “you need to decrease how much light is let into the camera” which is not exactly true. You need to reduce the size of the aperture of the lens in order to bring more of the image into focus, the side effect of that is less light is let into the camera but just dimming all the lights in the room for example isn’t going to deepen the depth of field even though you have decreased how much light is let into the camera
The clip you used of the Millennium Falcon taking off at 3:18 isn’t actually a miniature. That scene was added in the special editions of a new hope so the Falcon is actually a digital model in that shot. Nice video, just a funny mistake.
with a video all about bigatures im surprised it has not been mentioned ones that they are not miniatures but bigatures xD great video about the mini world in the film industry i already knew quite a lot but i keep learning some new things.
Thought I was just going to watch something entertaining - but ended up learning a good few things I can apply to my miniature making endeavours! Well done on a great video. 🎉🙌
In Asteroid City, I could absolutely tell that the mountains in the background were mini. At first they looked good, but then those sideways crawl shots allowed me to parallax the distance better. They weren't miles away like the movie implied. They were very close. If they had instead done a spin shot or a pan up, it would have hidden the real distance much better.
I'm not entirely surprised he is German since building miniature stuff is almost embedded in our older generation. Basically every grandpa built everything in small scale and the bestest grandpas of them made it the smallest and most realistic. Many attics are still filled with a lot of miniature worlds.
Not restricted to Germany though. It was, and still is popular in the UK, North America, Japan, and elsewhere. Check out large scale miniatures like Miniatur Wunderland, Northlandz, Grand Maket Rossiya, Our Home and Miniature Land, and Madurodam. Thankfully the art of model building and model railroading is alive and well; 3-D printing has breathed new life and new possibilities into the hobby.
Weird that everyone in the comments is only complimenting Wes Anderson. Simon Weisse is clearly a master at what he does!
Same here! Scrolling through the comments, hardly anyone mentioned him
Well, the topic of the video is Wes Anderson, so it’s gonna make sense for all the comments to be on Wes anderson
Agree, I was fortunate enough to see the french dispatch minature set with Simon and his whole team are true artists
the video should have just been about simon
Frankly, I watched about forty minutes of this and it bombed. Characters attempting to be eccentric appeared simply dull. I happened to have been born in the 50's. Even with poetic license, people didn't behave that way. I was bored with it and shut it down.
Ive always felt like wes Anderson's movies are just pure passion, movies filmed, acted and edited with pure joy and love for cinema.
That is the very reason I love his films. ❤🎥
Like you know that he put his absolute best in his movies!
Simon Weisse is a genius and a master at what he does. Wes Anderson on the other hand is equally smart for actually wanting people to recognize that he's using miniatures for his films and at the same time they're conveying a sense of realism. I salute them both!
I always can spot the miniatures in his films, but I’m never bothered by it like I am with most other movies. It’s that Wes Anderson Magic™
"actually"
i love love miniatures. it excites me to see the whole process on how these artists put all those tiny little details to make every piece look and feel realistic.
I absolutely love the craftsmanship that goes into making miniatures and props.
So happy to see that miniatures and practical effects are being preserved by masters like Simon!
My name is Nigel Carren and I am a professional miniature medieval armour maker. I typically working in 1/6th and 1/12th scale and each hand-forged steel knight is typically comprised of 73 separate parts. WE enjoyed this video immensely thank you!
Best wishes from me and all the mice in the workshop. ⚒️🐭🐁🐭🐁
Yes it’s so wonderful to see a resurgence in the art form overall. And your hobby and passion can truly become a career if that’s your goal. I just enjoy making my Miniature houses, rooms, and all the things that go inside. And now that I’m no longer working I enjoy the company and knowledge of fellow miniaturists at my local miniature society. ❤
We Anderson is a brilliant filmmaker with a vast color palette. His films are willing to go the extra mile. The cinematographies and stories all work together seamlessly to create masterpieces onscreen.
Wes Anderson films are the romance of Film making, just beautiful.. So much respect for these artist .
The thing that had me fall in love with Wes Anderson's filmmaking is the fact that I feel like I'm constantly pulled in through the screen onto the set, most of the time by the miniatures but also by the feeling that the film sets, and then I get into this sort of swaying back and forth, back onto the seat in the movies as a spectator watching a film, and then back inside of the set, and so back and forth, it makes me enjoy his films on a whole another level. And the miniatures themselves make a part of that feeling, being made in such a glorious way that they don't interrupt that feeling, yet still making themselves apparent - I know they're miniatures, but they're made so good that it doesn't matter, the momentous "okay, it's a miniature, but it's a part of the story so it's just another way for Anderson to convey his storytelling" is there for a second and it just makes the miniature blend in and feel as a natural part of the story. It's apparent that it's a miniature, but it's not tacky, B-movie style, but rather gloriously made sculpture, put there to help with telling the story.
Great video about the pros and cons of a unique filming method!
Asteroid city was excellent and all the projects this amazing Simon Weisse worked on Anderson's movies !!! Love his way to talk about his work you can feel the passion !
Physical effects are really captivating
i was lucky and got to see the grand budapest model in weisses workshop before it was even used. such stunning work done by these guys... feels surreal somehow.
This video was really well done. Great job of showing the process in layman's terms while still making it exciting and interesting.
These miniatures and practical effects is what makes the Lord of the Rings movies hold up so well 20 years later
Also why 2001: A Space Odyssey still holds up 55 years later
but the Hobbit series are gonna feel outdated much sooner
I was surprised that you could make a film about large scale miniatures and not mention Weta.
I was waiting for this commentary. LOTR was groundbreaking in every special and visual effect technique available, including miniatures. The camera movements are fantastic!
There's the opposite effect in LOTR too! Some shots used an oversized ring to bring out the details.
I have the greatest respect for any director who can and will still use practical effects. It's truly an art.
Asteroid City is a photographic masterpiece. The details in the sets are genius.
Absolutely beautiful filmmaking for a relentlessly boring & confusing plot.
just delightful to look at these, i wish scale models where more commonly used as an art form the way paintings on a wall are.
Miniatures feel real not because they fully authentic to our world but because they are fully authentic to their own. They are a 'real miniature'. And there's a charm to that which can't be understated.
its amazing to hear from Simon Weisse . I can feel the enthusiasm he has and emotion of fun he has doing the work.
His work with Wes Anderson is just amazing. It has to be I suppose with Anderson's incredible attention to detail. He tells such great stories on so many levels.
As someone who is into the hobby of large scale rc cars everything here is literally flipping awesome
Always love to hear about model building for movies and set building in general. There are a lot of us tabletop wargamers who work in scale models all the time and it is fascinating to see what other model builders do. Especially people who have limitless budgets ;-) compared to a game that is.
I’ve always been in love with the art that is miniature model making. Thanks for sharing this great little film, what’s a treat!
Can you do a video on matte paintings? So many movies from the 80s and 90s had amazing detailed paintings. Do they still exist? Do people collect them?
The world of miniatures and dioramas are amazing. As an artist to be able to capture realistic things in a small scale is truly a talent.
makes me respect directors like wes anderson & christopher nolan all the more for how much they know about & show their love for filmmaking :') loved this insightful vid!
Wes Anderson films are the romance of Film making, just beautiful.
I am glad that people like Simon Weisse are still around and doing the work allowing the likes of Wes Anderson to make the movies in the style and techniques he would wish, especially as a movie every 2 years from Wes probably doesn't offer Simon enough work to live off.
Great video, miniatures like stop motion are rare but amazing artistic works and this goes over why you get that feeling from it.
Thank you so much for showing this! These artists are the epitome of talent! Would be an incredible video to go to a model shop and show all the departments and artists working through a large scale model, start to finish.
Miniatures are my absolute favorite form of film trickery!
Finally I understand how they create those spectacular scene in box office movies in the era of early computer
Having grown up on Thunderbirds and other Gerry Anderson shows, I've always had an appreciation for miniatures and practical effects like this
man this doubles the work, it's amazing just how much effort they spend for such movies
Disclaimer: Just because tightening the 'aperture' 5:38 "decreases how much light you let into the camera" does not mean that by "reducing the light" you'll end up with a wider depth of field ("every part of the model" in focus). There are a bunch ways for you to decrease light: ND filters, faster shutter speed, light absorbers/black flags and so on...
It's not about decreasing light. It's about the >aperture< and the way it filters and shapes the light passing through the lens.
Also, the bigger the sensor or film format, more shallow the depth of field.
Aperture doesn't (just) mean less light.
🇧🇷
I can't show this to my photog/ film major son because his comment will go on for at least an entire 15K words on this one...yes, he's on the scale.
Something about this style emits so much happiness. Even if its intended to be creepy its always endearing
It’s unfortunate that miniatures aren’t used as often as they once were as they are an amazing art form. Practical effects just made films so much better.
I’ve always been fascinated by miniatures and how they are used in all ways including cinematography.
Quite amazing!
All together now, "It's a small world after all"...
This magic is the reason why I enjoy watching movies 🎥…
As a model builder since the late 60s I love seeing models in movies
This video was simply fascinating I loved Asteroid City funny amusing and visually abstract looking like a model railway table.
Really love to see more stories of amazing people with amazing craftsmanship.
I glad I found this rediscovered this channel! Did not realize how good it is and how vast the subjects are.. Nicely done!
It was a beautiful spaceship, glad they went with the green...
Long live miniatures, stop-motion, and other traditional visual effects techniques! This was a great watch, thanks for putting it together VOX.
Using miniatures for Blade Runner made all the difference. The buildings with real fog looked super good
I remember being suitably impressed, when that space ship (Star Wars) passed overhead, it was huge!
I had never seen anything so big an it took so long to pass...
The novelty of computers and perfection is wearing off and we are now moving towards a place where the character and artistic style of a film is once more the most applauded aspect. It’s the same with camera lenses, cinematographers want hand built anamorphic lenses over the ‘perfect’ new lenses because they have more character and add to style of the film
I love miniatures, I hope they make more movies using them. My favorite is stop motion, the pink house in Coraline is so good,
I remember the original Star Wars trilogy and how they used mostly miniatures for alot of the ships. It was a great example of making more out of less in film.
I love practical effects and all the artisans who are involved with it.. miniatures are so rad too.. great stuff
I love that a lot of the old stuff is not dying yet and maybe still has a bright future ahead. Like vinyls. Thrifting. Etc. Might not be super commercial / popular but will keep an important place.
again this is a introduction of a master class filming....... merci beaucoup
The Millennium Falcon bit in the video is actually CGId, not the model. That scene was added in the Special Edition of Episode IV.
Weirdly brought up Game Night and I worked on that film. I drove through that neighborhood that you referenced as use of models. I’m pretty sure we used Tilt Shift to create that look and not models. Don’t remember ever seeing models in our Art Department.
Been really enjoying every Edward Vega essay I've seen so far!
There is this old show in Discovery Channel Movie Magic, I love it so much they explain the movie techniques and made me understand how movies were shot.
Fascinating! Thx. This kinda stuff got me into media production some 50 years ago as a 10 year old who had just seen Star Wars in the theater.
I can finally watch this now I’ve seen it!
I pray that they sell these. There’s nothing that I wouldn’t do to get my hands on the grand Budapest hotel
2:28 he's soooo real for using the metric system bc same
Was great to film with Wes Anderson and see how he works closely.
The size of the APERTURE defines the depth of field - not how much light you let in. The amount of light can be less or more with aperture but this can also be controlled with cutters/screens, ND filters and shutter speed.
wow i'd love to have the skills to be able to build models like that
Creí que hablarían del estilo pausado y caricaturesco tan característico que tienen sus películas Stop motion
Al presentar el ambiente no satura la pantalla de tantos elementos, ésa simpleza es increíble
It so amazing what you can do. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge ans experiences. I adore your work. I could listen to you for hours and hours.
4:54 Long lenses only crop more. Perspective (compression) is the same for all lenses when shot from the same position.
Magnificent video, a talent on the part of the team of layout designers as well as the filming team. They are cinema geniuses!
Don't forget to visit the miniature and cinema museum in the old town of Lyon, France !
Wes Anderson is when you can do what you really love and the audience happen to love it. too.
Love the video! A small correction: 5:39 - You say “you need to decrease how much light is let into the camera” which is not exactly true. You need to reduce the size of the aperture of the lens in order to bring more of the image into focus, the side effect of that is less light is let into the camera but just dimming all the lights in the room for example isn’t going to deepen the depth of field even though you have decreased how much light is let into the camera
VFX Artist here -- that shot of the millenium faclon you used was CG, not a model, from the reissue Lucas did in the 90's.
Knew that E-type was a Bburago model from the first moment due to the widespread 265 WK license plate 😅.
The clip you used of the Millennium Falcon taking off at 3:18 isn’t actually a miniature. That scene was added in the special editions of a new hope so the Falcon is actually a digital model in that shot. Nice video, just a funny mistake.
with a video all about bigatures im surprised it has not been mentioned ones that they are not miniatures but bigatures xD great video about the mini world in the film industry i already knew quite a lot but i keep learning some new things.
Fascinating upload thanks.
Thanks for such amazing video. The real hero here is Weisse.
Big fan of models!
feels wrong not to mention Lord of the Rings in this context. Minas Tirith especially.
still remembering nolan did the plans crash in TENET,
where he completely avoided miniatures.
Thought I was just going to watch something entertaining - but ended up learning a good few things I can apply to my miniature making endeavours! Well done on a great video. 🎉🙌
It's a shame they didn't mention the ultimate model in terms of looking real: The 2001 spaceship. At F22 every frame over 1 minute!!
Water.. always Fights against the amazing work done by effects artist...
Didn't know Wes Anderson was so old.
The use of miniatures in Asteroid City added to the old time vibe.
I am still impressed to this day with the miniatures used in True Lies.
The Florida keys bridge explosion and the Terminator Judgement Day Nuke scene
Thanks for the spanish audio track :)
This makes me so happy.
One of these genius effects people was Derek Meddings,who did the miniatures for all the Gerry Anderson tv series and some of the early Bond films.
Great video, thank you!
Is Lord of the Rings considered old now? They used HUGE miniature sets to bring the story to life. The Rivendell Model is amazing if you have seen it.
Nice essay! The "miniature: battleships for In Harms Way were up to 40 feet long.
This is fascinating
Very good.
Great video although weird to hear miniatures discussed with no mention of Eiji Tsuburaya, he was the goat even considering budget
In Asteroid City, I could absolutely tell that the mountains in the background were mini. At first they looked good, but then those sideways crawl shots allowed me to parallax the distance better. They weren't miles away like the movie implied. They were very close.
If they had instead done a spin shot or a pan up, it would have hidden the real distance much better.
I'm not entirely surprised he is German since building miniature stuff is almost embedded in our older generation. Basically every grandpa built everything in small scale and the bestest grandpas of them made it the smallest and most realistic. Many attics are still filled with a lot of miniature worlds.
Not restricted to Germany though. It was, and still is popular in the UK, North America, Japan, and elsewhere.
Check out large scale miniatures like Miniatur Wunderland, Northlandz, Grand Maket Rossiya, Our Home and Miniature Land, and Madurodam. Thankfully the art of model building and model railroading is alive and well; 3-D printing has breathed new life and new possibilities into the hobby.