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November 2014

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www.postmagazine.com 14 POST NOVEMBER 2014 ince its premiere in 2011, ABC's highly-successful series Once Upon A Time (OUAT) has been bringing some of Disney's most beloved sto- ry- book characters — including Snow White, Prince Charming, Pinocchio, Peter Pan, Captain Hook, and Rumplestiltskin — to the small screen, working overtime to turn even the most jaded viewers into believers of magic and fairy tales. The show's central plotline is based around the premise that these charac- ters, who live near the fabled Enchanted Forest, were placed under a curse by the Evil Queen and transported into current day Storybrooke, Maine, where they would lose their memories and live life as ordinary people. Only the Evil Queen, who herself lives in Storybrooke as the town's mayor Regina Mills, knows the truth behind everyone's true identities (and also retains her magical powers). It's when Mills' adopted son Henry leaves Storybrooke in search of his birth mother (Emma Swan, who turns out to be the daughter of Snow White and Prince Charming) and brings her back to Story- brooke, that the real magic starts to hap- pen. And that's where Zoic Studios steps in and raises the bar for primetime VFX. With the show shot in Vancouver, British Columbia, on Arri Alexa cameras, Zoic Studios (Vancouver) is working with ProRes 4444 fi les and creating anywhere from 350 to sometimes 500 VFX shots per episode. Zoic's (www.zoicstudios. com) co-founder Andrew Orloff , VFX supervisor on OUAT and president of the Vancouver offi ce, speaks with Post about some of the series' most challenging eff ects and the show's most ambitious plotline yet, bringing the phenomenon of Frozen, along with its lead characters Anna and Elsa, to Storybrooke. How did Zoic Studios become involved with Once Upon A Time? "Zoic has a long-standing relationship with ABC. The genesis of this particu- lar show started back when we did the reboot of V, which aired on ABC and was a Warner Bros. show. It was shot in Vancouver, and had some of the same producers attached to it. For that show, for the spaceship interiors, we developed a system that we call Zeus, which is our proprietary virtual environment technol- ogy. When that show ran its course, I was contacted by Steve Pearlman, one of the executive producers, and Adam [Horow- itz] and Eddy [Kitsis], who are the execu- tives, to talk to them about a brand-new show, Once Upon A Time, which is a very diff erent genre, but they wanted to uti- lize the same virtual set technology and really take it to a new level. They wanted to create considerably more lavish envi- ronments, more environments and with more complicated lighting and blocking and variety of sets. "It was a good fi t right off the bat. We started before the pilot got picked up — working with them to help them get the green light. Once the show was picked up, we were on a race track ever since." What was the initial goal for the VFX? What kind of look did the producers want for the show? "Well, of course there's the fairy-tale land where everybody came from, that needs to look like it's a fantastic environment; like nothing that exists in our reality. But it also needs to be consistent to itself and be grounded and create its own world. We were truly building a new reality here of what does Storybrooke look like? What does Wonderland look like? What does Oz look like? What does Arendelle look like? And we've gone into this amazing idea that basically, what Adam and Eddy are saying in the show is that every piece of literary fi ction that we have in our world is a representation of some alter- nate universe that exists on its own but not just as a two-dimensional representa- tion of it, but it has its own set of intri- cacies and problems, just like our world does. So, we have to give it that scope, feeling and sense of magical realism." You want the viewers at home to believe that they're real. "Exactly — and connect with them as if they're real. That's the biggest goal for the visual eff ects. We never do trick shots where we're zooming and zip- ping around the castle or for long shots around these fairy-tale environments, saying, look at how beautiful and majes- tic this is. We shoot it just like we would shoot anything else." Can we talk about the Frozen storyline that's part of the current season and some of the new eff ects you're creating for these new characters? "This storyline, more than any other, since Frozen is so new and fresh in every- body's mind and beloved by everybody who has seen it, we really feel a big re- sponsibility here at Zoic to translate that world of Frozen that was in the movie, faithfully into OUAT. "So, when we look at the design for grandpappy the rock troll, or the docks in Arendelle, or the way Elsa shoots ice out of her hands, we really are looking ABC'S ONCE UPON A TIME BY LINDA ROMANELLO ZOIC STUDIOS MAKES MAGIC FOR THIS FAIRY-TALE TV DRAMA S Andrew Orloff (inset) and the team at Zoic provide all the VFX for Once Upon A Time, including visuals for the new Frozen storyline. PRIMETIME

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