Computer Graphics World

March / April 2016

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m a r c h . a p r i l 2 0 1 6 c g w 1 9 Honda ' e Dreamer' Honda's latest commercial, titled "The Dreamer," takes viewers on a trippy CGI road trip through the imagination of a Honda Civic engineer. The wild, inventive journey features a wide range of 3D objects within many all-digital environments as a Honda Civic traverses an ever changing, ever expanding road- way. Except for a few scenes with the engineer, the entire 60-second commercial is com- pletely computer-generated. The vibrant spot, created by the facility Roof Studio, also contains the song "Walking On A Dream" by the Australian musi- cal duo Empire of the Sun – drawing viewers in on both a visual and audible front. The production was done by a core team of 10 over the course of approximately four months. However, the group's ranks swelled to 25 at times as artists from around the globe contrib- uted assets – objects and short animated sequences – to the whimsical piece. "We had a great relationship with the agency [RPA], and they afforded us a lot of creative freedom," says Sam Mason, who along with Guto Terni and Vini- cius Costa, served as creative directors on the spot. "Creative- ly, it was very open for us." As a result, the group from Roof continued to add 3D elements and story pieces, even into the last day of the project. In essence, the designers let their imagination – or, more accurately, that of the engi- neer – run wild. And Roof was the ideal studio to do this, as the agency was already familiar with its previous design-centric work. "They wanted us to take some of that design sensibility, those elements of surrealism, and expand them outward to a full-scale universe that the car travels through," says Mason. S C A L E I T U P The commercial opens with a live-action shot of an actor (the engineer) working on drawings at his desk. A digital door opens in the back of his head, and the 3D adventure begins. Initially, the scene starts in miniature, confined by the size of the engineer's head. But once the car crosses the first bit of track, it becomes full scale. "We then created a massive landscape that went on into the distance," says Mason. Scale was one of the main concerns, says Terni. The car started out proportional to the engineer, at miniature, but the client did not want to continue that feel through the rest of the piece. To avoid having the car seem small against the massive landscape, the artists used atmosphere, such as fog and other tricks oen used for big, wide landscape shots. Moreover, the designers made the engi- neer appear giant size, rather than regular size, thus enabling the car to maintain a real-world scale. This was done through camera angles and filming the engineer segment at 60 frames per second, giving him a larger, more lifelike presence. The CG car, though, is the star of the commercial and had to be product-accurate both inside and out. The group started with CAD reference data, and in the end, the vehicle model comprises between 500 and 1,000 parts – some of which are shown off early in the spot during an under-the-hood shot as the engine is inserted, revealing all the pieces of an actual motor. Not only did the car have to look full scale, but it had to per- form like its real-world counter- part. The crew looked at a significant amount of live-action reference and tried to stay true to the laws of physics in terms of how a car would behave. Sometimes, though, that move- ment became more stylized when the vehicle was placed in impossible situations – for example, when it was launched across a void in the road. "Yeah, we had to break reality quite a bit to stay with the shot, but we tried to make it feel as natural as we could," says Terni. As Mason explains, "It was kind of a ride piece, where one element sets the rhythm, and the continuity was the car and how it would speed up, slow down, and handle a turn. Since we had this abstract hero, which is the car, all it needed to do was behave like a car, and the world around it could transform." A G R A P H I C D I S P L A Y Soon aer the CG car is intro- duced, a digital takeover occurs, giving the artists and designers more flexibility as the imagery and backgrounds became wild- er and crazier. Half the landscape shots have CG all the way to the background. The scale is large. "We were going for some feature-film style, giant, CG landscapes. But we were doing it for a commercial," Mason notes. "The challenge was transitioning from miniature scale to some- thing cinematic and big, without losing the audience." According to Terni, they accomplished that by setting up a reality where just about anything can happen during this dream ride. "We let design lead the way with bits and logic. "THE DREAMER" IS A DESIGN-HEAVY SPOT THAT CONTAINS A PLETHORA OF CG ELEMENTS AND MINI ANIMATIONS WITHIN A LARGE-SCALE, DIGITAL ENVIRONMENT.

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