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OldSchool Cinema Effects

MadaBidyoni

Lieutenant
Red Shirt
Hi
do you know about a site with explanations about old cinema effects before the computerised effects era?
thanks
 
Here's a blog about matte paintings:

http://nzpetesmatteshot.blogspot.com/

You might also try your local library or used-book store. There were a lot of behind-the-scenes books published about filmmaking and special-effects techniques. For instance, Industrial Light and Magic: The Art of Special Effects by Thomas G. Smith is a pretty good overview of ILM's pre-CGI and early-CGI days, published in 1986 and covering all of ILM's output from Star Wars through Enemy Mine. The library might also have back issues of Cinefex, an industry magazine that went into intricate detail about the special effects of various movies.
 
If you've got any DVD/BR they sometimes have features on special effects, if they are in-camera, model or CGI work.
 
Check out old issues of Starlog, particularly the early issues. That's where I learned something about old school VFX. There's an archive of them online somewhere. Shouldn't be too hard to Google it.
 
Even better than Starlog itself would be their more specialized publication Cinemagic, which was all about special-effects techniques -- not just overviews of professional techniques, but how-to guides for amateur filmmakers to create their own low-budget effects. It was a really cool magazine and I learned a lot from it. It inspired me to write and plan out an amateur SF film of my own that I hoped to produce in college, but I was never able to get enough other people interested enough to get it made. Which is probably just as well, since I doubt I would've enjoyed making the film anywhere near as much as I enjoyed planning it out in elaborate detail, and it was probably way too ambitious to pull off well with my total lack of actual experience. (Seriously -- I had a script and a detailed shooting schedule worked out, I had storyboards and figured out how I'd do all the effects shots, and I even wrote a musical score for full orchestra, though I can't for the life of me remember where I thought I was going to get an orchestra.)
 
Even better than Starlog itself would be their more specialized publication Cinemagic, which was all about special-effects techniques -- not just overviews of professional techniques, but how-to guides for amateur filmmakers to create their own low-budget effects. It was a really cool magazine and I learned a lot from it. It inspired me to write and plan out an amateur SF film of my own that I hoped to produce in college, but I was never able to get enough other people interested enough to get it made. Which is probably just as well, since I doubt I would've enjoyed making the film anywhere near as much as I enjoyed planning it out in elaborate detail, and it was probably way too ambitious to pull off well with my total lack of actual experience. (Seriously -- I had a script and a detailed shooting schedule worked out, I had storyboards and figured out how I'd do all the effects shots, and I even wrote a musical score for full orchestra, though I can't for the life of me remember where I thought I was going to get an orchestra.)

Seconded on Cinemagic - and also Cinefex was a good one...
 
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