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  • In Marvel’s Black Panther, the fictional metal vibranium is a wonder material of epic

  • proportions.

  • It stores and releases large amounts of kinetic energy, and cloaks the country from outsiders.

  • While Vibranium doesn’t actually exist, the inspiration for its design came straight

  • from real scientific labs that are exploring: acoustic levitation, ferrofluids, and cymatics.

  • Behind this cinematic boundary between science and science fiction, is a special effects

  • team that makes the technology you see in these Marvel films feel like it’s right

  • on the cusp.

  • We're looking for ways to take what we already know is plausible and achievable and take

  • it just a little step further and have them say, “Can't wait until we have that technology.”

  • The work we do for feature films is really centered around designing the technology for

  • these characters, mainly Marvel superheroes.

  • We want everything to feel real, where's it going to be 5 years or 10 years, even 20 years

  • from now, and then incorporating that thought process into all of the designs.

  • Technology is so present in entertainment today that there's a lot of tropes and almost

  • cliches, enhance the map and glowing blue holograms everywhere.

  • I think the industry as a whole went through a phase where the future is cyan, and that

  • was great 20 years ago.

  • We're always trying to find a way to turn those paradigms on their head a little bit

  • or come up with some new unexpected solutions.

  • For over ten years, this VFX team’s been at the helm of title card sequences, displays,

  • and full technology landscapes.

  • Technology moves the narrative forward because so many of their characters are built on the

  • foundation of science.

  • Tony Stark is an engineer and technology genius.

  • Bruce Banner, scientist, physicist, doctor.

  • Doctor Strange was a brain surgeon.

  • So many of these characters come from the lab.

  • And the specific design that goes into a character’s technology becomes another expression of their

  • identity.

  • Marvel has this unspoken technology innovation food chain where each character's in a different

  • pecking order of technological coolness and sophistication.

  • For many years, there was no one who had better technology than Tony Stark.

  • He was absolutely at the highest rung of that latter.

  • We're very fortunate that Robert Downey Jr. is for some reason surprisingly good at holding

  • up a fake thing, and making motions and circling things and making it seem real.

  • That design was all driven by his performance, because he's doing radial moves and he's tapping.

  • So we know all right, we need a radial element over here because otherwise his spin is not

  • going to work.

  • So that's how that design gets created.

  • Nick Fury and SHIELD...when we see his tech, it's a lot more utilitarian, it's a lot more

  • militaristic, very purpose-driven.

  • Then, Black Panther and Wakanda came along, and all of a sudden that superseded Tony Stark,

  • and we had to go beyond his technological innovation.

  • I have to mention the Wakanda Bible that we were given, and that spelled so many things

  • out about this civilization.

  • We were really challenged with creating a set of rules and guidelines of what could

  • be plausible, what could be logical that will govern the technology throughout the film.

  • They're this country that has intentionally walled themselves off from the rest of the

  • world.

  • What does that technology look like if you're developing holograms, but you're not influenced

  • by the rest of the world's technology to develop holograms?

  • What would you do differently?

  • That movie is very much built on this innovation of the element Vibranium.

  • They wanted something that felt very natural like you could just dig this up out of the

  • ground and you would have this incredible technology.

  • And from those principles, then, we can start building off of that.

  • How does the Black Panther suit come on?

  • How do the Kimoyo Beads work?

  • How is Vibranium used as weaponry?

  • How is it used as transportation?

  • We'll have our internal brainstorming sessions, what we call this tech audit.

  • So we'd try and figure out what technology is working now that could snowball into this

  • sort of future vibranium technology.

  • We like to do what we call our sort of mild to wild directions.

  • Here's the simplest, most basic version, and here's the version that should start making

  • people a little bit nervous and scared.

  • Because we know we always end up back down sort of in the middle.

  • To visualize vibranium, the team poured over scientific papers and cutting edge research,

  • like this acoustic levitation experiment from the University of Tokyo.

  • That's how we got to these sand particles.

  • We can have sand that can morph into different shapes and do different things.

  • And using that idea, we developed this idea that the kimoyo beads themselves were just

  • really densely packed vibranium sand.

  • We looked at research in cymatics, and we looked at visualizing sound waves.

  • There's a scene in the Royal Talon in the beginning of the movie.

  • He's looking at this sand table, and the way it forms and the way it dissipates is with

  • cymatic patterns.

  • To get the look and feel down, the team went practical and made their very own sand table.

  • We wanted to build a model that we could interact with physically, and start to play with how

  • does sand look if it's in a car shape.

  • We'd put screens underneath our sand table, and show the light projecting up through the

  • sand and finding out what that looks like.

  • So we would know, if he's reaching down to pick something up, well what is he doing?

  • Does he have to grab it?

  • And if he grabs it, how does that affect the interface and the interaction?

  • Something that we learned early on is that if you go too far beyond what is in our current

  • technological climate, you will lose the audience.

  • They will immediately call BS.

  • Like, “This is bogus,” or, “Look at this just lorem ipsum type here, this ones

  • and zeroes that are just used as filler.”

  • You have to treat it as if it's real technology, and put yourself in the minds of real technologists

  • and making sure that everything serves a purpose. Along with tethering the fictional technology

  • to real science, the Black Panther filmmakers also tapped the expertise of an acoustics

  • expert.

  • So there's this science exchange run by the national academies of sciences where a list

  • of experts from certain fields that Hollywood can ask if they need some advice.

  • And my name was on this list as someone as an expert in sound.

  • It was quite clear that vibranium and sound had a very tight relationship.

  • We talked about sound as a weapon...these are things that exist now.

  • Those are not that far in the future.

  • You can use sound to acoustically cloak an object.

  • if we remember that sound is a wave...any time sound hits something, it bounces back.

  • When you hear what bounces back, you can perceive the sound is there.

  • If you design an object so the sound doesn't bounce back, but instead goes around it, you

  • can hide an object from being observed by sound.

  • You can make it invisible to things like sonar.

  • You can also design materials to not make sound.

  • In the scene where Shuri gives the sneakers that are silent.

  • She would have had to design materials on the soles that would have allowed the air

  • to escape between the sneaker bottom on the floor, and where the foam or whatever soft

  • material he was walking on, didn't make a noise itself.

  • Another sonic element in Wakanda’s universe?

  • Transportation.

  • It seemed that vibranium was something that could provide power quietly.

  • You have a train that sits on top of electromagnets, those trains are incredibly quiet because

  • there's no moving parts.

  • Now that's a real life thing.

  • But it would take an awful lot of technology development to transform a maglev train into

  • all the things that vibranium are used for in the movie.

  • The most useful boundary between science and science fiction is, do I believe it?

  • And, as someone who studies sound a lot I'm pretty sensitive to oh that can't possibly

  • happen.

  • The technology innovation that they showed in the movie was of course very hard to see

  • happening in the near term.

  • But liberties that make the story compelling are totally cool.

  • I think it's the way it should be done.

  • And sometimes, pushing the boundaries of science fiction in feature films can spur new technologies

  • and materials that could be in our hands one day.

  • It's this interesting thing we call the science fiction feedback loop, where science fiction

  • is created by writers or filmmakers based upon today's current technological climate.

  • An entire generation goes to see these films, and that triggers this inspirational drive

  • in innovators and inventors to want to take what we just saw and make it real.

  • And eventually, when technology catches up and makes that real what was once science

  • fiction, then it starts again; where those science fiction thinkers, filmmakers, writers

  • see, “Okay, so now this new technology is here.

  • What's the next generation of this?”

  • And it's this endless cycle of inspire and create, repeat.

In Marvel’s Black Panther, the fictional metal vibranium is a wonder material of epic

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