Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • I need to speak to Caesar!

  • MATT REEVES: As "Dawn" begins the feeling is that it's the dawn of a new species.

  • That it's intelligent apes have inherited the earth.

  • The thing that happened between "Rise" and our film...

  • ...is that Weta has taken a quantum leap forward.

  • ANDY SERKIS: This film is actually...

  • ...in many ways more challenging than the first film in terms of it's scope, it's scale.

  • ERIK WINQUIST: Obviously something that was going to be huge to the success of this film because on...

  • ...the last film we had fairly large arenas, but this time almost everything was outdoors.

  • DYLAN CLARK: Never has it been done like this before.

  • We decided to use 3D cameras and really what we wanted to do...

  • ...was take that technology that WETA has perfected...

  • ...and apply into exterior sets, even more than we did on "Rise".

  • JOE LETTERI: We're working for the most...

  • ...part in a less controlled environment.

  • Motion capture works because...

  • ...it can see what the actors are doing and when you're shooting in a forest full of trees...

  • ...that makes it really tricky so we had to specially arrange dozens of cameras every time...

  • ...we changed location just to try to be able to really accurately get the actor's performances.

  • And the wireless cameras were great working in this kind of environment...

  • ...because we didn't have to worry about laying cables and maintaining cables. It gave us a lot of freedom.

  • MATT REEVES: They are using motion capture cameras and tracking markers and witness...

  • ...cameras to capture all of the detail of the actor's performances.

  • And then they're tracking that detail into these photo realistic ape models.

  • ERIK WINQUIST: The other thing though that was a real huge help on this film was...

  • ...the actual active body marker strands.

  • And so you can velcro that to the performers, you know, and they could roll around,

  • they could fight, they could do all the active stuff they needed to do as apes.

  • DIRECTOR (O/S): Action!

  • JOE LETTERI: Then really a lot of it just comes into the software that we've written to help...

  • ...translate that after we've acquired all the information to really just more accurately...

  • ...understand what the actors are doing and to be able to see that.

  • MATT REEVES: The hair simulation, the skin simulation, the, the moisture simulation.

  • Everything that they do in terms of the actual apes bodies is so much more realistic.

  • ERIK WINQUIST: One of the big things that we have introduced into the pipeline...

  • ...that was only barely seen, you know, in the last film. Was this whole element of wet fur.

  • DAN LEMMON: We see the apes when they're dry, we see them when they're damp,

  • ...we see them when they're kind of soaking wet.

  • It's an incredibly complicated system.

  • CAESAR: Show me.

  • MATT REEVES: And that's the amazing magic of what Weta is doing, is finding a way in which it...

  • ...can take the parts of the actors and the parts of the apes and meld them in such...

  • ...a way that, that emotion comes through. Seeing the results is incredibly exciting.

I need to speak to Caesar!

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it