Bluescreen (known in television as chroma key) is a term for the filmmaking technique of using an evenly-lit monochromatic background for the purpose of replacing it with a different image or scene. The term also refers to the visual effect resulting from this technique as well as the colored screen itself (although it is often not blue: for example, with greenscreen).
Developed by Warner Bros. employee and ex-Kodak researcher Arthur Widmer in 1950, he began working with an ultra violet travelling matte process. Widmer also developed and refined technologies for other motion picture processes including 3D and widescreen. He began developing bluescreen techniques, with one of the first films to use them being the 1958 adaptation of the novella by Ernest Hemingway written in Cuba in 1951, The Old Man and the Sea, starring Spencer Tracy. http://en.chinabroadcast.cn/2246/2005-2-14/90@206385.htm
The background footage was shot first and the actor or model was filmed against a bluescreen carrying out their actions. To simply place the foreground shot over the background shot would create a ghostly image over a blue-tinged background. The actor or model must be separated from the background and placed into a specially-made "hole" in the background footage.
The bluescreen shot was first rephotographed through a blue filter so that only the background is exposed. A special film is used that creates a black and white negative image — a black background with a man/spaceship-shaped hole in the middle. This is called a 'female matte'.
The bluescreen shot was then rephotographed, this time through a red and green filter so that only the foreground image was cast on film, creating a black sillohuette on an unexposed (clear) background. This is called a 'male matte'.
The background image is then rephotographed through the male matte, and the bluescreen shot rephotographed through the female matte. An optical printer with two projectors, a film camera and a 'beam splitter' combines the images together one frame at a time. This part of the process must be very carefully controlled to ensure the absence of 'black lines'. During the 1980s, minicomputers were used to control the optical printer. For The Empire Strikes Back, Richard Edlund created a 'quad optical printer' that sped up the process considerably, and thus saved the production money. He received a special Academy Award for his innovation.
Petro Vlahos was awarded an Academy Award for his development of bluescreen techniques. His technique exploits the fact that most objects in real-world scenes have a colour whose blue colour component is similar in intensity to their green colour component. Zbig Rybczynski also contributed to bluescreen technology.
A classic example of the technique is the television news weatherman who on-screen appears to point at a map, but is in fact being recorded standing in front of a blank screen. On the sides of this screen are smaller televisions projecting a front view of the weathercaster, so they know where and when to place their hands. This technique is illustrated in an early scene in the film Groundhog Day. These early television effects were originally accomplished by a technique called chroma keying, but older analogue methods have been increasingly supplanted by modern digital compositing techniques.
Sometimes a television presenter's clothing will happen to have a region, such as a logo or other decoration, whose color is close enough to the chroma key being used that it gets included in the mask and the background shows through. If the production staff fail to notice this before the program goes on the air, it will then look to viewers as though there is a small hole in the body of the presenter through which the background is visible.
Towards the end of 2004, Drew Carey hosted the TV show Drew Carey's Green Screen Show, where comedians act against a greenscreen background with live audience interaction. After post-production, viewers watching the show would see animation interlaced with the live acting.
At the 78th Academy Awards (2006) Ben Stiller, introducing the Academy Award for Visual Effects, parodied the effect by appearing in a green jump suit which he claimed would appear invisible on television, making him appear as a disembodied floating head. In fact it was clearly visible, since it was not shot using a greenscreen effect.
There are some modern screens that at first sight appear grey, but are in fact coated with tiny half-silvered glass beads to give a significant degree of retroreflectivity. A ring of coloured lights (usually LEDs) is placed around the camera lens, and the screen reflects this colour back to the camera. This technique reduces problems from performers casting shadows on the screen, and allows operation at low lighting levels. As the screen colour is defined by the colour of the ring light, it is easier to change the screen colour quickly, and to use a colour with a narrow range, making it easier to distinguish between the colour of the screen and colours on the subject.
In the past decade, the use of green has become dominant in film special effects. The main reason for this is that green not only has a higher luminance value than blue but also in early digital format the green channel was sampled twice as often as the blue, making it easier to work with. But the choice of colour is up to the effects artists and the needs of the specific shot.
Special effects | Film and video technology
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