A matte painting is a
painted representation of a landscape, set, or distant location that allows
filmmakers to create the illusion of an environment that is nonexistent in real
life or would otherwise be too expensive or impossible to build or visit.
Historically, matte painters and film technicians have used various techniques
to combine a matte-painted image with live-action footage. At its best,
depending on the skill levels of the artists and technicians, the effect is
"seamless" and creates environments that would otherwise be
impossible to film. In the scenes the painting part is static and movements are
integrated on it.
Background
Traditionally, matte paintings were
made by artists using paints or pastels on large sheets of glass for
integrating with the live-action footage.The first known matte painting shot
was made in 1907 by Norman Dawn (ASC), who improvised the
crumbling California Missions by painting them on glass for the movie Missions
of California. Notable traditional matte-painting shots include Dorothy’s
approach to the Emerald City in The Wizard of Oz, Charles Foster
Kane’s Xanadu in Citizen Kane, and the seemingly bottomless
tractor-beam set of Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope.
The first Star Wars documentary ever made (The Making of Star Wars, directed by
Robert Guenette in 1977 for television) mentioned the technique used for the
tractor beam scene as being a glass painting.
By the mid-1980s, advancements in
computer graphics programs allowed matte painters to work in the digital realm.
The first digital matte shot was created by painter Chris Evans in 1985 for Young Sherlock Holmes for a scene
featuring a computer-graphics (CG) animation of a knight leaping from a
stained-glass window. Evans first painted the window in acrylics, then scanned
the painting into LucasFilm’s Pixar system for further digital manipulation.
The computer animation (another first) blended
perfectly with the digital matte, something a traditional matte painting could
not have accomplished.
New technologies
Throughout the 1990s, traditional
matte paintings were still in use, but more often in conjunction with digital
compositing. Die Hard 2 (1990) was the first film to use
digitally composited live-action footage with a traditional glass matte
painting that had been photographed and scanned into a computer. It was for the
last scene, which took place on an airport runway. By the end of the decade,
the time of hand-painted matte paintings was drawing to a close, although as
late as 1997 some traditional paintings were still being made, notably Chris Evans’ painting of the Carpathia
rescue ship in James Cameron’s Titanic.
Paint has now been superseded by
digital images created using photo references, 3-D models, and drawing tablets.
Matte painters combine their digitally matte painted textures within
computer-generated 3-D environments, allowing for 3-D camera movement. Lighting
algorithms used to simulate lighting sources expanded in scope in 1995, when radiosity rendering was applied to
film for the first time in Martin Scorsese’s Casino.
Matte World Digital collaborated with
LightScape to simulate the indirect bounce-light effect of millions of neon lights of the 70s-era Las
Vegas strip. Lower computer processing times continue to alter and expand matte
painting technologies and techniques.
Significant uses
- The army barracks in All Quiet On The Western Front (1930).
- Count Dracula's castle exteriors in Dracula (1931) and other scenes.
- The view of Skull Island in King Kong (1933).
- The view of Nottingham Castle in The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938).
- The 1942 spy thriller Saboteur, directed by Alfred Hitchcock, is enhanced by numerous matte shots, ranging from a California aircraft factory to the climactic scene atop New York's Statue of Liberty.
- In Alfred Hitchcock's North by Northwest (1959) shots of the The United Nations building, Mount Rushmore and the Mount Rushmore house.
- Birds flying over Bodega Bay, looking down at the town below, in Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds (1963).
- Mary Poppins gliding over London with her umbrella (1964), the St Paul's Cathedral and London's rooftops and aerial views.
- The iconic image of the Statue of Liberty at the end of Planet of the Apes (1968).
- The rooftops of Portobello Road, the English landscape, miss Price house at somw views in and other scenes in Bedknobs and Broomsticks (1971) (special effects won an Academy Award).
- The city railway line in The Sting (1973).
- Views of a destroyed Los Angeles in Earthquake (1974) for which Albert Whitlock won an Academy Award.
- The stone column demolished by the locomotive in the Chicago station in the film Silver Streak.
- The Death Star's laser tunnel in Star Wars (1977).
- The Starfleet headquarters in Star Trek The Motion Picture (1979).
- The final scene of the secret government warehouse in Steven Spielberg's Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981).
- The Batty and Deckard chase scene in Blade Runner (1982).
- The view of the crashed space ship in The Thing (1982).
- The view of the OCP tower in RoboCop (1987) and other scenes.
- The Magic Railroad in Thomas and the Magic Railroad (2000).
For the technique used in photography
and special effects filmmaking to
combine two or more image elements into a single, final image see Matte (filmmaking).
Important traditional matte
painters and technicians
- Michael Pangrazio
- Walter Percy Day
- Norman Dawn
- Linwood G. Dunn
- Harrison Ellenshaw
- Peter Ellenshaw
- Albert Whitlock
- Matthew Yuricich
- Libin Jose Vattavayalil
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