Water is a common element/concept in animations and films.
However, the movements of it are hard to predict and simulate. In this paper, I
will analyze two visual special effects of fluid motion created with different techniques. One is from the film
“Titanic” (1997) and the other is from a stop-motion animation called “Magic
Water”.
II. Body
A Titanic
In “Titanic”, water
is generated by computers. The film production team shot the wave motions
caused by the real ships and manipulated it digitally. With the techniques of
“green screen” and “color correction” contributing to perfect compositing, the
scene looks very realistic.
B. Magic Water
“Magic Water” is a
stop-motion animation using clay to simulate water. It is kind of interesting
to interpret the fluid motion with the solid material. The animator exaggerated
the physical characteristics of the real water and applied it to the clay model,
which created a cartoon-style effect.
III. Conclusion
Although there are many
different approaches to make water effects, the nature of VFX is still serving
for the overall style and concept of the films and animations. From this
perspective, both “Titanic” and “Magic Water” are successful in creating the
water effect.
I used clay for character modeling and did some pencil drawings for animation. I'd like to tell a story in this animation short and hope you can enjoy it :)