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Pixar in a Box
Course: Pixar in a Box > Unit 3
Lesson 1: Introduction to lighting- Art of lighting overview
- Light quality
- Activity 1: Seeing light and color
- Light roles
- Activity 2: Lighting an orange (physical)
- Virtual lights
- Activity 3: Lighting an orange (virtual)
- Character Lighting
- Activity 4: Lighting a character
- Color scripts
- Activity 5: Color scripts
- Master Lighting
- Activity 6: Master lighting
- Shot lighting
- Activity 7: Shot lighting
- Getting to know Kim White
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Character Lighting
Pixar uses character lighting to enhance storytelling and evoke emotions. Techniques include rim lighting for drama, underlighting for scariness, and soft light for sadness. Danielle Feinberg and Erik Smitt, Pixar's Directors of Photography for Lighting, share examples from Coco, Incredibles 2, and WALL-E, demonstrating how lighting supports the story and characters.
Want to join the conversation?
- How important is lighting to animation?(8 votes)
- I'd say very important. It's just like the real world. If there wasn't light in the real world, you wouldn't be able to see anything. It's also like music in, say, movies. If you have a creepy music, you know something bad is going to happen. If it's happy music, something good is going to happen. It's all about lighting.(9 votes)
- I got scared by the monkey when i first saw it . The funny thing is , i still am . LOL(8 votes)
- I was kind of scary to me but when it was banging on the cymbals it was scarier but way funnier too(4 votes)
- When you say, "under lit", does that mean lit from below? Or does it mean without much light?(6 votes)
- It means that it is without much light. it says under lit as well as lit from below, meaning they are two different things(4 votes)
- When the monkey is underlit, where exactly does the light source come from? The desk doesn't seem to light up, and most of the light sources seem to come from the monitors to its sides.(6 votes)
- Wall-E is one of my favorite movies.(5 votes)
- That monkey hasnt slept ever(3 votes)
- His name is the Underminer, I thought a Pixar animater would know more about the Incredibles 2 than me.(2 votes)
- DO you guys usually put low lighting in animation movies ?(2 votes)
- Coming back to the "Dante Meets Virgil Again" scene I want to include in Hollow Knight, the moon is acting as the main light source when Dante and Virgil take their fight to the skies, so we can see some aerial sword-fighting from them both, with Dante's untrained style contrasting with Virgil's discipline. However, the final battle is what I easily intend to be the most tragic, but also Dante's biggest moment, so I want to play off the contrast, with Dante's colors having changed so he's basically a photo-negative of his brother. Moreover, the main reason the film is titled Hollow Knight is because of Dante being reduced to an empty shell of his former self by the time Act 2 begins, and it's about his journey of rebuilding himself with the help of some friends he meets along the way.(1 vote)
- Is there some kind of connection to all the light systems in movies/in real life or not.(1 vote)
Video transcript
(spring bouncing) - Now let's talk about
one of the most important things that we do in lighting at Pixar, lighting characters. Oftentimes, character lighting is used not just to light the character
and make them look good, but to say something about them or their situation in the story. That's what this video is all about. For example, in this
moment in Toy Story 3, Buzz is lit with only a rim light at the beginning of the shot, even though Jessie has a key light on her. Then, he steps into the key light at the end of the shot. This was done to make
his reveal as dramatic and threatening as possible. And in this example,
the monkey is underlit. The key light is coming from below him so that he looks scary and threatening. Compare this to the scene where the light is bouncing off the floor from the window, lighting the characters from below. In this case, even though the light is coming from underneath them, it is kept soft and is balanced out with the other lights in this scene. So that instead of feeling scary, the lighting feels sad. And in this example,
Joy is the light source and her warm light
shining back onto Sadness helps draw them together in the shot. We can see how close Joy is to Sadness and her light draws them together and underscores the intimacy between them in this moment. To better understand how this happens, I brought Danielle and Erik to tell us how they use lighting to bring characters to life here at Pixar. - I'm Danielle Feinberg and I'm a Director of
Photography for Lighting. - My name is Erik Smitt and I was the Director of
Photography for Lighting on the Incredibles 2. - So one of the things we
can do in character lighting is to really sell, sort of,
the emotion of a character or the emotion of a moment
in interesting ways. And so there's this
really fun moment in Coco where it's really the, the sort of, crux of
the whole story shifts and it's up until this
point we've thought that Ernesto de la Cruz is this very famous Mexican musician, and he's Miguel's hero,
and this wonderful guy. And they walk in together
and Miguel's having this evening with de la Cruz, his hero, and there's a pool nearby. And so he's getting this nice
soft, sort of, green light along with some candle light, and the general light in
the room is sort of purple. And it's all sort of softly
lit and they look appealing. And then as the scene goes on we reveal that de la Cruz is actually this totally evil guy. And so by the end of the scene de la Cruz has walked over near the pool and so 'stead of this
soft, sorta, green light, he now has this underlit harsh green light and it's sort of like if
you're telling a ghost story and you underlight
yourself with the light. And so that was the way
we used the lighting to, sort of, signify the shift. And we had this guy who was this great guy and now he's actually like completely evil and is sending Miguel off to his death. And so we get him all
underlit by that green light. (evil laughing) - And there's this wonderful
moment in the scene of Helen checks in. Where she calls him to check in and it's just after this
raccoon fight had happened and so he's a little perplexed. He realizes Jack-Jack
has these superpowers and Bob, things are going
a little rocky for him, not only is he not in the spotlight, not being the superhero
that he wants to be. He's realizing it's actually harder to be, you know, the stay at
home dad, the parent, the single parent on his own
than he thought it would be. And so we light him in a way where he's got a little bit
deeper shadow in his eye. He's a little bit standoffish
with her on the phone. He's not feeling quite engaged. And so, she reveals to him that she had the best day of her life. And she had this moment in the spotlight and saved this train. And so he turns on the TV and so we continue
that, the sense of that, in the cinematography
with the light on his face creating even deeper shadow in his eye. Even harsher angles on his face. And it's this world
that he wishes he was in and he's not reflected on his face, just showing, like, how miserable he is. And so we're trying to create that tension in the scene so that the audience can feel it along the way. - It turns out that WALL-E was incredibly difficult to light. Because if you think about it, WALL-E is, he's rusty, and he's metal, and he looks exactly
like a lot of the things in the garbage dump behind him and so finding ways to pull WALL-E out from that background was
actually incredibly challenging. And one of the ways we do that is with those rim lights
that you've heard about. And so, getting this edge of lighting to kind of separate from the background is really critical, but we
couldn't get any rim lights on WALL-E because he was this box with tight corners and it
wouldn't catch any light. And so we had to figure
out different ways, like banging up the corners
to catch a little light, but it gave us this
distinct shape of WALL-E and so you could kinda pull
him out from the trash. - So a scene in the Incredibles
where the characters move from one strong
lighting set up to another, one that comes to mind immediately is at the beginning of the movie when they're trying to stop the Tunneler from crashing into City Hall. There's this whole fight
sequence that takes place in this kind of stormy, steel gray light with, like, sunbeams that
sear through the clouds and captures certain areas of contrast. And so, it's like, it feels very moody. It's very pushed. It's almost a little bit mysterious and we use that to kinda caricature their action sequence as they chase this machine down the street. At some point, they realize
they need to get inside and stop the thing from the inside out. And so we wanted a big change of feeling when we go inside of there. Maybe make it slightly more theatrical, slightly more stylized, and so as Helen swings across
from one of these lamp-posts across the sky, and then down
into the Tunneler machine, there's an abrupt change and the light is extremely red from where the molten
core of this engine is and bright yellow from the back, and emerald green from the cooling tanks. And we really used that
as a way to distinguish between these two spaces, and to have the audience feel very, something very different, both when we transition inside and then when we cut back and forth from Helen fighting the
machine on the inside to Bob and the kids still trying to stop the machine on the outside. - As you can see, we put a lot of thought into how we light the characters in order to help support the story. In the next exercise,
you are going to return to your lighting set up
and swap out your orange with a toy character of your choosing and try out some of these ideas.