"Need a stunt double?" Standing before the revolving set, Duke asked Joseph Gordon-Levitt, who was about to shoot the zero-gravity hallway fight scene. The latter shook his head and declared with conviction, "I’ve done a ton of practice. I’ll do these scenes myself." Check latest chapters at 𝔫𝔬𝔳𝔢𝔩⟡𝘧𝙞𝙧𝙚⟡𝘯𝘦𝘵 Though he spoke confidently, Joseph Gordon-Levitt still looked a bit nervous. Even with the safety harness, this action scene involved a certain degree of difficulty and danger. Given Duke’s working style, a stunt double would naturally be the first choice for such scenes, but he wouldn’t completely ignore the actor’s own opinion. Most of the scene would be performed by Joseph Gordon-Levitt himself, but some high-risk stunts would still require a professional double. In this regard, the actor had no say. Duke would never let a lead actor take such a risk. Not to mention the potential trouble from their agency or the actors’ union if an injury occurred—he simply couldn’t afford the delay in schedule. This shoot was also one of the most typical examples of combining traditional set building with digital technology. In this scene, gravity shifts alone weren’t enough Duke also employed a "zero gravity" trick. During filming, the gravity changes were produced using a rotating set. But how was complete weightlessness achieved? The traditional approach was to build a high-speed rotating centrifugal system that put actors into a real zero-gravity state. The digital-tech approach was more straightforward just hang the actor in front of a green screen and composite the background later, easy and clean. However, Duke relied on the perfect integration of traditional sets and digital technology a result of imaginative production design paired with cutting-edge digital work. First, the entire zero-gravity sequence was shot within a real, physical set. The actors, including Joseph Gordon-Levitt, were suspended inside it to simulate weightlessness. But this suspension wasn’t just a matter of a few wires. According to stunt coordinator Jimmy Carter, the set was filled with so many wires it looked like a forest. None of this was a concern for the final film—they wouldn’t interfere with the shot, since digital effects artists could easily erase them using the latest computer technology. Duke understood that shooting in a conventional way would be a nightmare for digital effects, as it meant an enormous workload to remove all those wires. So he devised a brilliant filming technique—building the set vertically instead of horizontally and positioning the camera to shoot straight up! That is, the hallway walls became the ceiling and floor in a literal sense, and the vertical orientation of the set became the depth of the shot—vice versa, what appeared as depth in the scene was actually a vertical surface in real life. This gave a much better chance to hide the suspension rigs behind the actors, making the wire-removal work far less demanding—something the digital VFX artists were surely grateful for. In this regard, traditional shooting methods were a great help to digital techniques. But digital tools also aided traditional effects tremendously. For some actors, especially those facing the camera meaning they had to perform while facing downward, like Ken Watanabe and Cillian Murphy long-term suspension was unbearable. Stunt doubles had to be used, but those characters had to show their real faces on screen... So, facial replacement was essential, and that could only be handled through digital effects. The VFX team scanned the actors’ faces, built digital models, and then mapped them onto the stunt doubles’ bodies—virtually indistinguishable from the real actors. Such a unique shooting method required seamless coordination between practical effects and digital technology. In Duke’s view, this was the essence of VFX evolution. Traditional and digital effects didn’t have to fight for dominance. Digital effects represented the future of filmmaking, but that didn’t mean traditional effects were useless the two could absolutely complement each other. For Duke, the making of Inception was not a battle between practical and digital, but a comprehensive application of the entire craft of cinema. Of course, for Duke, digital effects still outweighed practical effects by a wide margin. After the ILM VFX team finished the reversed-Paris sequence, they moved on to build another fully-CG scene the architectural complex at the edge of the subconscious. To make the audience believe that Dom Cobb and his wife had spent fifty years constructing the city at the edge of the subconscious, the film required a massive number of 3D structures—and the VFX team had only a few months to deliver what was essentially fifty years of work. At the same time, the diversity of architectural styles increased the modeling complexity. To further enhance the realism, Duke specifically requested that the city at the subconscious’s edge reflect modern architectural aesthetics spanning different eras from Bauhaus style to skyscrapers to postmodernism. All of this had to be completed by digital artists who weren’t even that highly regarded in the industry. Despite modern blockbusters routinely featuring over a thousand digital effects shots, the digital effects department remained in an awkward position. On one hand, they were vital to the success of VFX-heavy films. On the other, Hollywood—still not fully adapted to digital filmmaking—had yet to give them the respect they deserved. You could see this from how digital artists’ names were buried at the very end of the film credits. Anyone familiar with Hollywood production knew that most crews rarely considered how their original footage would work with VFX. They simply shot everything and tossed it over to the VFX department. That’s why digital effects were often seen as "post-production cleanup." Still, the situation was slowly improving. Projects by directors like Duke and James Cameron were a beacon of hope for digital artists finally, they were no longer just doing "post." In their projects, VFX technicians were involved in every phase from pre-production to final edit. Paul Franklin, the visual effects supervisor for Inception from ILM, had been involved from the film’s very inception a rare thing in Hollywood. Throughout the shoot, he was part of Duke’s core creative team along with Anna Prinz, Hannah Selina, and John Schwartzman. He traveled to every filming location, participated in location scouting, set construction, and shooting discussions, and had ample time to gather VFX references. Thanks to numerous past collaborations and successful projects, ILM had fully earned Duke’s trust. The nearly 2,000 VFX shots in Inception would be handled entirely by ILM alone. It took Duke nearly a month to complete all the studio scenes at Warner Bros. Studios. Then the crew left Los Angeles, chartered two planes, and flew directly to Tokyo, Japan, to shoot a few additional scenes. One of the scenes was set on the Shinkansen. Originally, Duke had planned to shoot it on location, but due to uncertainties with the filming location and the Shinkansen management, he decided to build a set in the studio instead. The scenery outside the train windows would be replaced using CGI in post-production. Leonardo DiCaprio once said that Duke wanted to use filming as a chance to travel the world. That was obviously impossible—the crew was busy and the shooting schedule extremely tight. There were still other scenes to be rushed. After arriving in Tokyo, Duke spent his days shooting and his nights reviewing footage and handling other aspects of the production. Besides being a director, Duke also had other roles to play, with a series of investments and businesses to keep track of. For example, after acquiring shares in Relativity Media, he now held nearly 40% of the investment and profit share in Avatar, which was launching an aggressive promotional campaign across North America and the world and was set to hit global theaters in December. At a temporarily rented helipad in Tokyo, amid roaring sounds, a helicopter lifted off. Duke looked up. When the helicopter circled once and prepared to land, he signaled his script supervisor. "Scene 78, Take 11..." Holding the clapperboard in front of the main camera lens, the script supervisor shouted loudly, "Action!" The main camera panned to focus on the descending helicopter, following it as it touched down on the helipad. Once the helicopter came to a stop, the cabin door was pulled open from inside, and Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Leonardo DiCaprio jumped out one after another. Duke made a gesture, and the second camera, operated by a camera assistant, immediately zoomed in on Ken Watanabe’s face as he appeared at the cabin door. The boom mic also moved to the side of the helicopter. "Hey, Mr. Cobb," Ken Watanabe shouted at Leonardo’s back. When Leonardo turned around, he spoke in a tempting tone, "What if I could take you home, back to your kids in North America? What would you say?" "You can’t do that!" Leonardo clearly didn’t trust him. "No one can!" "Harder than inception?" Ken Watanabe added. Joseph Gordon-Levitt motioned ahead with his head and reminded, "Cobb, let’s go." Longing for home and his kids gradually showed on Leonardo’s face. He didn’t listen to Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s reminder and instead walked quickly back to the helicopter and asked Ken Watanabe, "How complex is the idea?" A faint smile appeared on Ken Watanabe’s face. "Surprisingly simple." The filming in Japan went smoothly overall. By mid-December, Duke had completed all the exterior scenes in Tokyo and temporarily handed the crew over to Anna Plitz. He and Leonardo then returned to Los Angeles to participate in James Cameron’s Avatar! Hi For access to additional Chapters of Director in Hollywood (40 chpaters) Made In Hollywood (60 Chapters) Pokemon:Bounty Hunter(30 Chapters) Douluo Dalu: Reincarnated as Yan(40 Chapters) Hollywood:From Razzie to Legend(40 Chapters) The Great Ruler (30 Chapters) Join pateron.com/Translaterappu
