News Stories

FIFA 12 3D to support SpotPass

[by ComputerAnd VideoGames.com]

The producer of FIFA 12 3D has told Official Nintendo Magazinethat EA’s forthcoming 3DS football game will feature downloadable content available via SpotPass.

“We are not utilising StreetPass but we’ll have a day one kit and roster update to make sure we are fully authentic for the new season and SpotPass is one of the ways that you can download the update,” Matt Prior told ONM.

Prior added that he’s more interested in making sure the gameplay is solid than utilising all of 3DS’s features.

“We looked into all of the unique 3DS features early in the development cycle but with our first foray into FIFA on the 3DS we wanted to make sure we got the fundamentals right and focused on getting the core game solid while at the same time innovating in key areas.

“We did this by developing a lot of content and modes and developing the gameplay with unique 3DS features which we have done with the addition of touchscreen shooting. We wanted to focus on getting those things right and creating a very solid and fun gameplay experience.”

One thing EA won’t be supporting with FIFA 12 3D is online multiplayer. Still, EA believes that it will be the best 3DS football game yet.

See the original post here: http://www.computerandvideogames.com/303843/news/fifa-12-3d-to-support-spotpass/

Heat, bureaucracy made ‘Arabia 3D’ Greg MacGillivray’s toughest shoot

[BY SUSAN KING, LOS ANGELES TIMES]

Director Greg MacGillivray knows a thing or two about shooting large-format films in tough locations: For 1998’s “Everest,” for example, he designed a lightweight, all-weather Imax camera to take up the highest mountain on Earth. But he says his new Imax movie, “Arabia 3D,” opening Friday at the California Science Center, was his hardest endeavor.

“At times we were in 120-degree heat” in the Saudi desert, recalled MacGillivray, 65. “When we would change rolls, which is every three minutes, we would actually put a tent over the camera. We had a tent that was tied down and then we would lift it up and over the camera, so that the camera assistant could change film in the tent where dust wasn’t blowing around.

“That worked fine, except that it would get to be 130 degrees inside the tent, so he would come out sweating. There were these huge sandstorms that curtailed filming. I tried to film in them and got nice shots, but you end up not knowing where you are.”

The first major film shot entirely in Saudi Arabia, the 45-minute movie spans 2,000 years of history and the three “golden ages” of Arabia: the Nabatean Empire, the Islamic Age, and the current era of oil wealth and technological development (which also touches on women’s struggle for equality).

The country and its history are seen through the eyes of Hamzah Jamjoon, a Saudi native and 26-year-old MFA film student at Chicago’s DePaul University.

He sets out across the country to explore its history and cultural and geographic diversity.

The Oscar-nominated MacGillivray, who also produced “Arabia 3D,” said the film “was a different kind of hard” than the Everest film.

“We didn’t have to climb up to the top of Everest with a camera” this time, he said, “but dealing with permits and the size of the country and getting actually permissions and keeping them” was difficult.

Obtaining “the helicopter permit so we could shoot aerials – it took us over a year of actual day-to-day to work, hundreds of meetings. I had a guy living in Riyadh, the capital, for three months banging on doors every day. . . . They don’t have any infrastructure” for filmmaking.

MacGillivray said the genesis of the film was the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

“Some Arab American business people were embarrassed by the fact that 15 out of the 19 hijackers were Saudi Arabians and Osama bin Laden was from Saudi background,” he said.

These businessmen approached MacGillivray’s company, MacGillivray Freeman Films, about making an Imax movie for Western audiences that would help shed light on Arabs and the Muslim culture. MacGillivray acknowledged that he was worried at first they would want to turn it into a propaganda piece.

“I said I think I can do it if I get complete freedom and complete autonomy and don’t have to go through the government and things don’t need to be approved by the king,” he said. “They said we can assure you of that. They gave me complete autonomy to figure out the story.”

MacGillivray had never been to Saudi Arabia. So he set out with his wife and longtime collaborator, Barbara, the researcher for the screenplay, to visit the country as well as Syria, Lebanon, Jordan and Oman.

Not only did they fall in love with the landscape, they were also taken with the warmth of the Saudis. And MacGillivray came up with “a way to fashion a film that could communicate in a 45-minute sequence what being an Arab is and what Islam is and try to get across the fact that they are not much different from us. They have a lot of things they are working on like women’s rights, and there is progress being made there.”

However, women still are not allowed to drive or vote and must have a male guardian regardless of their age. The lack of equality is one of the main reasons MacGillivray selected Helen Mirren to narrate and included Nimah Nawwab, a women’s activist and poet, in the film.

“I always wanted a woman to narrate from a kind of women’s perspective,” he said. “That is why Nimah is a central character. . . . She could tell her true feelings in terms of women’s rights and what she wants out of it. She’s traveled the world and knows what (Saudi) women can’t do. She realizes that it’s changing but she wishes it would change more swiftly.”

Saudi Arabia has one Imax theater, in Al Khobar on the Persian Gulf at the Sultan bin Abdulaziz Science and Technology Center, and MacGillivray is hopeful that it will open there this year.

One businessman funding the film recommended Jamjoon, who graduates this summer, to MacGillivray as a crew member. But MacGillivray was taken with the young man and his movie star looks and thought he would be a perfect on-screen guide.

“Having him travel around the country in a kind of travel movie sense gives the audience more of a sense of time and place,” said MacGillivray.

Making the film, said Jamjoon, “has opened the door to what I really want to do in life.”

“It has been one of my dreams to make a movie about Saudi and Islam and the Arabian people,” he said. “Sadly, there are a lot of misconceptions about Muslims and Arabians in the media. I feel the need to make it easy for Western audiences to look at the Arabian culture and see the beauty of it instead of looking at it and getting scared.”

See the original post here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/05/31/2243197/heat-bureaucracy-made-arabia-3d.html

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Specification for Naming VFX Image Sequences Released

ETC’s VFX Working Group has published a specification for best practices naming image sequences such as plates and comps. File naming is an essential tool for organizing the multitude of frames that are inputs and outputs from the VFX process. Prior to the publication of this specification, each organization had its own naming scheme, requiring custom processes for each partner, which often resulted in confusion and miscommunication.

The new ETC@USC specification focuses primarily on sequences of individual images. The initial use case was VFX plates, typically delivered as OpenEXR or DPX files. However, the team soon realized that the same naming conventions can apply to virtually any image sequence. Consequently, the specification was written to handle a wide array of assets and use cases.

To ensure all requirements are represented, the working group included over 2 dozen participants representing studios, VFX houses, tool creators, creatives and others.  The ETC@USC also worked closely with MovieLabs to ensure that the specification could be integrated as part of their 2030 Vision.

A key design criteria for this specification is compatibility with existing practices.  Chair of the VFX working group, Horst Sarubin of Universal Pictures, said: “Our studio is committed to being at the forefront of designing best industry practices to modernize and simplify workflows, and we believe this white paper succeeded in building a new foundation for tools to transfer files in the most efficient manner.”

This specification is compatible with other initiatives such as the Visual Effects Society (VES) Transfer Specifications. “We wanted to make it as seamless as possible for everyone to adopt this specification,” said working group co-chair and ETC@USC’s Erik Weaver. “To ensure all perspectives were represented we created a team of industry experts familiar with the handling of these materials and collaborated with a number of industry groups.”

“Collaboration between MovieLabs and important industry groups like the ETC is critical to implementing the 2030 Vision,” said Craig Seidel, SVP of MovieLabs. “This specification is a key step in defining the foundations for better software-defined workflows. We look forward to continued partnership with the ETC on implementing other critical elements of the 2030 Vision.”

The specification is available online for anyone to use.

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