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  • >>STAN WINSTON: The Tyrannosaurus Rex we built full size.

  • 9,000 pounds of a completely full size, animatronic, robotic machine.

  • [Jurassic Park's T-Rex] [Sculpting a Dinosaur]

  • >>RICHARD LANDON: This is Richard Landon, mechanical designer for Stan Winston Studios,

  • on the original Jurassic Park project.

  • I was in charge of creating the armature that supported the full-size sculpting stand for

  • the T-Rex.

  • >>MIKE TRCIC: I'm Mike Trcic, and I was one of the artists fortunate enough to work on

  • this project.

  • >>SHANE MAHAN: This is Shane Mahan, and we'll be talking about the creation of the sculpture

  • of the full-size T-Rex from the first Jurassic Park.

  • >>STAN WINSTON: Over there.

  • A little bit more this way.

  • Good, okay, go back the other way.

  • >>SHANE MAHAN: Here's Stan talking to Steven Spielberg into the camera.

  • >>STAN WINSTON: It's all for you, Steven,

  • because we love dinosaurs.

  • >>SHANE MAHAN: You're watching a very quick progression.

  • That small fifth-scale sculpture that you saw was the basis of these parts and components

  • that you see now.

  • We took the fifth scale, which was sculpted, and then it was cut like so many loaves of

  • bread, if you can imagine that.

  • Each piece was then numbered, and then the parts are cut out so that they can fit over

  • the structure, the metallic structure that's going to support these pieces.

  • It's basically like constructing a hull of a ship.

  • You see 15, 16, and so on and so on, and how that was done was the parts were numbered,

  • top to bottom, analyzed, and then put on an opaque projector, and the projector was then

  • projected on the wall to the correct scale, and then the wood was cut accordingly.

  • It was all done by eye and mathematics and a lot of calculations.

  • >>MIKE TRCIC: God, it was just an incredible undertaking really when I think back on it

  • that we actually managed to pull this off.

  • There was so much ingenuity.

  • Everybody really pulled together and really made this work.

  • There's the miniature that Rich did and the armature and then the full-size armature in

  • the background.

  • I believe those are the legs as well that you see, the tall pieces.

  • We're just about to get ready here and place the bulkheads on.

  • >>SHANE MAHAN: We were actually using techniques that were developed hundreds and hundreds

  • of years ago by sculptors of large bronzes and such.

  • There's the fifth scale painted, and that was our guide and our gauge for the reconstruction

  • because what we had to do was reconstruct the sculpture from scratch.

  • >>RICHARD LANDON: Stan would come in on a regular basis and say, "Okay, I want to be

  • sure that I've got room for the nostrils, I've got room for the eyes.

  • Are you sure this spacing is correct?"

  • And I would not only mathematically prove on paper that it was correct, but then I also

  • had to satisfy him artistically,

  • and we would adjust little things like how much the belly would hang or how much the

  • tail would droop, and some things weren't exactly the same as the original planned structure,

  • but we changed it so that the artists liked it because it was the artist's eye that always

  • decided what the final product was there at Stan's.

  • >>SHANE MAHAN: Now a process of chicken wire and fiberglass is laid over the chassis of

  • the creature's body.

  • This is to give the clay something to stick to without going right through the wire because

  • at some point the weight would just push through.

  • Respirators, doors were opened.

  • Many weeks later, many, many weeks later in this process the first layers of clay are

  • being drafted into place.

  • This takes many days, and this is Roma clay.

  • This is not a sulfur-free clay.

  • This is Roma clay.

  • I think it's a #2 or #3 medium clay,

  • and those are gauge sticks.

  • Those sticks that you see in there are gauges of thickness for the calculation of skin and

  • where bones may go.

  • What we had to do was we would take the fifth-scale castings, and using the measurements, recreate

  • everything.

  • Mike Trcic was in charge of sculpting the head predominantly.

  • >>MIKE TRCIC: My focus was the head and neck area.

  • I wanted to make sure that I could keep that as accurate as possible.

  • By this time I knew the sculpture pretty intimately because I had done the fifth scale and the

  • small scale, and here we are on the big one.

  • Basically everybody--if they had a sculpting question they ran to me for answers.

  • >>SHANE MAHAN: It was somebody's job every morning to cut clay from the packages and

  • put pallets of clay in the oven on the other side of the building early in the morning

  • to heat it up so that the clay was warm.

  • This whole process, from start to finish, took 16 weeks to complete just for the sculpture,

  • not talking about molding it and casting it.

  • I believe it was just for the sculpture.

  • >>MIKE TRCIC: I would close my eyes at night and see scale patterns.

  • You see this neat little tool I made?

  • It's kind of cool.

  • Very nice.

  • Basic tool design.

  • You could do this.

  • Before, see, the primitive method was with this, and you would have to do this and then

  • turn it.

  • I actually remember I put my initials, MT, up on the top of the T-Rex head, and Stan

  • saw it, and he says, "What's this?"

  • And quickly I said, "Stan, you're looking at it upside down."

  • "That's not an MT.

  • That's a WI for Winston Incorporated."

  • >>SHANE MAHAN: The teeth here have been mocked up out of foam core to get the look,

  • the absolute look of how it's going to feel, but you can see all the subtlety of wrinkles

  • and scales.

  • This character had to feel 100% real, or the film just did not work.

  • >>RICHARD LANDON: Each sculptor would bring their favorite technique and their little

  • tricks of the trade.

  • Some of them would take the clay and stir it up with alcohol or acetone and liquify

  • it, and then they could apply sort of a sluice that almost looked like aged skin drawn out

  • over an area.

  • Other guys had different tools and techniques that they would try and teach the other guys

  • to use, and over the course of the 3 months of the sculpture they ended up doing a really

  • good job of doing a really unified look.

  • Everyone had their own contribution, and yet the T-Rex looked like one creature, not a

  • patchwork quilt of various styles.

  • There's the full-size T-Rex really kind of coming together.

  • You can see the legs are on.

  • She still needs her small arms up there at the base of her neck, but she's standing up

  • into the top of the building.

  • They actually had to raise the roof literally so that when she began moving and they did

  • the mechanical structure she'd have somewhere to go.

  • The small forearms were sculpted on a separate stand down a little closer to the ground,

  • and then Stan would request on a regular basis that the whole thing be assembled so that

  • you could tell the proportions were all correct, that everything looked right in relation to

  • one piece to the next.

  • Spielberg came by on a regular basis too.

  • He stayed very involved in how it looked.

  • The legs were originally aluminum structures.

  • On the exterior you can see the aluminum sticking out of the side, and that ended up being not

  • enough to support the weight, so we had to change to steel exoskeletons to sort of hold

  • up all that weight.

  • >>SHANE MAHAN: Thank you very much for watching.

  • The creation of the T-Rex was monumental in the history of Stan Winston Studio,

  • and it was one of Stan's great and most prized creations of creatures that he had done.

  • >>RICHARD LANDON: I'm Richard Landon.

  • Thank you for watching the behind the scenes on creating the full-size Tyrannosaurus Rex

  • sculpture.

  • It was a huge personal point of pride for me that Stan trusted me to create something

  • so large and so heavy having had no background before.

  • We all grew out of makeups and Terminators and little tiny things, and for Stan to embrace

  • this group of people as having the ability to step up and grow up and build something

  • this fantastic and gigantic was a huge point of personal pride.

  • >>MIKE TRCIC: I haven't seen this video in years, and again, looking back at this, again,

  • I can only wonder what were we thinking?

>>STAN WINSTON: The Tyrannosaurus Rex we built full size.

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侏羅紀公園的T-Rex - 雕塑一隻完整尺寸的恐龍。 (JURASSIC PARK's T-Rex - Sculpting a Full-Size Dinosaur)

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    邱于嘉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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