FX GUIDE: The Technology of Michael Jackson Reborn

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This is a great article from fxguide.com that goes into much more detail about the making of the MJ digital image created for the Billboard award show showing MJ performing Slave to the Rhythm. The images shown are HD and show the great detail of the sets and image.

The technology of Michael Jackson reborn

By Mike Seymour
<time class="entry-date" datetime="2014-06-16T21:00:21+00:00" pubdate="">June 16, 2014

</time>

We look at the face of Michael Jackson with exclusive high resolution images from the Billboard Awards hologram and interview with VXF Sup Steven Rosenbaum

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Stephen Rosenbaum was tasked with digitally creating one of the world&#8217;s most famous performers, Michael Jackson, to promote a new song, Slave To The Rhythm, at the live event of the Billboard Awards. It was a digital performance with excellent facial animation built on a range of technologies from LightStage facial capture to motion capture.

Given the enormous importance of Michael Jackson to music generally and his global reputation for stunning live performances, the job of allowing an audience to once again see him perform brought with it a justifiable amount of pressure. Clearly, after decades of enjoying his performances, the audience knows how Jackson moved, they know how he looked, and literally anything less than stunningly accurate wasn&#8217;t going to work.

Stephen Rosenbaum completed the project from his base in San Francisco. In fact, as fxguide spoke to Rosenbaum he was sitting much where he was when he started his career when it was ILM &#8211; an irony that was not lost on the visual effects supervisor. &#8220;This is the room where I started my career 25 years ago, so I am literally sitting back in one of my old offices where Joe Letteri sat, where Scott Anderson sat, where a bunch of us started back in the early days of ILM. And the decor has not changed,&#8221; he joked.

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&#8203;Prior this project, Rosenbaum and his team were heavily involved in modernizing a creature pipeline. It was this wealth of experience that made them a great choice for this production. The Michael Jackson Estate brought the project to Rosenbaum and Pulse Evolution (A specialist human animation company) in October of 2013. In light of the current migration of projects from California to Canada and beyond, Rosenbaum was particularly pleased to be doing such high quality work, but in a new arena and expanding the massive skill base of the artists still in California. &#8220;One of the things that is so exciting about this project was that we are applying our skills and expertise in an area that is largely untapped,&#8221; he says.

To help with accuracy in dancing, styling and approach, Rosenbaum was offered the chance to work with dancers, performers and wardrobe specialists who had all worked personally with Michael Jackson. This proved invaluable. In addition to a wealth of reference footage, Rosenbaum could talk directly to people who could speak to howMichael Jackson approached his craft and how he creatively solved problems. &#8220;I could turn to them and say here is a specific piece of performance, I was going to have him do this, and they would be able to say, &#8216;Well, actually Michael might have done this &#8211; turned his head to the side instead of back &#8211; because this was the way Michael would be thinking,&#8217;&#8221; explains Rosenbaum.

Rebuilding a legend

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The decision of what age Jackson should be in the performance was, at least in theory, wide open. The performer could have been almost any age, as his career spanned decades. In reality, an actual &#8216;plaster&#8217; life cast of the singer&#8217;s face made in 1997 meant that this would be the age of the Jackson the world would see: 39. It was at this age that the veteran special effects expert Stan Winston made a life cast of the singer for the project
Ghosts. The team got access to that original life cast and had the mold scanned. As great as Stan Winston&#8217;s work always was, the very weight of the material and the agents used to avoid it sticking to a subject&#8217;s face can fill in skin pores. So while the life cast was a great measure of the performer&#8217;s dimensions it was not as accurate as today&#8217;s techniques for accurate skin pore texture. &#8220;It got us only about 75% of the way there,&#8221; estimates Rosenbaum.

&#8220;The pressure from the alginate (plaster) not only pushed out some of the pore features but some of the facial features, chin, general skin,&#8221; adds Rosenbaum. &#8220;Michael has a very unique face, and part of his face was softer (thus it was more affected), so we had a bit of a challenge, we also had a physiological challenge of what we thinkMichael Jackson looked like at age 39, what we perceived he looked like, but from the hundreds of images we got from the Estate, we arrived at what he should actually look like.&#8221;
The other issue is that a life cast is just one neutral pose. In modern terms, if an actor is being scanned it would be normal to get multiple FACs poses in addition to the neutral pose, so that animators could see how the face looks in various poses. With just the one life cast the team was limited.
The combined issues of not having fine skin pore detail and no additional poses lead Rosenbaum to decide to get some additional reference in to provide extra detail. What would be important in the final is providing organic micro displacement maps to add to a traditional meso level bump that one might get from a cast. Interestingly this was most visible in creating a specular breakup and it was this that greatly improved realism. The team found various additional reference which could provide the missing texture details and provide reference for how a face moves between key poses. While these people were not, of course, the real Michael Jackson, the team only needed to extend in high frequency detail missing from the real life cast and get controlled reference footage. While a lot of real footage of Michael Jackson was used as reference, FACs poses are very particular and recorded under control lighting. The team also got additional key iconic expressions filmed to analyze and study. &#8220;Michael had a very distinct way of emoting,&#8221; says Rosenbaum, &#8220;so we got them to try and match some of the iconic expressions from his hero performances, and then on top of the FACs expressions do additional key concept expressions, and that was central to our success &#8211; not just relying on what the facial muscles technically do, but also how Michael might have emoted.&#8221;

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Unlike some earlier attempts at this performer re-creation, Michael Jackson&#8217;s mouth was very visible on stage. He performed without using a hand held mic held in front of his mouth as was the style of Tupac Shakur. This meant the mouth or lip sync needed to be much more accurate than previous staged &#8216;holograms&#8217;. Michael Jackson had very distinctive hair that needed to be recreated. &#8220;Unlike Tupac who was bald, Michael deliberately used his hair during a performance when he is dancing,&#8221; notes Rosenbaum. &#8220;He would use it as part of his expressive performance.&#8221;

Key academic research has been done recently in the area of micro-geometry for improved facial accuracy. Rosenbaum had the desire to use this new innovation in providing micro geometry displacement. These maps &#8220;proved to be hugely valuable to us and a significant step up in look development than what we&#8217;d done on prior projects,&#8221; he says. The logic of micro-geometry is very interesting. It would be reasonable to think at first glance that any character not seen in extreme closeup would not benefit from very small scale micro geometry. In fact it could be seen as adding to render times, disk space and something to easily be dismissed. But what has been found by the recent research is that while the actual pore detail is itself not read, the much larger specular highlight that a cheek or forehead may exhibit does change rather remarkably with the addition of the micro geometry of the skin of the face. While the skin pore resolution is very small, the highlight may be a quarter of a face in height in any one frame, with the textural quality and &#8211; more importantly &#8211; the realism, is greatly enhanced by modeling the skin to seemingly incredible levels of detail.

&#8220;What we found is that the specular contribution to skin is vital,&#8221; indicates Rosenbaum. Previous research had suggested two specular lobes contributing to the overall response on facial skin, &#8220;and we in fact incorporated three,&#8221; says Rosenbaum. &#8220;You don&#8217;t, at first glance, realize that you are looking at three levels of specular contribution. What you see is subtle grading and fall-off across different surfaces such as the cheek or the forehead or chin &#8211; they all have different responses within the highlight itself. It is actually the key contributing factor we found to realistic looking skin.&#8221;

Highlights seen across micro geometry, while being more realistic, can actually be more intense &#8211; in a way that a make up artist might want to reduce if seen on a real set. For this reason, and for the realism of what a performer such as Jackson would actually wear, &#8216;digital&#8217; makeup was added to mimic the correct look that the singer might actually have used. This was a key part in moving from general realistic skin to a realistic skin on Michael Jackson, performing at a major event. This digital makeup was based on &#8220;a lot of tests we did with real makeup,&#8221; says Rosenbaum. The team examined someone with and without makeup to note the differences in specular contribution that professional makeup would contribute and the final solution actually involved multiple layers of this subtle but important &#8216;digital&#8217; makeup.

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The final maps were 6 x 8K, and rendered in RMS 18 (RenderMan). &#8220;Everything was ray traced,&#8221; Rosenbaum commented. While the team used high end SubSurface Scattering (SSS), &#8220;what was giving the most realism was the micro-geometry.&#8221; Additional R&D or work in SSS would not have made much difference, especially given the performer&#8217;s makeup which naturally reduces the effect of SSS, according to Rosenbaum. The face did have a varied SSS across the face, but for the lips, which are normally central to any SSS discussion, the team still found that it was the micro displacement based on the new research work that lead to the greatest return in realism. &#8220;The fine amount of displacement that was being revealed by the specular contribution,&#8221; explains Rosenbaum, &#8220;you get this additional octave of specular response &#8211; that is what made them realistic &#8211; versus say varying amounts of sub-surface contribution.&#8221;

For the singer&#8217;s eyes, the team got great help from the Estate and the dancers and performers that had worked with Jackson. &#8220;He always commanded the crowd,&#8221; says Rosenbaum. &#8220;What we found is that someone may dance for themselves and where they might be going, but Michael was such a consummate performer, he was less thinking his performance than feeling his performance. He would look out and make eye contact deep into the audience.&#8221;

&#8220;While the face was where we emphasized critical look development efforts, a lot of time and energy was put in to the overall body and character performance to reinforce accurate Michael likeness,&#8221; commented Stephen Rosenbaum.

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Costume

For the great skill as a singer and dancer, Michael Jackson was also a showman and his costumes were always important. Here the team were lucky enough to able to work with Michael Jackson&#8217;s costume designer, Michael Bush. Not only was this helpful in planning, but the designer was accessible right through production to advise. Bush had created most of MJ&#8217;s personal and concert tour wardrobe in the past. The costume seen on the stage is a new design of an outfit that might have been worn during this period of the singer&#8217;s career, he created this original piece just for the show. &#8220;We had a lot of conversations about how Michael wore his clothes and the types of clothes he wore and how they fitted on his body,&#8221; says Rosenbaum.

The new work had an eye to the future. In many respects just as the life cast became invaluable years later, the team wanted to make sure this work would be well documented in case this was wanted or needed for any future project. &#8221;We went in building the highest quality assets,&#8221; notes Rosenbaum. &#8220;We built in facial detail, the hair, the eyes &#8211; everything to the highest quality. In fact, we were working at 7.5K resolution,&#8221; a resolution significantly higher than was projected on the night.

&#8220;We built the asset to be re-used,&#8221; adds Rosenbaum. &#8220;I&#8217;ve always been a fan, and I think he looked great.&#8221; The results were well received. After the performance the team showed it to Jackie Jackson, Michael&#8217;s brother. &#8220;We replayed it to him after the show, and he was smiling throughout and he kept saying &#8216;That&#8217;s Michael, that&#8217;s Michael&#8217; &#8211; you could tell he believed what we had done was true to Michael&#8217;s persona and his style of performance.&#8221;

http://www.fxguide.com/featured/the-technology-of-michael-jackson-reborn/


 
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qbee;4022249 said:
This is a great article from fxguide.com that goes into much more detail about the making of the MJ digital image created for the Billboard award show showing MJ performing Slave to the Rhythm. The images shown are HD and show the great detail of the sets and image.

The technology of Michael Jackson reborn

By Mike Seymour
<time class="entry-date" datetime="2014-06-16T21:00:21+00:00" pubdate="">June 16, 2014

</time>

We look at the face of Michael Jackson with exclusive high resolution images from the Billboard Awards hologram and interview with VXF Sup Steven Rosenbaum

jackson_featured.jpg




Stephen Rosenbaum was tasked with digitally creating one of the world&#8217;s most famous performers, Michael Jackson, to promote a new song, Slave To The Rhythm, at the live event of the Billboard Awards. It was a digital performance with excellent facial animation built on a range of technologies from LightStage facial capture to motion capture.

Given the enormous importance of Michael Jackson to music generally and his global reputation for stunning live performances, the job of allowing an audience to once again see him perform brought with it a justifiable amount of pressure. Clearly, after decades of enjoying his performances, the audience knows how Jackson moved, they know how he looked, and literally anything less than stunningly accurate wasn&#8217;t going to work.

Read More ..

http://www.fxguide.com/featured/the-technology-of-michael-jackson-reborn/



Thank you Qbee for posting this. Very very interesting and highly innovative just like Michael would have wanted. I'm glad they've kept the assets for future projects. :D
 
Man In The Translucent Material: How Virtual Michael Jackson Came To Be


<figure class="featured_image" style="box-sizing: border-box; margin: 0px; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); font-family: 'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 14.399999618530273px; line-height: 16px;">
VirtualMichaelJacksonBillboard-e1403543415674.jpg
<figcaption style="box-sizing: border-box; color: rgb(153, 153, 153); font-style: italic; margin: 10px 0px;">Virtual Michael Jackson serenades the crowd at the Billboard Music Awards.</figcaption></figure>

For someone who passed away half a decade ago, Michael Jackson seems very much alive. This year alone has seen the King of Pop continue a permanent show in Las Vegas (One, a collaboration between the singer’s estate and Cirque du Soleil), tour the world (via Immortal, another joint venture) and release a new album (Xscape).
Then, last month at the Billboard Music Awards, Jackson came to life in the form of a hologram-like illusion—and performed the song “Slave To The Rhythm” from his latest posthumous album as millions watched from home. The spectacle is still making waves due to continued discussion by viewers (as well as news of dueling multimillion-dollar lawsuits by rival illusion-making outfits over ownership of the technology employed to bring back Jackson).

Lost in the hubbub is how, exactly, virtual Michael Jackson came to be—and what, exactly, virtual Michael Jackson is. Misconceptions abound. First of all, many observers have misidentified the star of the Billboard Music Awards as a hologram. In fact, what graced the stage that night was an updated form of a 19th Century illusion known as Pepper’s Ghost.
“[The effect] has been used in theatre, magic shows, and haunted houses for more than 150 years,” says Frank Patterson, chief of Pulse Evolution, which partnered with Jackson’s estate to create the virtual King of Pop. “Simply put, it’s a method of projecting the image of an off-stage performer onto a sheet of glass or other translucent material located on the stage, thus creating for the audience the illusion that the performer is actually on the stage.”

Virtual Michael Jackson took more than half a year to build, starting with conversations between the singer’s estate and Pulse in October 2013. The goal was to create something even more life-like than the pioneering performance of Tupac Shakur’s illusion at Coachella in 2012.


Pulse also needed to come up with a production distinctly different from the phantom King of Pop that appears in Cirque du Soleil’s One, the permanent show in Vegas based on Michael Jackson’s music and career. In early 2014, the engineers at Pulse started building a computer-generated system of hinges and controls known as a rig that eventually enabled them to animate a virtual, polygon-based Michael Jackson.

Next came the process of capturing choreography with the help of Jackson collaborators Rich and Tone Talauega, followed by animation and shot work. Finally, in May, virtual Michael Jackson met the live elements of the show on a soundstage at Sony Studios in Los Angeles. All in all, the project cost “many millions of dollars,” says Patterson.

So why would Jackson’s estate shell out such a vast sum for a single performance? There are a few reasons. Firstly, there’s plenty of cash coming in—over $100 million per full year since the singer’s death. Secondly, that state of affairs is predicated on Jackson remaining in the mainstream’s consciousness.
“The most important thing for the estate of a deceased performer is keeping his or her name or persona in front of the public,” noted entertainment attorney Donald David, whose résumé includes representing the postmortem interests of late rapper Tupac Shakur.

The approach seems to be working, at least in the eyes of some close to the King of Pop’s postmortem productions. Said Jamie King, who has overseen Jackson’s Cirque shows and the Billboard performance: “Kids who didn’t grow up with Michael are now discovering his genius and legacy.”
Finally, there’s another reason: the possibility of building on the technology and creating something even bigger. Could there be a virtual Michael Jackson tour someday? Such talk is mere speculation at this point, but Patterson wouldn’t rule it out on a broad basis.

“In the coming years these kinds of virtual beings will be finding their way into every aspect of our lives,” he says. “It’s safe to say virtual performances will continue to grow … I certainly believe we will see virtual musicians touring the world in the near future.”

http://www.forbes.com/sites/zackoma...irror-how-virtual-michael-jackson-came-to-be/
 
It looks as though shares in 'virtual michael' technology will soon be available. I wonder if A David will try to buy shares......

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

NEW YORK, Oct. 10, 2014 /PRNewswire/ -- Pulse Evolution Corporation (PLFX) common stock will begin trading on OTCQB under the symbol "PLFX". Pulse Evolution Corporation ("Pulse") is the entertainment IP company that created Virtual Michael Jackson and expects to create and launch new careers for Virtual Elvis Presley and other iconic celebrities. "We are confident that the OTCQB will offer our investors the opportunity to buy and sell shares on a recognized platform that dedicates itself to entrepreneurial and development stage companies," said CEO and Co-founder Frank Patterson.

Pulse is a creatively driven, digital production and IP Company, established to produce specialized, high-impact applications of computer-generated human likeness for utilization in entertainment, life sciences, education and telecommunication. Founded by the world's leading producers of photorealistic digital humans, Pulse develops "virtual humans" for live and holographic concerts, advertising, feature films, branded content, medical applications and training. In addition to producing Virtual Michael Jackson at the 2014 Billboard Music Awards, members of the executive team led the company that produced virtual Tupac Shakur at Coachella 2012 and the award-winning visual effects for The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, and supervised high-end visual effects films like Divergent, The Matrix Revolutions, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone and more.

Pulse ( www.pulse.co ) is headquartered in Port St. Lucie, Florida. U.S. investors can find current financial disclosure and Real-Time Level 2 quotes for the company on www.otcmarkets.com.

About Pulse Evolution
Pulse Evolution Corporation (PLFX) is a creatively driven, digital production and IP Company, established to produce specialized, high-impact applications of computer-generated human likeness for utilization in entertainment, life sciences, education and telecommunication. Founded by the world's leading producers of photorealistic digital humans, Pulse Evolution develops "virtual humans" for live and holographic concerts, advertising, feature films, branded content, medical applications and training. Pulse Evolution is headquartered in Port St. Lucie, Florida. To learn more, visit http://www.pulse.co/.

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/pulse-evolution-corporation-creator-virtual-133200583.html


For financial reporting purposes, the Share Exchange represents a "reverse merger" rather than a business combination and Pulse Entertainment is deemed to be the accounting acquirer in the transaction. The Share Exchange is being accounted for as a reverse-merger and recapitalization effective as of September30, 2014. Pulse Entertainment is the acquirer for financial reporting purposes and Pulse Evolution Corporation is the acquired company.

We believe that our plans for virtual performances of Michael Jackson, Elvis Presley and Marilyn Monroe provide us with the foundation for significant growth in our core business.


Plan of Operations and Liquidity

As of the date of this report, we have raised approximately $9.9 million since our inception and are highly dependent on raising capital to fund our start-up and growth strategies. Our core business is the acquisition from estates and other rights holders of certain intellectual property rights to create virtual celebrities, and the right to present, and license to others to present, those
virtual performers in live, and a variety of live-virtual and commercial formats. In execution of its business plan, we have chosen to pursue a model whereby we provide virtual performers for appearances and collect royalties when we have an ownership interest in the intellectual property rights for the
virtual performer (the "Talent Model"). Under the Talent Model, we may permit other producers to create performances that make use of virtual performers created by Pulse Entertainment.


http://www.4-traders.com/PULSE-EVOL...AL-CONDITION-AND-RESULTS-OF-OPERATI-19172274/
 
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Waiting for the Marilyn hologram performance...
I'd kill to see the remix version of "Diamonds" played in Burlesque performed.
 
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