Digital backlot

A digital backlot (also known as a virtual backlot) is a motion picture set that is neither a genuine location nor a constructed studio; the shooting takes place entirely on a stage with a blank background (often a greenscreen) that will later on project an artificial environment put in during post-production. Digital backlot is more often used in certain genre of films, like sci-fi and comics, in order to achieve what would otherwise be too expensive or outright impossible to build as a real set.

Notable films

Among the first films to introduce the technique was Mini Moni the Movie by Shinji Higuchi in 2002, predated by Rest In Peace by Stolpskott Film (2000).[1] Others include:

Released

Upcoming

  • Tribes of October[2]
gollark: It is on there. It just wasn't set as public. I updated it.
gollark: Ah, so it looks like I do know where it is, but I carcinized it last year and the library it uses is no longer trendy.
gollark: As if I know where my code is.
gollark: They're not hard, but it won't really do that since you can't see the backend code.
gollark: osmarks.net is a very accursedly implemented site.

See also

References

  1. "Rest in Peace". Video.google.com. Retrieved 2011-04-13.
  2. Ollie Chong (2012-06-21). "Stephen Moyer in New Movie – Tribes of October". TrueBloodNet.com. Retrieved 2012-06-12.
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