Behind the Scenes: Making Michael Douglas Younger in “Ant-Man” and Wigs and Makeup for Key and Peele
Posted on July 26, 2015 at 8:00 am
“Ant-Man” begins with a flashback to 1989, with Michael Douglas appearing not as he looks to day but as he looked 25 years ago. How did they do that? Special effects that are called “digital make-up.” New York Magazine’s Vulture has the story. They spoke to Trent Claus of Lola VFX, who had both the advantage and disadvantage of a ton of reference material.
Unlike on previous transformations, they had a plenty of reference material — multiple feature films’ worth — of exactly what a 45-year-old Michael Douglas would look like. To hear Claus tell it, this was both a blessing and a curse. “It helped us a lot to have that reference,” he said, “but it made us work harder, because the audience already knew what he looked like at that age. There wasn’t a whole lot of leeway.”
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De-aging an actor is essentially giving them a digital face-lift, and Lola’s team do the same work with digital composites a skilled plastic surgeon would do with a scalpel. The two professions turn out to have similar ways of talking. “The most obvious thing is that the skin along the jaw in most people tends to get lower and lower and sag a little bit as you get older. Particularly around the throat and the Adam’s Apple area, you’ll get a build-up of extra skin down there,” Claus told me. “One thing we’ll have to do to de-age someone is restore that elasticity and try to not only to remove the excess skin, but pull it back up to where it once was.”
Our cheeks thin out and sink as we get older, so Lola also added a little more fat to the middle of Douglas’s cheeks. And since human ears and noses never stop growing, they also had to shrink Douglas’s back to their 1980s’ sizes, as well as remove some of his ear wrinkles. Then it came time to restore what Claus called Douglas’s “youthful glow,” adding shine to his skin and hiding the blood vessels in his nose.
Equally transformative are the “practical” (real-life) effects created by the magnificent wig and makeup team for “Key and Peele.” It is almost impossible to imagine that all of these characters are played by just two actors.
Slate has a great story about Amanda Mofield, the show’s hair stylist, and Scott Wheeler, their makeup artist. Describing the college bowl sketch, Wheeler said, “We shot the first one—we did 32 characters, made them up, wigged them and shot them—in two hours, total. The way we made that work was … we were doing very small tweaks on each character, and slowly building up the facial hair. And then when they showed the characters, they showed them out of the order from how we made them up, so they looked like bigger jumps. And that was our master plan that worked perfectly.”
Wil Wheaton Talks About His Mental Illness in a Video for UROK
Posted on July 8, 2015 at 12:23 pm
I love the way Wil Wheaton sort of plays himself on “The Big Bang Theory.” The characters interact with him as Wil Wheaton, Wesley Crusher from “Star Trek: TNG” and star of “Stand By Me” (and “Serial Apeist 2”). But the “Wil Wheaton” character, especially in the first few appearances, was arrogant and mean, a fitting “nemesis” for Sheldon Cooper, played by Jim Parsons.
Real-life Wil Wheaton is a proud fanboy and hero of nerd culture. He was one of the first celebrities on Twitter (@wilw), with more than 2.8 million followers.
And real-life Wil Wheaton has some mental illness issues. In a video for UROK, a non-profit group that helps teens understand mental illness, he talks about his anxiety and depression.
“You are not the only person in the world who has anxiety. You are not the only person in the world who has depression. You’re not the only person in the world who has thoughts of self-harm. There are people who want to help you. There are people who have spent their entire lives helping people like you and me and all of the people that you’re seeing in this video. And you’re not alone. You are okay.”
It is so easy for teenagers and even adults to think we are alone in our moments of sadness and fear. Many thanks to Wil Wheaton for his generosity and courage in sharing his story.
Project UROK is a nonprofit organization founded in 2014 by Jenny Jaffe. Their mission is “to create funny, meaningful videos for teenagers struggling with mental health issues, made by people who have been there before, to provide not only practical assistance, but also a sense of belonging, a sense of comfort, and a sense of hope.
New on Lifetime: Preach, About Four Charismatic Women
Posted on June 7, 2015 at 8:00 am
Lifetime’s new reality series is “Preach,” following four powerful female leaders who believe God has given them the ability to heal the sick, see the future and rid people of their addictions. Known as “Prophetesses,” these women say that they speak as the interpreter through whom the will of God is expressed. In order for their legacy to continue, they must enlist a “protégé” and teach them how to carry on their gift. These Queens of the Church each have different styles and their own special way of delivering God’s message, but all are united in their love of the Lord.
· Best Supporting Actor in a Drama Series: Jonathan Banks, Better Call Saul (AMC)
· Best Supporting Actress in a Drama Series: Lorraine Toussaint, Orange Is the New Black (Netflix)
· Best Guest Performer in a Drama Series: Sam Elliott, Justified (FX)
· Best Comedy Series: Silicon Valley (HBO)
· Best Actor in a Comedy Series: Jeffrey Tambor, Transparent (Amazon)
· Best Actress in a Comedy Series: Amy Schumer, Inside Amy Schumer (Comedy Central)
· Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series: T.J. Miller, Silicon Valley (HBO)
· Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series: Allison Janney, Mom (CBS)
· Best Guest Performer in a Comedy Series: Bradley Whitford, Transparent (Amazon)
· Best Movie Made for Television: Bessie (HBO)
· Best Limited Series: Olive Kitteridge (HBO)
· Best Actor in a Movie or Limited Series: David Oyelowo, Nightingale (HBO)
· Best Actress in a Movie or Limited Series: Frances McDormand, Olive Kitteridge (HBO)
· Best Supporting Actor in a Movie or Limited Series: Bill Murray, Olive Kitteridge (HBO)
· Best Supporting Actress in a Movie or Limited Series: Sarah Paulson, American Horror Story: Freak Show (FX)
· Best Reality Series: Shark Tank (ABC)
· Best Reality Competition Series: Face Off (Syfy)
· Best Reality Series Host: Cat Deeley, So You Think You Can Dance (FOX)
· Best Talk Show: The Daily Show with Jon Stewart (Comedy Central)
· Best Animated Series: Archer (FX)
· Critics’ Choice LOUIS XIII Genius Award: Seth MacFarlane
· Most Exciting New Series: American Crime Story (FX), Aquarius (NBC), Blindspot (NBC), Minority Report (FOX), The Muppets (ABC), Scream Queens (FOX), Supergirl (CBS) and UnREAL (Lifetime)
Interview: Martha Williamson on the Expanded “Signed, Sealed, Delivered” Movie Series
Posted on May 31, 2015 at 2:59 pm
It was just over a year ago that I first spoke to “Touched by an Angel” creator Martha Williamson about her dead letter detective series for Hallmark, “Signed, Sealed, Delivered.” She is one of my all-time favorite interviews, making me feel like an instant old friend, and it was a delight to catch up with her about the series’ new expanded format as feature-length films for the Hallmark Movies & Mysteries Channel.
Tell me about the challenges of the new format.
I’m loving this because we have essentially a whole story now. We were doing the series that was originally going to be about dead letters being delivered late but the life of this quirky little group just took on more of a role. People embraced them so much and just fell in love with the two little love stories between Oliver and Shane and Rita and Norman and wanted more of the backstories of these folks and their lives. I would never compare myself in any way to “Mad Men.” But a guy wrote something brilliant about how in that show the characters take on their own lives and you have to follow their own lives and that’s kind of what I find myself doing. We have these amazing characters in these great actors who embodied them so well that you just kind of have to follow these characters and see where they wanted to go. And as a result we discovered that it was so much more satisfying to make movies. And Hallmark had this new Movies & Mysteries channel that they wanted to do. I’m not a mystery writer per se but every letter is inherently a mystery in one form or another. These people are postal detectives, which actually exists. But they really became this little family. And so I found that we needed extra time and Hallmark really wanted us to go to the Movies and Mysteries. It is turning out to be very gratifying. We’re actually shooting one right now in Vancouver and I’m writing the second one, then there is a third one as well. I’ll stay on the set and write the next one. It’s really a family experience. Some of the actors will walk off the set and say “How’s it coming?” and I’ll say “Oh man! What do you think Oliver would do if we were here?” He always wants to do the right thing and I think he struggles. So it becomes this group discussion because everyone so invested in it. And we’re really having a lot of fun. I have to say it’s just perfect for me, too. I’m the mother of two teenage girls and doing a series as you know is all-consuming but to be able to have this freedom of writing a movie and then go shooting, writing a movie and go shooting, it all seems to be working out for everybody.
I was excited to hear that we would find out more about Oliver’s wife, and delighted that Poppy Montgomery was cast in the role.
Just brilliant, she was brilliant. The minute I met her I said, “Oh my gosh! You were Holly and I didn’t even know.” It is like I was writing for Poppy. I hate to imagine channeling because I don’t believe in channeling but it was as if I was writing for Poppy and she walked in and said, “This is my part.” It was just perfect. I’ll back up here having done so much about working with angels, all of a sudden, the thing about angels is angels don’t have to have faith because they know, they’ve been there, they know what’s true. People, human beings struggle with faith all the time because they haven’t seen. What was the line? “Blessed are the ones who see and believe but more blessed are the ones who believe without having seen.” That was the next step for me, was in writing, now how we supposed to live?
What does it mean to live in faith?
And I’m still so saddened when I see so many television shows who depict people of faith as rigid and so judgmental and so legalistic and so unforgiving when faith itself is based on forgiveness. Even I go back to “Mad Men” again in the finale the other night. When he showed up and he talked about Jesus, he looks like a fanatic creep. And it’s so disappointing even now and I felt like, why can’t we explore somebody like Oliver? A nice man who goes to church sings in the choir, tries to do the right thing based on the faith in which he has been raised and still finds himself as we all do unable to completely control the circumstances of our lives. How do you address that?
I know that my father was divorced in 1940 and it was this horrible source of shame for him because nobody in the history of his family had ever been divorced. And here he was getting divorced and it just broke his heart. And yet he was this man of great faith and so how was he going to reconcile these two things. It does finally come down to just doing the best you can and trying to do the right thing and carry on. And so that’s who I think Oliver is. How do I take a show like this to churches and say this is a story about a guy whose wife has left him and moved the Paris and now they’re going to decide whether or not they’re going to get divorced? And I think that’s what really interesting to me is that he is working out his faith in front of an audience in fear and trembling and every day as we are all challenged with stuff. It’s not what happens. Its how we face it and how we deal with it.
And Oliver is not bitter but he also knows what he has to have. I think my favorite line is when Oliver and Poppy finally sit down for their come to Jesus conversation. She tells him they realized how completely different they were. They got married for maybe the wrong reasons and their whole faith systems, their whole value systems are very different and finally she says, “What do you want?” and he says, “Peace.” And she in her sort of hippie, new agey way goes, “Oh that’s beautiful” and he goes, “No that’s essential, I need peace”. And I think he realizes that she can’t give it to him. Peace is not something that she can give to him, he’s going to have to take it. And that’s true I think for all of us, nobody else can give us peace, we have to make those choices for ourselves. And I’m excited about it; it is very sweet and loving but surprisingly honest conversation.
Poppy is just perfect and she knocks it out at the park because she’s isn’t crazy, she does not play crazy person. She just sees it as: this is exciting and something fun and I’m going to write a poem about this and I’m going to go to Paris. And this is a guy who does have parameters in his life and he does want to live according to a certain code and it doesn’t make him intractable and it doesn’t make him judgmental. There is nothing wrong with trying to do the right thing and I think somewhere along the way we somehow confused self-awareness with self permission. Yes we want to be happy but not when it hurt other people.
I love Eric Mabius as Oliver. He shows us that Oliver tries to find the order and certainty and closure in his job that he does not have in his life.
That’s exactly right. Oliver is like a lost letter himself. Once that Holly situation is resolved it opens up to the real painful stuff he has to deal with in his past. So that becomes why did he allow himself to be captured by this sprightly personality? Well because she was so fascinating she took him away. As she says, “Why did you marry me?” and he said, “Because I’ve never met anybody like you, you shook me up and I needed shaking up in my life. But the truth is I think we’ll find what it was doing was preventing him from actually having to deal with some deeper issues.
It’s so wonderful to watch Eric at work. He locks up himself in his room and works on that script for days. When you have a chance to see this show pay attention to his face and you will realize at the end of the show that he never once repeated a facial expression. Every facial expression is unique to the moment; he doesn’t rely on the tried and the true reactions that you see in so many people. He carefully lays out the show and then like the best actors that I know then they throw it all away and let this happen and it becomes so fresh in the moment. He’s great! He’s just great, he is so much fun to watch.