RUSHES
TAKE ON EXCITING BBC LONG FORM POST WORK ON ‘BUILDING THE IMPOSSIBLE’
Rushes
are delighted to announce their involvement in the exciting new
BBC series ‘Building The Impossible’
Each week
a regular two-person team - one engineer, one material scientist
- takes on an engineering challenge from the past, using the knowledge
and technology of the time. The catch is that although there may
be historical references to what they are trying to build, the objects
may never have actually existed before - the team really must ‘build
the impossible’.
In each of
these four programmes, the ‘build’ will provide us with
a genuinely exciting ‘test’ as the climax. The world’s
first submarine, a monstrous Roman catapult, the earliest airship,
designed but never built, and the burial shaft the Egyptians developed
to try to foil the tomb raiders.
At Rushes Post
Production, the 3D team have been busy creating historically accurate
recreations of two of these machines, that include a Roman Catapult
capable of hurling a 26kg boulder over a hundred yards and a French
Airship of the 18th century that was over 250 feet long.
Says Rushes
Rick Leary: “To achieve this, we made extremely detailed models
of each machine in Maya, working in close collaboration with the
engineers and historians associated with the project in order to
ensure historical accuracy. The work also involved using Maya Paint
FX, creating computer generated people and raytracing on ART’s
PURE PCI rendering cards installed in NT racks. The final product
is a very stylised look that works perfectly and gives it a seamless
finish”
The series will be on air late 2002.
|