The movie
Beasts of the Southern Wild is a live-action film
featuring aurochs, which are extinct animals. How did they do that?
National Geographic talked to second-unit director Ray Tintori about the
animals in the film, and found out the big, fearsome, prehistoric
cattle were played by baby potbelly pigs in costume!
We put a foam, bison-like hump under the nutria skins, to
throw off the shape. With the horns, well, safety was the No. 1 concern
at all times. And we must have gone through 40 versions of costume
design, trying to figure it out. The first time we put wooden horns on
one of the pigs, we realized we’d just handed a switchblade to a
toddler. Because the pigs were always rooting around and charging
everything. They’d run into us, and we’d be like, “Ow! Oh, my God that
hurts!”
The horns we wound up using were really soft, like cast latex. In
some of the footage we have, the horns would bend every time the pigs
ran into something. The coolest thing about it was figuring out how to
design the horns to look like they’re part of the skull. Because you
really can’t have any wobble. We had to design a way to attach tusks and
horns to a pig’s head without hurting the pig.
Read more about the porcine movie stars at
NatGeo News.
No comments:
Post a Comment