Madagascar 3 gets HP power
DreamWorks Animations used over 200 HP Z800 workstations, its ProLiant BL460c blade technology, networking solutions and Managed Print Services to produce Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted.
HP technology and DreamWorks Animation’s have combined to
give audiences a treat with the breakthrough animation of the studio’s 3-D
movie, “Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted,” which hits theatres on 15 June.
HP technology was used to help DreamWorks animators solve
the artistic challenges that bring “Europe’s Most Wanted” to the big screen in
the third instalment of the blockbuster “Madagascar” franchise.
DreamWorks used HP technology that included HP Converged Infrastructure, HP Z Workstations, HP networking and
server solutions, and digital rendering.
“Our goal with every film is to push the limits of our
creativity to bring the story to life for the audience,” said Ed Leonard, chief
technology officer, DreamWorks Animation. “HP technology enables our artists to
exceed those limits and focus on creating the most powerful 3-D animation
experience.”
DreamWorks Animation uses HP technology throughout the
production cycle, for everything from day-to-day tasks to developing the most
detailed animation scenes and processing massive amounts of rendering
data. Throughout the years, HP technology has played an integral role in
creating DreamWorks’ ground-breaking animated features, including the “Shrek” series, ”How to Train Your Dragon,” ”Kung Fu Panda,” ”Kung Fu Panda 2” and “Puss in Boots.”
“Madagascar 3” tapped the power of several HP
technologies, including:
- Artists utilising more than 200 HP Z800 Workstations to help
create a wide variety of deeply intricate, organic environments that exist in
part due to the HP Workstations with multicore processors.
Artists used these workstations to help design
everything in the film—from the Zooster characters to digital effects such as
complex fire and highly detailed crowd close-ups.
- HP DreamColor technology was utilised in the film’s production
process to provide accurate and consistent colour across print, monitor and the
big screen.
- HP ProLiant BL460c blade technology, geographically dispersed in
four server render farms across the United States and India, provided peak
compute power at crucial stages of production. The blade servers powered an
incredible 200 terabytes of data and more than 65 million render hours.
- HP Networking solutions including HP 12500, 5800 and 6120 series
switches, HP Networking Intelligent Management Center, and HP Intelligent
Resilient Framework provided significantly improved levels of network
performance while providing a simplified, single-pane-of-glass network
management across the studio’s scalable 10G WAN/LAN environment. HP IBRIX X9720
Network Storage System enabled DreamWorks to respond to the demanding
unstructured data requirements of the studio while allowing for future growth.
- HP Enterprise Services Flexible Hosted Rendering has provided
DreamWorks with high-performance computing power to get dynamic capacity on
demand for multiple computer graphics (CG) films. Over the course of the
production cycle, 12 percent of “Madagascar 3” was rendered in the cloud.
- DreamWorks Animation also used HP
Managed Print Services (MPS) to ease the complexity of print management and
increase productivity during the production of “Madagascar 3.” This process
facilitates greater visibility into information, thus enabling faster revenue
generation. Through HP MPS, DreamWorks Animation is transforming
paper-based workflows to reduce waste, cut costs and unleash employee
productivity.
“HP Z Workstations power the creative genius at DreamWorks and
help bring the next big thing in animation to audiences around the world,” said
Jeff Wood, vice president, Worldwide Marketing, Commercial Solutions Business
Unit, HP. “HP is committed to professionals in media and entertainment and will
continue to work with leaders like DreamWorks to understand the needs of the
industry and bring in the next big thing in technology."
“Madagascar 3” fun facts
- More than 120, 000 individual computer-generated frames were
used to create the film.
- The majestic Circus Act sequence features the largest, most
detailed crowd in DreamWorks production history—more than 5,000 individual
characters. The scene includes several special effects including haze, sparks,
glow, fire and rain, and required 1.6 million render hours to produce.
- The Flashback sequence incorporates massive fire effects and
highly detailed crowd close-up shots that required 2.8 million render hours.
- In the Running for the Train sequence, nearly 1,200 Euros are
thrown into the air.
- The Manhattan skyline originally didn’t have the new World Trade
Center—a DreamWorker from New York City who had just been down to that area was
awestruck by the partially completed building and asked that it be put in to
show the amazing architecture.
- Gia’s eyelashes have 96 tracks that can be animated.
- Alex has more than 2,000 individual controls to allow the
animators to position him into any conceivable pose.
- Each person in the crowd scenes had three possible bodies, six
possible heads and various wardrobe item possibilities, for a total of more
than 19 million unique person combinations—for comparison, the New York City
Metropolitan area just reached a population of 19 million this year.
- There were 2,393 buildings in the Monaco set comprising 42
different models, most of which had three variations. Many of the buildings had
other models scattered atop them (chairs, shrubbery, planter boxes and other
constructs).
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