Technology
meets Biology for CBS Sci-Fi Series Extant Producer Todd Coe hired Rick Lazzarini and his
genius team of Artists and Technicians at The Character Shop
to design and create "Lucy". The design went through many
iterations, with Executive Producer Steven Spielberg
weighing in with approvals. After an initial go-round, Spielberg
requested that we up the ante, to give this
almost-background item more movement, more function, a
speaking role, and a move to the forefront. So that's what
Rick and his crew did! Here's a near final test showing
head, neck, and jaw movements... Here are images
of the initial animatronic Lucy head, which
featured 3D printing and radio-controlled eye and blink
movements (click to see a higher res version): Inspired by Spielberg's
directive to "go bigger", Lazzarini and his team went back
to square one: Design. From a rough sketch provided by
Extant's Production Designer Cabot McMullen: Lazzarini engaged the services of Illustrators Austin Smith
and Josh Crockett to give detail,
clarification, and color to the rough sketch. Below,
a sequence of images showing Crockett's progress,
using Zbrush and refelecting many emails, chats, and IM's
with Lazzarini to ensure the details were correct for
presentation:
Once approved by Spielberg,
Lazzarini, his
Animatronics Technician Lars Jangaard, and his
Art Department (Stephen Blandino, Chase
Birdsong, Natalie Knudsen) began the actual construction
of the final animatronic head.
To achieve the "organic metal mesh" look, a skull shapes
was vacuformed, and then rigid dental acrylic
applied, by hand, then dremeled, cleaned, sanded, until
the rounded, protective cage was completed. Meanwhile,
pieces were turned on the lathe
for the cosmetic pieces, out of black delrin and
aluminum. Head swivel, up/down, tilt, and jaw mechanisms
were created, to be operated by remote control.
Intricate internal wiring was built up, wire
by wire, and a glowing "chip brain" and other interior
lighting was incorporated. A serene child's
face was sculpted, molded, and cast in silicone, then
applied to the head. The result is an intriguing,
eye-catching, original take on what we can expect from
androids and AIs in the near future. We'd love to create
an army of them! What's
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ANIMATRONIC
A.I. FOR SPIELBERG'S "EXTANT"
CBS and Steven Spielberg premiered a new Science Fiction
series, "Extant", in July, 2014. The show stars Halle
Berry as Molly Woods, a mission-driven Astronaut, with her
Scientist husband John Woods (Goran Viinjic), who explores
new realms of Artificial Intelligence, Bionics, and
Robotics, calling his creations "Humanichs". Woods has an
assistant and colleague named Julie (played by Grace
Gummer) who has created a new, prototype Humanich:
Lucy, who learns at an advanced rate,
and is intriguingly unfinished.
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