April 1st, 2009

Changes are in motion

You’ve followed the BRAVIA-drome ad from concept to post-production. You’ve even enjoyed a sneak preview of the final cut.

Now the wait’s over as the commercial hits TV screens and the new Motionflow site goes live. Click here to view the new site and see great behind-the-scenes videos, more of Kaká and Motionflow demos.

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March 31st, 2009

Motionflow 200Hz - bringing action sequences to life

This is it, the last post before the ad officially launches and lots more content heads your way. Before we move onto the next stage of the campaign though, here are five action-packed movies to see on the BRAVIA Z4500 for the ultimate sensory experience.

While standard TVs have a 50Hz frame refresh rate, meaning that high-speed action can look blurred and appear to flicker, Motionflow 200Hz quadruples the frame rate to produce a clear picture that’s judder-free. The end result is an intense, enhanced experience and action sequences that look as if they are happening right in front of you.

Casino Royale

Bond movies are pretty much all one amazing action sequence full of breathtaking stunts and explosions. The first Bond film with Daniel Craig is no exception.

The 6th Day

Arnold Schwarzenegger does what he does best in this movie about a sinister human cloning operation that is sweeping America. When Schwarzenegger finds he has been cloned, it’s a fight for survival to escape the assassins who will stop at nothing to kill him and single-handedly stop the cloning of humans.

Hancock

Will Smith plays Hancock, a superhero with a bad attitude, a bad reputation and a bad drink problem who costs the state a fortune in damage to public property. This is action adventure with a comedic angle is packed with explosions and awesome special effects.

Watch the Hancock trailer

Surf’s Up

A computer animated mockumentary, this movie follows Cody Maverick, a penguin who wants to become a famous surfer like his idol Big Z and win the annual Big Z Memorial Surf Contest. Full of lovable characters and brilliant surfing scenes this is a fantastic film for all the family.

Watch the action-packed clip

Men in Black

In this hit from 1997 Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones star as agents from a top secret agency that monitors alien activity on Earth. Men in Black is a classic science fiction adventure flick with a comedy twist and one big Bug - which the heroes must find and exterminate in order to save the galaxy.

Watch the Men in Black trailer

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March 30th, 2009

Kaká kicks off our new poster campaign

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March 11th, 2009

Inside the production process

The Sony BRAVIA-drome in construction

With the BRAVIA-drome ad due to premiere in April, Jonathan Davies of the Motion Picture Company takes us through the production process.

MPC were involved early on with this project, is that unusual?
We do sometimes get involved with pre-production but this project was different because we were going to build something. Ben Scott took care of the BRAVIA-drome’s aesthetic, Artem did the engineering and we provided the technical information to make sure that it was built to the right size.

At the beginning everyone thought we could just spin the zoetrope and do any kind of animation. But you’re constrained by the physics, how big the image will be, the number of frames you need, how fast you have to spin it. There was about two months’ work upfront.

How did you work out what was needed for the moving image?
We used a 3D package called Maya to visualise the spin. There were certain considerations to take into account, like the size of the square in Venaria, the need to produce around three seconds of animation and to get the image of Kaká as large as possible. We ended up with 64 images, which is around 2.5 seconds of animation.

Then you filmed Kaka doing a series of football tricks?
Once the BRAVIA-drome was built we knew exactly the size and number of images we needed of Kaká. The problem was how to get them to the right dimensions, because film resolution only goes up to a certain size. So we took a technical approach, and turned the camera on its side. That way, we got the most information possible on to the 35mm negative. Joining the loop was tricky. The sequence had to be shot in a particular way so that when Kaká kicks the ball out of frame it can come back in at the same height.

Did you have any problems capturing the BRAVIA-drome on film?
There were issues when it was spinning. If you have people standing in front of the BRAVIA-drome making fast movements you’ll see a series of jagged lines, a bit like an optical illusion. We had to make sure people didn’t move too quickly.

How much footage did you shoot?
We shot about 13 hours’ worth of footage on Sony HD cameras, and the ad itself will be 60 seconds long. That’s a lot more footage than normal, but the editor was on set to deal with the camera rushes. Next step is to do an edit that everyone’s happy with, grade the selected shots, colourise them, then clean up the piece. Sound recording and mixing take place at the same time. The final part of the process is when sound and picture are put together.

Does the post-production team follow a script?
They’re following a storyboard and something called a previz, which we do before the shoot. It’s a basic 3D animation of what’s going to happen in the ad. We take every shot from the storyboard and from the brief and build them into an edit. It gives everyone a chance to see what the finished piece will look like.

What did you think when you saw the BRAVIA-drome in action?

It looked amazing and quite surreal because the image is so clear. Although I knew how it was made, with printed images, it really does look like one single moving image – a bit like a huge circular TV screen.

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February 25th, 2009

See the new BRAVIA Motionflow 200Hz advert first

It’s here. If you’ve been following the BRAVIA-drome story you’ll be keen to find out how the final ad turned out. Ahead of its official launch in April, you can watch it here, now.

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February 23rd, 2009

Putting motion in focus

Sight is so immediate and familiar that it’s easy to overlook just what a staggering process it is. While we all associate the sense with our eyes, that’s just the beginning of a breathtaking cascade of computation going on inside our heads.

Research suggests that our brains have separate systems for perceiving colour, objects, faces and motion, which is what we’ll look at here.

Fired up by motion
Scientists have used a number of different techniques to explore motion perception. One approach has involved electrophysiology, which measures the electrical activity of a neuron, or brain cell, while the brain is doing something. In this way scientists have found that a large number of neurons fire up at the back of an animal brain only when the eye records motion. More specifically, certain neurons seem to be associated with movement in particular directions.

You can see this for yourself. Just like muscles, neurons tire if you use them too much. So if you stare for 30 seconds at an image moving in one direction, then look at a static object, like your hand, it will appear to be moving in the opposite direction. This happens because the neurons which have not been tired out upset the overall balance leading to the illusion of motion. Try it out here.

What happens when it goes wrong
Another way of delving into motion perception is to analyse what happens when it goes wrong. In 1983 a report described the experiences of a woman with damage to the area of the brain already identified by electrophysiology. Instead of seeing moving images, her vision of the world was as a series of static snapshots, like living with a stroboscope in your head.

Distinguishing between types of motion
Another decade would pass before neuroimaging (fMRI) arrived, allowing scientists to peer deeper into the fizz of neural activity that accompanies motion perception. Intriguingly, this technique revealed that our brains seem to separate the movement of humans and objects. So the sight of Kaká speeding across the pitch is processed in a different area to the vision of a ball flying through the air.

How Motionflow 200Hz helps
How does Motionflow 200Hz fit in to all this science? By quadrupling the frame rate, our brains no longer have to guess what’s happening between frames because all the information for perceiving crisp, smooth motion is provided by the TV.

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February 13th, 2009

Let’s get technical

Get the inside scoop on building the BRAVIA-drome from supervisor/designer Simon Tayler at Artem, the SFX company behind its construction.

What was your brief?
We’ve had extensive experience of large mechanical projects at Artem, but in our 20-year history there’s been nothing quite like the BRAVIA-drome. Our brief was to build an enormous, beautiful, sculptural piece that would look more like a work of art than a traditional Victorian zoetrope. It also had to display a large, bright, clear, smooth image to emphasise the qualities of Sony’s new Motionflow 200Hz technology. (more…)

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February 10th, 2009

The experts behind Sony Motionflow 200Hz

What’s it like, inventing a new technology? Get the inside story on Motionflow 200Hz from its developers, Sony engineers Kyoichiro Oda and Wataru Mamiya.

Identifying the task in hand

Oda: “I began wondering what the key features would be for next generation LCD TVs and felt the focus had to be on the quality of fast-moving images. We did a careful evaluation of existing image-improvement technologies and found that each involved a tradeoff between the components of LCD display performance. For example, the picture might be improved but luminance is reduced.” (more…)

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February 5th, 2009

How Sony Motionflow 200Hz works

BRAVIA Z4500 hit the shops last year, complete with Motionflow 200Hz. The technology has been hailed as a world first, but what does it actually do?

Picture this. It’s match day. You turn on your TV and there’s your team pelting down the pitch, in razor-sharp detail. That’s what Motionflow 200Hz delivers. Our revolutionary motion enhancement technology captures every kick, every swerve, every flick at 200 frames a second. So you get action that’s as smooth and clear as real life.

Standard TVs have a 50Hz frame refresh rate, which means that high-speed action can appear to flicker and blur. By quadrupling that frame rate Motionflow 200Hz produces a picture that’s crisp and judder-free.

The technology works by adding three frames to a fast-moving sequence. It predicts movement in all directions and creates new images to match these movements, so any gaps in the action are filled. The result is an intense and immersive viewing experience. From sports to games, action movies to cartoons, Motionflow 200Hz means you won’t miss a thing.

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January 22nd, 2009

Sony Motionflow star brings media spin to a halt

Despite last week’s frenzied speculation about a record-breaking transfer to Manchester City, Brazilian international Kaká has announced that he plans to stay at AC Milan.

Commenting on his decision he said: “At the moment I don’t want to change anything.

“All the messages that I received said to choose with the heart and I think in the end that has been the decision. It is absolutely not about money.”

The former FIFA player of the year, and star of our BRAVIA-drome TV ad, is known as much for his strong principles as his deftness and speed on the pitch, a point he proved by turning down the £15 million a season reportedly being offered by Manchester City.

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