Tuesday, September 30, 2014

The Laws of Physics in an Animation Universe.

The Dream Physics of Satoshi Kon's Paprika 

Satoshi Kon's Paprika is a 2-d animated film that explores the human subconsciousness and surrealist world of dreams. One of the memorable aspects of Kon's film is that half the film takes place in a grounded world based on realism, and the other half takes place in a fantastical dream world. The general gist of the film is about Dr. Atsuko Chiba and her team of scientists. They've created a machine called the DC Mini in which the user, in coordination with a patient, can dive into the patient's dream and experience the exact same dream. This opens new doors to psychological treatment as accessing the patients dream, allows the DC Mini user to view the patients unhinged subconscious. While treating patients in the dream world, Chiba creates an alter ego of herself. As her real self is introverted, stern, and succinct, her dream self named Paprika is literally a “dream girl”. She is extroverted, a flirt, and charismatic. The project is considered a huge leap in technology, and psychological treatment. However, at the same time, faces termination due to the dangers of overusing the DC Mini permanently submersing the physical state of the user into a vegetable like state, while their subconsciousness gets to live on in their very own dream world. The project is even later further jeopardized, as one of the valuable and powerful DC Mini's are stolen from the main lab.

Just like Chiba and Paprika's personalities, the physics of the two worlds contrast and play off each other. While in the real world physics are very realistic and grounded, in the dream world physics are completely thrown for a loop and anything is possible. Objects defy gravity, time and space is distorted, and squash and stretch is exaggerated to purposely show inconsistent mass. Inanimate objects come to life to create a parade of colour, people's masses growing to transform, and even “space” can be broken to connect dreams together. Kon really pushed what can happen in the dream world, to create a breathe taking feast for the eyes in Paprika.

In the very opening sequence of the film Chiba and Paprika treat Detective Konakawa, trying to find the source of his depression and anxiety. His dream shows the key to his anxiety, which is a long hotel hallway with red carpeting, and the corpse of a dead man floating to the ground as if he were light as a piece of fabric. 

The "fabric" like corpse in Konakawa's dream hallway.

The dead man is about 6 1/2 feet tall, and an man about that height should weigh and fall like he is about 170 pounds. To emphasis this Kon puts in the sound effects of wind, even though the corpse should have hit the ground almost immediately, and with quite an impact. Further more the rest of the physics in this sequence of the dream, besides the floating corpse, behaves realistically. Konakawa has his feet grounded from the force of gravity. Further putting emphasis and the floating corpse, Konakawa sees the faceless murderer escaping at the end of the hallway. The faceless murderer like Konakawa, is not affected by the weightlessness the corpse has. The corpse defies the natural physics of gravity that is effecting both Konakawa, and the escaping faceless murderer. Instead of hitting the ground like the 170lb corpse that he is, the corpse floats slowly in front of Konakawa taunting him with memories of the past. This is further pushed, as when Konakawa realizes what he is looking at, he goes into shock in his dream, and the floor falls away from him. He begins to plummet into the white space of his dream world, before he is awaken by a hypnic jerk.

A few minutes later in the film, it shows Paprika exploring the city at night after leaving Konakawa. What's interesting about this scene is that Paprika is exploring the real world, but due to her “dream girl” status and powers, she defies the physics of reality. As she explores the city, she skips around playing, but when watching the scene there is a noticeable difference in the time it takes her to hit the ground when she is mid skip. Each skip has a wide stride, and is extended by about two frames, a small change, but it plays a big difference. Paprika's skips are drawn out, and it feels like even though the real people around her are affected by the normal physics of the earth's gravity, Paprika's animation actually makes her feel like she is skipping on another planet with a slightly lower gravitational pull.
Note - Unfortunately this gif has actually been altered and sped up in comparison to the actual film, so Paprika feels less"floaty"
However, pay attention to the length of the distance in her last leap, as she skips off screen.

Another interesting aspect of the dream world is that neither time or space behaves as it normally would. Time can actually overlap itself multiple times, creating two of the same people, at the same time in a dream. In a later part of the film Paprika is closing in on the culprit who stole the missing DC Mini. She dives into a colleagues dream, only to realize that she has been tricked and the dream she is exploring is a clone of a previous dream she has already investigated. Whats interesting about this is that Kon shows this by literally showing two Paprika's. Time repeats itself twice in a reoccurring dream Paprika experiences, but on the second time around she attempts to warn her past self of the imminent danger. Whats interesting about the way Kon broke the physics in the dream world is that the viewer is left in the dark, until Kon reveals that there is a second Paprika existing in the dream. 

 
Pinnochio Paprika attempts to warn her former self.

In the dream world, one's physical appearance can move forward and back in time as well. When Paprika sits down with Konakawa to discuss his anxiety disorder and the cause, Konakawa realizes his trauma most likely happened when he was younger. The he subconsciously realizes this, he physical form changes into his younger self, when the incident happened. This is an interesting use of distorting the physics of time, because instead of distorting the time around a character, the time of the character is what is affected.
Konakawa coversing with Paprika in his dream when he stumbles upon a clue that his anxiety is likely tied to an event in his youth.

The physics of space is also distorted in Kon's fantastical dream world. Unlike the physical space of the real world, where one cannot teleport or merely rip holes into space to move about, in the dream world these are completely possible. Paprika literally breaks space to move from one location to another in the film. She does this in order to find the culptrit who stole the DC Mini, with the identity of the culprit hidden in a hole in the space of the dream. When she shatters the the space blocking this pathway, she gains access to a passage that connects the dreams of two different people. Spaces do not exist seperate from each other in the dream world, and they actually end up intertwined because of the DC Mini.
In the top frame, Paprika shatters the space of the dream, discovering a hidden pathway.

There is another example of spaces connecting is when a dreaming Konakawa collides his dream with the villains to rescue Paprika. During this scene the two dream spaces, the villains' and Koakawa's, exist separately at first, with Paprika being strangled in the dream of villain. In Konakawa's dream he witnesses this, at first helpless, on the screen of a movie theater. However, as he sees Paprika in danger, he literally pushes himself against the screen of the movie theater, attempting to connect the physical space of his dream, with the physical space of the villain's dream. As he pushes against the wall of his dream, it begins to stretch, and he physically rips a hole through the fabric of space into the villains' dream rescuing Paprika.



Konakawa forces himself into the wall of his dream, to rip a path open to another dream.
This aspect becomes even more interesting, as near the climax of the film the dream world and real world collide, and because of this the real world becomes distorted with dream world physics. An example of space being distorted is Paprika using a TV in Chiba's real world to travel quickly between two spaces. This is similar to how in the dream world, spaces can be connected as long as there is a path that can be found or a path that can be made. 
 Now with physics of the real world distorted, Paprika exists in reality, but still has dream world physics.

Finally, in the physics of the dream world, squash and stretch, and the mass of an object is consistently distorted. Inanimate objects come to life, and begin to squash and stretch to give them an ability to walk. In the video provided below, a few samples of this can be seen at 0:01, and 0:48. It is especially prominent in objects that are perspective heavy, like the refrigerator leading the parade. These objects squash and squish to the point where they should technically be breaking due to the material they are made of. In the dream world it=this can be exaggerated to the point where even objects that are made of solid materials such as metal, behave as if they are made of rubber.

When the dream world collides with the real world, mass can be manipulated and pushed to no end. At the 2:40 mark in the same video, humans transform into guitars and gold statues, however in both transformations their original mass is not consistent to their ending mass. In both cases each character gains about 1/3 extra mass to fit their new form. As unnatural as this is, simply because the dream world has collided with the real world, these bizarre distortions are now physically possible based on the laws of physics previously established.

 
Video example of exaggerated squash and stretch, and distorted mass in Paprika.

Satoshi Kon's film, Paprika, is a beautifully animated film that really pushes animation as a media and a form of story telling. The way he distorts physics in the dream world he creates through gravity, distorting space and time, and squash and stretch, is really only scratching the surface of the film, and the dream world he created. It's amazing to see how much thought Kon put in Paprika to contrast the grounded real world with the dream world, and it really shows the viewer how bizarre and broken their own dreams can be. At the same time though, the best aspect of Kon's film is that like a dream, when the world is as thoughtfully and exceptionally executed as Paprika is, anything is believable to it's viewer.



Sunday, September 21, 2014

Law of Physics in Animation Outline - Satoshi Kon's Paprika

Satoshi Kon's Paprika - Essay Outline
Introduction
    • Satoshi Kon Film, 2-d Animation
    • The film takes place in a world similar to ours, where a device called the DC mini allows someone to join in on another's dream, with one person is asleep and dreaming. The dream can also be recorded and rewatched, and it is used to treat trauma and psychological disorders/distress.
    • Paprika contrasts a realistic world, with the broken and imaginative physics of a dream world.

3 Hypotheses
Gravity
    • Gravity is distorted in the dream world, Paprika's character can seem as light as a feather, to as a normally weighted human female if she decides to choose so.
    • Objects and characters move in distorted arcs. The two bartenders are able to leap the distance of a wide street just by sprinting a short distance.
    • The suspect of the Detective's drean film, when shot in the back, collapses into a rag doll, and floats slowly to the ground as if he is actually a piece of paper

Time
    • Time is severely distorted in the dream world. Time is allowed to run both forward and backward in the dream of the Detective's. In his dream, he repeatedly shoots the same same suspect, over and over again in the same hallway.
    • Events do not run in a straight line, even though the Detective's movie dream happens at the very beginning of the film, it repeats itself and is even watched by the Detective himself in a later part of the film.
    • When the Detective confronts his fear, and finally shoots the suspect in his dream, the dream immediately cuts to the end of the “film” and does not show time passing.

Squash and Stretch and Inconsistent Mass
    • When the dream world collides with the real world, objects that are normally solid/structured squash and stretch with distorted mass. Ex. The Dream Parade, refrigerators bend and squish in distorted shapes to walk down the street.
    • People distort their bodies, and either gain or lose mass to turn into objects.
    • Objects that are normally solid, bend and squish like worms to fly through the air in the Dream Parade.

Conclusion
    • Kon purposely designed the dream world to be abstract and devoid of realistic physics to contrast it with the real world the film is half set in. It makes the film interesting, because it shows the viewer how abstract their dreams are, but when they are asleep and dreaming they buy into it without realizing.
Film Trailer

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Mini Portfolio

Hi, my name is Claudia Law and I'm in the Animation/Illustration program with a focus on Visual Development. I would like to eventually work in the video game industry as a concept artist. Currently I'm working on an indie game project with a couple of my colleagues named "Foster" as a character and environment artist. I enjoy working in small teams, as I feel it is much easier for everyone to get their ideas heard, and it is a better environment to have impulsive and creative ideas.

I'm also a very big film fanatic, with one of my current favourite directors being Bong Joon-ho. He directed the 2009 suspense film "Mother". I highly recommend this film to anyone that is interested in cinematography, because it has excellent shot compositions to visually tell a character's mental state without any use of dialogue or obtrusive cues. Some of my favourite animation directors include Miyazaki(of course), Satoshi Kon(Paprika, Tokyo Godfathers,etc), and Mamoru Hosoda(Summer Wars, Wolf Children, etc.).

In my free time I like to cook. For me, cooking is alternate from drawing when I feel too stressed out or overwhelmed. I really enjoy learning new recipes, and usually spend a lot of time watching YouTube Chefs. Some of my favourite YouTube cooking channels include Food Wishes, Byron Talbott, and Maangchi.

Lastly, here is my mini-portfolio for viewing. There is also my alternate BlogSpot for "professional" updates, and my Tumblr for more casual work.












Here is the trailer for "Mother" 2009.