It was incredible to see the amazing artistry and attention to detail. Seeing the various cuts of the film was honestly the most amazing part.
We were able to watch many versions, starting with board-o-matics. Did you see a cut of the film? Anything by the other VFX companies?īrian: No other VFX companies had been brought in at this stage. So you saw concept art and a few animated scenes. They gave us a draft of a script, which was missing an ending but would give us a jumping-off point. We were blown away and left with a high level of enthusiasm but we were bewildered as to how we could make something that could follow such an amazing film. The brief was open and there were a lot of themes to leverage: an aesthetic inspired by comics, the infinite range of Spider-centric characters, the multiple dimensions. We looked at concept art, character designs and a few preliminary animated scenes.
They walked us through the background and the basic plot. An army of people started to pour in: Phil Lord, Christopher Miller, Peter Ramsey, Rodney Rothman, Bob Persichetti, Christina Steinberg, Will Allegra, and a collection of producers and collaborators. We met at Sony Animation and entered one of their conference rooms. So how do you add the finishing touches to that? What was the first meeting like?īrian: Inspirational and intimidating. Seeing it win felt like the final acknowledgment of what we all knew: it's an amazing film and it touched all of our hearts.īob Persichetti, Peter Ramsey, Rodney Rothman, Phil Lord and Christopher Miller pose with their Oscar statuettes for best animated feature film for Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse James: I loved watching the Annies and hearing the thunderous cheers every time the film came up but the Academy Awards was the culmination. It was an unbelievable honour to be part of a film that is so inspiring on every level. How did it feel to see Spider-Verse win Best Animated Feature at The Oscars?īrian: We were so thrilled to see it win. This was the first time we did two titles of this scale and magnitude simultaneously.
We created two very ambitious title sequences, one for Spider-Verse and the other for The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part. It’s been a big few years for Alma Mater! The last time we talked was in 2015 about your work for 22 Jump Street.īrian: The truth is we don’t take on titles that often! This past fall and winter has been the exception. Below, Mah and Ramirez reveal the directions that didn’t make it, their 3D explorations and techniques, the Easter eggs and barely-visible custom art, and the plug-ins that helped them along the way.Ī discussion with Title Sequence Directors and Designers BRIAN MAH and JAMES RAMIREZ of studio ALMA MATER. Tackling the “inspirational and intimidating” brief required heavy lifting from creative directors Brian Mah and James Ramirez, VFX specialists, an editor, an illustrator, and a gaggle of animators and compositors. It was created by Alma Mater, the studio behind the titles of 21 Jump Street and The Lego Movie. Like the psychedelic Dondi White–Roy Lichtenstein team-up we never knew we were missing. The main-on-end sequence is a zipline through a kaleidoscopic vortex of blazing colour, invigorating energy, industry in-jokes, and meta-Spideys, all doused in Kirby dots and halftones, graffiti and street slaps. Its slam-dunk closing title sequence, which won the 2019 Excellence in Title Design Award at SXSW, required a team of about a dozen people. To achieve it, the film required 140 animators – at one point ballooning to reach 177 members – the largest crew that Sony Pictures Imageworks had ever used in film. Combining Sony’s computer animation with Pichelli’s vibrant traditional style proved to be key to Spider-Verse’s vivacious, one-of-a-kind aesthetic. Directed by Rothman, Bob Persichetti and Peter Ramsey, it’s the most innovative take on Spider-Man since 2002 when Columbia Pictures (now part of Sony) first brought the web-slinging hero to the big screen.įor stylistic inspiration, the filmmakers looked to the hand-drawn techniques of comics artist and Miles Morales co-creator Sara Pichelli. Written by Phil Lord (co-writer on The Lego Movie, 21 Jump Street) and Rodney Rothman ( 22 Jump Street), Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse is a wild, glitchy, exhilarating and most of all laugh-out-loud fun reworking of your friendly neighbourhood wall-crawler. Nothing looks like it and nothing feels like it. Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse is a film like no other. She declared that it would “break new ground for the superhero genre,” which, it turns out, was not simply run-of-the-mill hype.
When Kristine Belson, president of Sony Pictures Animation, confirmed the title for Spider-Man: Homecoming at CinemaCon in 2016, she briefly talked about the as-yet-unnamed animated Spider-Man film.