Thursday, January 15, 2015

Best Possible Outcomes for Brock Lesnar at 2015 WWE Royal Rumble

Best Possible Outcomes for Brock Lesnar at 2015 WWE Royal Rumble
Jonathan Bachman/Associated Press
Brock Lesnar will enter the 2015 Royal Rumble pay-per-view as the WWE world heavyweight champion, but how the Triple Threat match against John Cena and Seth Rollins ends will set the stage for WrestleMania 31.
Whether or not Lesnar walks out of Royal Rumble with the title, it is imperative that WWE does not waste the mainstream attention the former UFC champion draws while he is still under contract.

According to Dave Meltzer of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter (viaMMAWeekly.com), the WWE believes Lesnar will leave the company once his current deal expires after WrestleMania, and he is thought to be considering a return to the UFC.
While there was a time in wrestling when Vince McMahon and Company would fear Lesnar's refusal to give up the title and leaving the WWE as champion, this is a different business landscape, and that shouldn’t be an issue.
If the company doesn’t fear Lesnar's entering WrestleMania with the world title, the best-case scenario would be the champion pinning Cena clean instead of Seth Rollins. Not only would it help Rollins avoid taking the pinfall in his first championship match, but it would also unequivocally end the feud between Cena and Lesnar.
Giving Lesnar the decisive victory would also explain why Rollins doesn’t cash in, as he would be apt to lose against the fully conscious Beast in this scenario.Add in the fact that Lesnar would carry the belt into WrestleMania, only to put over the eventual winner of the Royal Rumble, and this is the perfect outcome for Lesnar and the company.Unfortunately, the wrestler most likely to take the loss if Lesnar wins would be Rollins. Despite raising his game and stealing the show on Monday’s Raw, the most likely scenario would see the Beast pin Rollins clean to avoid another Cena defeat. There's one possible outcome which isn't getting enough consideration but would be the most interesting: Paul Heyman could turn on his client once again and align himself with Seth Rollins and The Authority heading into WrestleMania.

If Lesnar truly is leaving the WWE after his contract ends, the company must find a way to get Heyman involved with a different character. It is imperative to keep Heyman involved with the product, and helping Rollins walk out of the Royal Rumble with the WWE Championship would be the ideal way to transition wrestling’s greatest advocate.

The fans already cheer when Lesnar comes out because of the aura he carries, and being crossed by Heyman would only increase his face reaction. In this situation, Lesnar could enter WrestleMania as the face challenger and ultimately put over Rollins or the eventual Royal Rumble winner in a Triple Threat match.

Regardless of how the WWE handles the booking of the championship Triple Threat match at the Royal Rumble, allowing Lesnar to walk into WrestleMania and put over another star will make this a successful angle.

Tuesday, January 13, 2015

Everything You Need to Know About the Avengers Movies

Everything You Need to Know About the Avengers Movies
The forthcoming movie Avengers movie, the summer’s big kick-off superhero blockbuster, is the culmination of five superhero films released over the past four years, all of them set within the same universe. But if you’re not familiar with the comics world these characters stem from, you may not know that.
Don’t panic! The good news is that you don’t need to see the five previous films to get the full Avengers experience. But if you want to afterwards, I’ll illustrate below how The Avengers has been quietly (and rather brilliantly) building to a head since 2008.
No spoilers ahead for The Avengers. Mild to large spoilers for the others.

Everything You Need to Know About the Avengers Movies
Iron Man (2008)
This is where it all begins. Apart from the obvious fact that this is the (surprisingly hilarious) origin story for Tony Stark/Iron Man, a central character in The Avengers, the film drops three, possibly four hints that there is far more to come past the events of Iron Man.
1.) Agent Coulson & S.H.I.E.L.D. This minor character pops up in three or four scenes to meekly prompt Tony Stark to brief the government on this new Iron Man technology. (Well, we think it’s the government anyway. The name Coulson gives for his employing organization is so long that Tony quips, “You should get a better name.” Later in the film, we find it’s been acronymed to just “SHIELD.”) Coulson himself proves extremely capable against the film’s villain, employing nothing more than a gun and general sneakiness. By the end of the film you’re definitely keeping an eye on him.
Everything You Need to Know About the Avengers Movies
How this figures in to The Avengers: SHIELD is the organization that, basically, assembles the Avengers. They become more of a presence in later films. Agent Coulson himself is a character in The Avengers, and has become a fan favorite.
2.) Jarvis. Jarvis is Tony Stark’s personal A.I. assistant and a bit of a pet project for the machinist/arms dealer/futurist technocrat. He initially just runs Tony’s house and office, but is patched into the Iron Man suit later on. He’s effete, British, and highly competent. Tony talks to him quite a lot.
How this figures in to The Avengers: In the comics, Jarvis was the super team’s human butler and general keeper of all Avengers secrets. In the movies, he’s part of the Iron Man suit, so he’ll most likely serve the same function.
3.) Post-credit scene with Nick Fury. The ending of Iron Man involves a big fight and a big revelation: Tony Stark is Iron Man. In a post-credits scene, Tony Stark comes home after this announcement to find a trench-coated stranger with an eye patch waiting for him. The stranger razzes Tony a little about playing superhero, then turns around. Comic fans in the audience gasp as they recognize Nick Fury, the leader of SHIELD, then go absolutely bonkers as Fury ends the scene with the line, “I’m here to talk to you about the Avenger Initiative.”
Everything You Need to Know About the Avengers Movies
For many of us, this was the first indication that these films would be tied together into one universe, something that is rote in comics but has never been tried in the movies before.
How this figures in to The Avengers: This is the keystone moment. The guy with the eyepatch that you see in the posters for The Avengers is Nick Fury. And he’s played by Samuel L. Jackson because he is a total bad-ass. This is the only man in the world that could bring a group of alpha-level superheroes together.
4. What’s that shield doing on your desk?. Sharp-eyed viewers caught Captain America’s iconic shield under construction on Tony Stark’s work bench during one scene in the movie.
How this figures in to The Avengers: It might not figure in at all. The shield was mostly an Easter Egg for comics fans to find, as the movie timeline doesn’t match up just yet. Tony doesn’t know about the Avengers until the very, very end of the film, so there’s no reason for him to be constructing a replica of Captain America’s shield. This comes up again in Iron Man 2.
Everything You Need to Know About the Avengers Movies
Click to enlarge


Everything You Need to Know About the Avengers Movies
The Incredible Hulk (2008)
There’s a good chance you never saw this film. It was an attempt to begin a Hulk movie series again after the false start of the 2003 Hulk film, but the 2008 film ended up being a false start in and of itself. The film only really drops one big Avengers hint. And even with that it wasn’t certain the Hulk would show up in The Avengers movie at all, as Edward Norton, the actor playing him in this particular film, didn’t sign on to the blockbuster.
1.) Hulk hide from humanity! This isn’t really a hint, more of a statement of the Hulk’s general state. Bruce Banner, the scientist who turns into the Hulk, can’t control his transformations and seems to go back and forth in regards to how lucid he is while he’s the Hulk. Because of this, he tends to stay far, far away from any kind of settlement to avoid accidentally killing anyone.
How this figures in to The Avengers: This plays into a scene inThe Avengers.
2.) You have an unusual problem. In a post-credits sequence, Tony Stark surprises the army general who’s been going after the Hulk (and the audience) by striding up to him in a bar and letting him know that he can help with “an unusual problem.” Tony drops that he knows the Hulk was the result of a restart of the Super Soldier Program, a keyword that will figure in later, and, vaguely, that they’re putting a team together.
How this figures in to The Avengers: At the time, this was mostly reassurance that The Incredible Hulk was a part of the Avengers narrative, and that one could trace the Hulk’s superpowered origins all the way back to the 1940s, and people who we’ll see inCaptain America.
3.) A shield in the snow. A deleted scene. A deleted scene from The Incredible Hulk was meant to show the Hulk bounding through an ice field. It was strongly hinted that this was where Captain America would be found.
How this figures in to The Avengers: It doesn’t here, as this concept was recycled in the later Captain America film, although the idea that the Hulk tromping mindlessly through an ice field causes the world’s first superhero to be found is nicely poetic.

Everything You Need to Know About the Avengers Movies
Iron Man 2 (2010)
The sequel to Iron Man finds Tony Stark and Iron Man as a known worldwide phenomenon. This is the movie where the concept of “the Avengers” becomes openly apparent. Several scenes add a new layer of complexity to the building mythology of superheroes in the Avengers universe.
1.) Hammer Industries. Stark Enterprises’ main competitor in the arms field is Hammer Industries, led by the maliciously nerdy and terribly inept Justin Hammer. In Iron Man 2 we see footage of Iron Man replica suits that Hammer has been working on, and we see the shoddy results of this later on in the movie. The implication here is contextual. Combat in the 21st century will be carried out by people with abilities we could only conceive of in comic books.
How this figures in to The Avengers: It doesn’t figure in directly, but it does get you familiar with the concept of entire platoons of superpowered people, both heroic and villainous.
2.) Howard Stark. Tony Stark’s father Howard, the founder of Stark Enterprises, plays a much larger role in Iron Man 2 despite being deceased. We see Howard in old footage where he’s addressing his son, and we see the legacy he left behind to the world in regards to scientific progress and the celebration of scientific progress. This is mostly notably symbolized by the Stark Expo, a World’s Fair-type celebration that Tony revitalizes in the beginning of the movie. The original Stark Expo ends up holding a huge secret for Tony (and for science, really), and we find out later that anothersuperhero can trace his origins to that very same site.
Everything You Need to Know About the Avengers Movies
How this figures in to The Avengers: Like Hammer Industries, Howard Stark’s story adds context to the Avengers universe. This is where you begin to find out that the exceptional intelligence, technology, and heroism of the Avengers is the culmination ofgenerations worth of work and advancement, and not just a collection of random super-people.
3.) SHIELD house arrest. After Tony gets drunk and starts fighting in his Iron Man suit at a party, he’s placed under house arrest by SHIELD (enforced by a returning Agent Coulson, who gets in some really good cracks at Tony’s expense). The house arrest has a two-fold purpose, however, as Nick Fury illustrates when he brings Tony some of his father Howard’s effects. Through this we find out how Howard helped implement an early version of SHIELD, and Tony finds out just how much like his father he really is.
We, and Agent Coulson, also find out Tony has been re-constructing Captain America’s shield. Although here it’s only used to prop up some hardware.
Everything You Need to Know About the Avengers Movies
Fury and Stark also have a disdainful chat about the “Avengers Initiative” in pieces throughout the movie. Stark is critical of the idea, thinking it childish, and Fury deflects him by outright telling Tony that he’s too childish to even be considered for the Avengers. He can certainly help them, but he can’t be one. The implication being that Tony is not quite the son Howard Stark expected him to be.
How this figures in to The Avengers: Fury and Stark are obviously the coordinating and support system for the Avengers team, and this is the first time we see them working together in an Avengers-related context. It also makes it clearer that Tony is being groomed for a larger role in the affairs of, well, the world.
Everything You Need to Know About the Avengers Movies
Click to enlarge

4.) Black Widow. In place of Agent Coulson, this film introduces another agent of SHIELD to shadow Tony, Natasha Romanov, who we later find out is a master assassin that goes by the name of Black Widow. (Did you see her butt?)
How this figures in toThe Avengers: Black Widow is a central character in The Avengersand this is where she’s introduced. We still don’t know a lot about her origin, although it’s clear that she doesn’t have any supernormal abilities. She’s just very, very capable. Seriously, she’ll kill you.
5.) By the hammer of Thor. All the post-credits scenes in these movies are Avengers-related and this one is no different. In this one a black sedan makes its way to a crater in New Mexico. The door opens to reveal Agent Coulson, who opens his phone and simply utters, “Sir, we found it.” What did they find? A godly hammer stuck in the middle of the crater.
Everything You Need to Know About the Avengers Movies
How this figures in to The Avengers: Thor, the god of Thunder, has arrived on Earth. And luckily we don’t have to wait long to see how and why it happened.

Everything You Need to Know About the Avengers Movies
Thor (2011)
The build up to The Avengers begins in earnest with this movie, which was the summer superhero kick-off blockbuster this time last year. Of all the individual movies introducing the members of the Avengers, Thor was the hardest one to pull off. The story of a Thunder God come down to Earth from a heavenly fantasy kingdom is a hard sell, even if it fits the basic epic fantasy tropes, and it’s even harder to merge that with the origin stories of the other members of the Avengers, which are science fiction-based. We thought it pulled it off very well, though, and we can’t wait to see Thor’s return in The Avengers.
1.) Loki: A threat too big to handle alone. Thor introduces the concept of Asgard, a magical kingdom straight out of high fantasy and Norse mythology. Everything about this place, and the nine realms it’s attached to — including one packed to the brim with giants and goblins — is larger than life. Here, Thor is a god of thunder who wields a magic hammer. He has battle-hungry friends with similarly insane abilities, a father who is the ultimate god of Asgard, and a conniving trickster god of a half-brother, Loki, who’s goal is to snatch the throne of Asgard for himself. (He also sports aspectacular helmet. Really.)
Everything You Need to Know About the Avengers Movies
How this figures in to The Avengers: Loki is the main villain inAvengers and after failing to hold the throne of Asgard, Earth must seem like easy pickings. There are no gods defending it, after all!
We’ve also seen glimpses of goblins and giants in the Avengers trailer, along with even more terrifying beasts of myth. Of the kind that only appear to herald the end of the world and which wouldn’t look out of place in Asgard.
2.) Hawkeye. At one point in Thor, the god is cast down to Earth and separated from his hammer. He fights through a SHIELD complex to reach it and goes up against Hawkeye, a master archer and another central member of the Avengers. This is his first appearance.
Everything You Need to Know About the Avengers Movies
Thor also runs into Agent Coulson in the film, and promises to aid SHIELD in defense of the Earthly realm.
How this figures in to The Avengers: Pretty straightforwardly. Thor needs a reason to come back and Hawkeye is the last member of the Avengers that needs to be introduced, as the upcoming Captain America film won’t be able to cameo anyone in the modern day.
3.) A power greater than even Asgard. The post credit scene for this movie involves one of the scientists featured in Thor being hauled in by Nick Fury to investigate a small glowing cube. “What is it?” asks the scientist. “Power,” Fury answers, and in the glass behind them Loki suddenly walks in. The trickster god smiles and utters, “Well I guess that’s worth a look.” The scientist looks at Fury, smiles, and utters the same line.
How this figures in to The Avengers: Expect this to be the all-powerful Maguffin that Loki is striving for in The Avengers. Just what is this very cosmic-ish cube? We’ll find out....

Captain America: The First Avenger (2011)
This is the final movie released before The Avengers and it’s basically what it says on the tin. Here, now, we see the missing throughline of history that leads to the formation of the Avengers.
This movie is the exception to the others on this list. While they largely stand alone as their own stories, Captain America functions as a prequel to The Avengers. Pretty much everything in this film figures into the larger mythology, so we’ll just highlight the big parts.
1.) The prologue. The opening scene of Captain America takes place in modern day, with SHIELD investigating the icy ruin of a crashed plane for the aforeseen cube from Thor. This is where they stumble upon Captain America, frozen in ice for over 60 years. This is the re-used concept from the deleted scene from The Incredible Hulk.
How this figures in to The Avengers: Captain America is the core of the Avengers. He’s their general, their leader, and the ideal superhero. And this is how he survived to present day. By the end of the movie we’ll find out how he got trapped in Arctic ice.
2.) Hydra, the Red Skull, and the Super Soldier program. Hydra, a thinly-disguised version of the Nazi SS, are led by the Red Skull, a man who gained incredible strength and reflexes after downing an experimental super-soldier serum. (Later perfected and used on Steve Rogers to create Captain America.) But also? Lost his entire face. And this is Hugo Weaving playing him, so that is a terrible face to lose, you know.
Everything You Need to Know About the Avengers Movies
How this figures in to The Avengers: Red Skull and Captain America were the first superhumans in history and represent the beginning of the “arms race” that results in entire teams of superpowered individuals coming together in the 21st century. The Hulk and Iron Man can trace their origins back to these men. There’s a reason they subtitled the film “The First Avenger.” (Well, a reason beyond wanting to tone down the aggresive pro-American stance.)
3.) Howard Stark. A young Howard Stark figures very prominently in this movie. He’s so prevalent, and so dashing and proactive, that he’d be the hero of the film if Captain America weren’t in it. (Well, actually, Peggy would.TEAM PEGGY! But you know what I mean.) He develops the tech that allows Steve Rogers to become Captain America, and it’s at the original World Fair that Rogers is first noticed by Stark and his Super Soldier program cronies.
Everything You Need to Know About the Avengers Movies
Howard Stark admires his work

How this figures in to The Avengers: Nothing beyond what we already know, although Captain America goes way out of its way to characterize Howard Stark and show us a courageously noble side of him that his son Tony never got to see.
4.) Asgard and the cube. Remember the cube? The all-powerful Maguffin? The Red Skull has it by the end of the movie and it’s there we see a hint of its power. I say a hint because the damn thing is so powerful that it ends up opening a portal to Asgard and either melting the Red Skull or ejecting him into a dimensionless void. It’s a vague death.
Everything You Need to Know About the Avengers Movies
How this figures in to The Avengers: We get more background on the Maguffin that Loki will probably be destroying half of New York City to find in The Avengers.
5.) The epilogue. After Cap fights the Red Skull, the plane they’re on crashes into the Arctic. Cap suddenly wakes up in a 1940s hospital room, with an old-timey radio playing. A nurse walks in and he asks what has happened, etc., and on account of the fact that he’s not an idiot he works out that he’s being held in some weird complex.
Cap busts out of the SHIELD complex and makes a daring escape into… the streets of modern day Times Square, which stops him cold. A fleet of black sedans rushes up to him and out steps Nick Fury, who lets him know that he has 60 years to catch up on. Cap gets the SADDEST LOOK on his face, says an utterly heartbreaking line, and the movie ends.
Everything You Need to Know About the Avengers Movies

And that’s it! (He said, 3000 words later.) As you’ve read, the mythology behind The Avengers is fascinating for those who wish to discover it, but not necessary for those who don’t. As a comic book reader, I’ve been completely thrilled with how the movies have been slowly been building the backstory to what is sure to be an epic blow-out. It’s intellectually satisfying to see a format used so often in the comics be utilized to such an effective extreme in a film format. The actors going into a debut vehicle like The Avengers have had a lot of time to perfect their characters, give them shading and personal quirks that would otherwise not be present in an initial film.

Marvel spent a lot of money and many years making an Avengers movie that is multi-faceted and plausible, and I’m astounded by that alone. The cast and filmmakers behind that movie will make it fun, but all the tiny mentions and mythology I’ve listed above makes it rich and engaging. The same thing that makes comic books so damned addictive is now up there, on the screen.

Weird Secrets of The Avengers That You'd Never Have Guessed

You probably think you already know everything about The Avengers. After all, the Marvel superhero team-up movie had years of anticipation and build-up — which actually paid off, with a movie you probably saw more than once. But there are still secrets you'd never have guessed about Joss Whedon's massive aliens-vs-heroes spectacle.
we sat down with three of the movie's VFX creators at Industrial Light and Magic, and learned some totally insane secrets of the film. We also got a sneak peek at the creation of some CG sequences, like the above behind-the-scenes video about the making of the Hulk.
Here are 24 strange, thrilling secrets about The Avengers.
Last month, we journeyed to ILM's headquarters at the Lucasfilm campus, and watched some behind-the-scenes videos from The Avengers (which we're now able to share here.) We spoke to Visual Effects Supervisor Jeff White, Associate Visual Effects Supervisor Jason Smith, and Animation Director Marc Chu. (We spoke to all of them in both group interviews and exclusive one-on-one interviews.)
Here's everything they told us about the Hulk, Iron Man, and the streets of New York:

The Hulk

1. The Hulk started out a bodybuilder wearing green body paint.
Well, sort of. "We actually had a muscley guy on set, shirtless and painted green," says Jeff White. This was so that they could see how the green skin worked with the actual physical sets, and look realistic in context. "The guy they had on set really got into being referenced. He was flexing constantly as he went around," says White — and it sounds like he was pretty popular with many of the crew.
Weird Secrets of The Avengers That You'd Never Have Guessed
2. There was also a professional athlete in Mark Ruffalo's mo-cap suit.
It wasn't just Mark Ruffalo in the motion-capture suit for the Hulk. At various points, "everybody" wore the Hulk's mo-cap suit, says Marc Chu — even Chu himself wore it. For the scene where Bruce turns into the Hulk and chases Black Widow on the Helicarrier, they did some mo-cap footage with an athlete in the mo-cap suit, and it looked too human for Joss Whedon. The end result looked too much like a real sprinter running, so they had to scrap it. Whedon wanted something more flexible and also more "out of control." For some action, they tried different actors in the mo-cap suit. And some cases, it's keyframe animation.
3. The Hulk has no penis.
They modeled every part of the Hulk, except for one. "When the maquette came in, it's just a Barbie doll," said Jason Smith.
Weird Secrets of The Avengers That You'd Never Have Guessed
4. They studied the corners of Mark Ruffalo's eyeballs
They captured Ruffalo "right down to the pore level," says White. "We did a cast of his teeth." They shot the corners of his eyeballs, so they could spread his eyes. They took a ton of images of the inside of his gums, and the space between his fingers. They studied his fingerprints. They captured every aspect of Ruffalo's stubble, and even every little ingrown hair. And every mole. They recorded the inside of Ruffalo's armpits. "The Hulk has a couple of scars that are straight from the source," says Jason Smith.
They also did a ton of photoreference. According to Smith, they had days when they were just focusing on the Hulk's eyebrows, and a week where "everybody was just doing Google image searches on teeth — and don't do that." They were wondering, "What color would Hulk's tongue be: red or green?" And what are the Hulk's fingernails like?
5. A makeup artist added cheek and brow attachments to Mark Ruffalo
Before they captured Ruffalo's performance as the Hulk, they had a makeup artist put attachments onto Ruffalo's cheeks and brow to make them more Hulk-shaped. And then they added what they called a "digital prosthetic" to enhance those features.
Weird Secrets of The Avengers That You'd Never Have Guessed
6. They chose not to make the Hulk look super buff, on purpose.
Previous movie versions of the Hulk looked really cut, with really sharply defined muscles. Like, the Edward Norton Hulk was "always kind of flexed" whenever he appeared, says Chu. But for this version of the Hulk, Whedon wanted more of a "wrestler physique," says Smith. So when they were modeling his body, they made him softer around the shoulders and stomach — so when the Hulk really goes berserk, he's got someplace to go, physically. His veins can pop out and his muscles can flex more when he's jumping around smashing aliens, than the rest of the time.
7. Hulk's motions were partly based on apes.
According to Chu, they studied simian motions for the Hulk — and when Mark Ruffalo came to the studio to experiment with different motions in the mo-cap suit, he "started to tend to go towards more apish motions, giving him that animalistic quality that gives you a feeling that he's not quite in control."
Weird Secrets of The Avengers That You'd Never Have Guessed
8. They debated how high the Hulk can jump
In the comics, the Hulk can jump for miles — but the makers of The Avengers wanted to keep him realistic and create a feeling that he had real mass, says Chu. So they decided he can jump to the tops of buildings, but "miles and miles away, probably not."
9. The shot where he turns into the Hulk and punches the Leviathan had to be redone.
The first time Bruce Banner becomes the Hulk, on the Helicarrier, he's being attacked and it's sort of involuntary. But the second time, he decides to become the Hulk, and walks up and punches the Leviathan, and it's a huge hero shot. When they first did that sequence, the transformation was really fast — it was basically over in a second or two. Whedon decided to go back and redo it so the change happened slower, and you could watch Mark Ruffalo turn into the Hulk, and see his clothes explode off him. They couldn't use the real Mark Ruffalo for that sequence at all — so the hardest part was the first frame, trying to get the digital Mark to look like the real Mark.

Iron Man

1. They totally changed how Iron Man flies
Joss Whedon "wanted to take off the training wheels" that Iron Man had in his first two movies, says Marc Chu, who had worked on both Iron Man films. In other words, Iron Man needed to be able to fly without using the thrusters in his hands and feet this time around. They added a "backpack thruster," and that enabled Iron Man "to make some comic book poses" instead of using his limbs to hover.
2. Robert Downey Jr. basically never wears the full Iron Man suit any more.
That suit is really, really uncomfortable and pinchy, says Chu. And whenever you see Iron Man in his armor, that's a CG rendering of Iron Man, or a stunt man named Clay. After the first Iron Man movie, says Chu, Downey Jr. saw what they could do with CG versions of the suit. "He knew he did not have to wear as much of the suit, and that would make him a lot more comfortable." There's a partial version called the "football suit" that he wears in a couple scenes, like at the end when he's laying on the ground.
3. They worked really hard to keep the Mark 7 armor from feeling like a "magical tortoise shell."
When all the pieces fly onto him, "the volume of pieces" had to feel real and not like they were coming from nowhere, says Chu.

The Other Avengers

Weird Secrets of The Avengers That You'd Never Have Guessed
1. When Hulk punches Thor, that was one of the hardest shots to get right.
That sequence took from the first day of the process until the very end, says White. It's one long continuous shot of the two of them working together, ending with Hulk punching Thor. For the actual punch, they put Chris Hemsworth in front of a bluescreen standing on top of a real section of a downed Leviathan that they built. And they attached Hemsworth to a cable pull that they retimed, so he could look like he was knocked sidewise. They cut a few frames out of the footage, so it looks like Hulk's punch has "instant impact," says White.
2. Every single Avenger had a digital copy.
they were able to substitute a CG version of Black Widow in some scenes where she's involved in a mostly CG action scene. Black Widow was the hardest to do, because a beautiful person is harder to model than an ugly person — her eyelashes had to be perfect, or it wouldn't look like the real Scarlett Johansson. Typically, you only get a limited amount of time to capture images of each actor, but in this movie, they got tons of high-quality scans of every actor, so they could create really high-quality digital versions. They captured every possible facial expression from these actors, using the Nova camera system.
Weird Secrets of The Avengers That You'd Never Have Guessed
3. Cap is digital in that big "hero shot".
The big scene where all the Avengers are fighting and the camera pans through, showing each of them in turn fighting different aliens, required some last-minute tweaks. Whedon decided that instead of fighting alone, Captain America should be helping Iron Man — so they cut Captain America out of his original location and put a digital Cap next to Tony. (They could also make Cap jump higher and spin-kick better than the real stunt guy.) Likewise, in the shot at left from the trailer, where they're all in a circle facing outwards, they cut Hawkeye and put him someplace else. (It was tough to get the Hulk in a shot with everyone else, because he's a big guy.)
4. When Thor uses Mjolnir to create a storm cloud, that's stock footage.
They were going to create a huge simulation of a storm over Thor's head, but in the end they just wound up buying a stock clip of storm clouds forming in a circle. It's a super-brief shot, so it wasn't worth creating CG clouds for.

Virtual New York

1. They only had three days to film in the real New York.
They originally thought they'd have a few weeks or a month of filming in Manhattan. But in the end, they only had three days, says Jason Smith. They got a few shots of all the Avengers standing on the real Park Avenue viaduct, that they intercut with the shots of the 300-foot viaduct replica that they built in New Mexico. It's really difficult to film in New York — you can't get clearance for a helicopter below 500 feet, you can't close the viaduct for days, and so on. New Yorkers keep saying that it's amazing that they were able to film so much in New York, not realizing it's mostly digital shots. (Plus Cleveland.)
2. They basically made their own Google street view of Manhattan, so they could model it.
The VFX crew had a team of still photographers, who went around taking "a massive collection of images," says Jeff White. In the video at left, the little chrome spheres raining down "represent all the photography we shot in New York City." Each sphere represents 72 high-res images that they shot, in all direction, so they could be sure of capturing every surface. They projected those images onto the buildings they created virtually, so they could render their camera moving through there.
But when you have a moving image, things like the reflections in windows need to move too — so they added their own actual office windows, in San Francisco, to the office buildings. If you look carefully, you might be able to see inside the ILM offices during the big battle scene. Some buildings, they rendered from scratch, like the Chrysler Building. They also drove around in a car with an Ultima arm rig, filming the streets for reference. So they could see what a particular building looks like at any particular time of day.
3. They spent a lot of time trying to keep New York's geography consistent.
So when someone is running or flying through the city, they tried to make this person's path logical — if they turned onto sixth avenue, they couldn't suddenly be in Alphabet City. After a jumbo jet crashes into a building, they made sure that building had damage when we saw it later.
4. They added some in-jokes to the storefronts in the city.
Like, of course, there's a shawarma restaurant in the background during the battle. There's also a store that sells something wacky like "books and sandwiches." And there's a law firm called Kirby & Lee, Attorneys at Law. (Note that it's Kirby and Lee, not the other way around.)

The Aliens and Loki

1. The Chitauri were originally way too glam. Like, Vegas glam.
Their armor was original a lot more golden. In the early designs, they looked really cool, with the gold armor looking menacing against their pale skin. But once you see it rendered in CG, it looked way, way too Las Vegas. "It started to look decorative," says Smith. So they pushed it more in the direction of looking bronze rather than gold. Ditto with the Leviathan, which the designers called "Jumbo" internally— he was originally a lot more blinged-out, and this made him look a lot more fake. So they ended up dirtying up the aliens a lot more, to take the super-bright gold look off them.
2. They were fishy.
The Marvel art department did some concept art where the Chitauri invaders have translucent skin that looks "almost fishy," says Jason Smith. So the ILM crew looked at lots of fish, especially "those angler fish that live at the bottom of the ocean," and manta rays. Also, the Chitauri's armor looked mechanical and "bolted into them" in the concept art, so they went with armor that looked kind of uncomfortable, and also weathered.
Weird Secrets of The Avengers That You'd Never Have Guessed
Weird Secrets of The Avengers That You'd Never Have Guessed
3. When the Hulk is smashing Loki up and down, they inserted Tom Hiddleston's real agonized face.
This took a lot of shooting of Hiddleston looking pained, so they could paste it into the digital Loki. "We're not inventing how he looks when he's in pain," says Chu. "I had to get behind [Tom Hiddleston] and shake him violently," so they could capture his real expressions. (He mimes violent shaking.) "I did it so long, he started laughing. So we didn't use that portion." And for one brief shot where Loki is just hanging upside down, they still had to cut Loki's face from somewhere else and stick it in, flipped the opposite direction.
Weird Secrets of The Avengers That You'd Never Have Guessed
"When we first heard about the thing where Hulk slams Loki up and down," says Smith, "it's like that's a bold thing to do. It's very cartoony. It's almost Hanna-Barbera." But when you watch it in the theater, it totally works, and it's the way we've always wanted to see the Hulk. And that's all down to Joss Whedon getting why these characters work, says Smith. In that shot, Whedon really wanted the Hulk's face to be totally deadpan, rather than making a lot of grimaces or weird facial expressions — and that's a huge part of why it works. "Because Hulk is just like, 'Yeah, I'm going to smash you into the ground, and it's not a big deal to me.'"

The Helicarrier

1. We learned how the Helicarrier turns invisible.
Maybe you already got this from watching the movie, but they decided basically the Helicarrier has a ton of cameras on top, photographing the actual sky, and then projecting that image onto LED panels on the bottom. Marvel wanted the Helicarrier to feel like something that could actually exist — but at the same time, it's a levitating aircraft carrier that comes out of the water and turns invisible, says Smith. And has ports that water come out of.