MATRIX:
Can you give us a brief breakdown of projects you have worked on?
TONY:
I worked on the Final Fantasy movie done in Hawaii. I started out at Digital
Domain doing a lot of work from commercials to games to a few little movie
things, then a lot of freelance work, and the Hawaii job was the big one.
Besides that, Ive spent time doing fine arts and graphics, for instance
T Shirt design - we have a line going. Beyond that I have many other projects,
Im working on my own comic book and Im going to try and have
a show eventually, things like that. Im keeping busy creatively.
MATRIX:
What
is your primary role as an artist on any given production youre
working on?
TONY: It varies, depending on whether
they see my skills on a particular show or project better for design,
for storyboarding, or for key frame painting. So I sort of cover my ground
doing all sorts of things. In Hawaii I was doing creature design in the
beginning and that moved onto doing a lot more key frame painting, setting
up the mood and lighting of certain shots, things like that. Here Im
doing mainly key frame painting of key shots where theyre having
some trouble seeing what it looks like, I kind of give them a map to go
by.
MATRIX: With THE MATRIX, what sorts of things are
you conceptualizing – the
real world or the Matrix?
TONY: All
of the above, from the ships to the real world and the other world. There’s
a general color scheme that has to be followed, especially for me because
I deal with a lot of color and painting, the
colors matter from the real world compared to the Matrix.
MATRIX:Are you working from conceptuals
Geof Darrow has designed?
TONY: It depends, if his designs are
in them, then yes. Most of the time there is some sort of reference in
terms of design, but if theres not I get kind of a free reign to
do what I want, and find different sorts of references that work.
MATRIX:How long have you been part
of the production?
TONY: I want to say more than two months,
but I could be wrong, time just passes by so quickly.
MATRIX: Whats your sense of the
scope of the project?
TONY: Huge. Very, very big. I feel
like weve only just started because we have so much more to do.
Theres an incredible story and visuals, just a big, big project
to accomplish.
MATRIX: Can you
tell us about the materials you use to create your artwork?
TONY:
Depending on the particular frame or shot that has to be done, itll
vary from marker to painting to sometimes digital, especially for shots
that require a lot of repetitive things that would be silly to render
out over and over. For times sake I would do one version and then
just duplicate it, but thats only in certain cases that require
things like that. A lot of times itll be mainly marker or gouache,
a lot of digital painting happens because of certain effects and looks
a particular scene requires.
MATRIX: How do Larry and Andy convey
what they want to you?
TONY: Theyll have just a very,
very loose sketch sometimes, and theyll try to explain it as best
as they can, and well do a lot of reiterations and try to fine tune.
When theyre there you talk as much as you can and you try to get
as much information from them to go right into the drawing, and hopefully
itll work. The piece Im working on at the moment is a fourth
version to try to get what the brothers described. Its getting closer
and closer as theyve been seeing more of them. This is a technique
I use, which is just these two tools and thats it a ball
point pen and a marker. It is a rough, quick sketch technique.
MATRIX: There are so many artists working
on this production, all working on different facets with different styles,
do you have a sense of how that is all going to mesh together in the end?
TONY: Ive dealt with a little
bit of computer work myself so I kind of know and can see how its
going to end up, but I actually have no idea in terms of the production,
I havent seen any of that yet. Itll be exciting to see it
finally come to life with models and acting, it will just look like natural
footage. The artists definitely look at each others work and kind
of see what everyone is doing to keep up with everything.
MATRIX:
Do you look at other artists work and work off of that?
TONY: Sometimes, sure, inspiration
is always hard to come by and here theres a lot of it, which is
good, it keeps you going.
MATRIX: How much art would you say
youre producing?
TONY: Well the large pieces take longer,
smaller pieces, obviously not as long, and then the full color, tighter
drawings obviously take a lot longer, it all depends on what is required.
If the scene needs to be really detailed and tight for them to use as
a map, then it would take probably a week, maybe less, but if its
only just a storyboard rough for them to see the general sense of the
color and what it would look like, I can do that in a day or two.
MATRIX: Im curious as to how
this production would compare to other productions you have worked on,
such as Final Fantasy, which are also artist heavy?
TONY: I dont know if its
the best thing to compare with, but as far as I can tell THE MATRIX seems
to be pretty good in terms of management, and working with the Directors
directly, and again, them knowing what they want is a huge, huge means
to have things progress. Ive spent a lot of time on other productions
where you spend a lot more creative time trying a variety of versions,
which makes sense, but here its less because Andy and Larry know
what they want.
MATRIX: Were you impressed by the first
MATRIX film?
TONY: I thought it was great, it really
opened up, hopefully, peoples perception of what a movie can be,
especially in terms of genre, creating a new 90s Star Wars, if you
will.
MATRIX: Do you
feel that the directors are pushing the envelope with THE MATRIX 2 and
3?
TONY:
I think they are, yes. They have an amazing vision in their heads that
they know exactly what they want, which is great to work with. Obviously
the difficult thing is trying to hit the mark, but because they know what
they want and they have such a vision for the whole scope of the film,
I think that itll come together really nicely. They know exactly
where its going to go and what fits and what works. Yes, I definitely
think so, I think a lot of people will be quite impressed.