Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Remember Avengers?

Yeah. Been awhile. And Avengers is old news.
But as anyone who... ahem...'follows'... my blog, it's not something that focuses on timeliness.

Better late than never, eh?

I do have a big dump to put up, as I spent a little time on almost every aspect of the movie, including the Helicarrier, Quinjet, Aliens and Alien craft.

So, prompted by special request, I'm putting up a selection of my work on Avengers.
So lets begin with a few bits of what you've come to expect from me and the one design of mine that made it into the film untouched... the MK 7. 

Below are the initial 3 sketches I did early on before we knew what the Mk 7 should be. The first was actually a revision of a design I had been thinking of initially for Iron Man 2 before ultimately choosing another project. It was a lighter, more streamlined version of what had come before, trying to integrate a flowing theme wrapping around the "RT" on the chest and mirroring that fast line through the body. This was more of the evolutionary design, and ultimately was approved pretty much immediately as a starting point for the Mk 7.

The next design was playing around with the stance  of the suit toward more of a brawler attitude, somewhat beefier and less aircraft-like.

Lastly was a more extreme departure, trying to create a very different silhouette, sort of the Stark Industries answer to a more heavily militarized suit like War Machine, but drawing from Air Force form language instead of Army.

Further discussion of the function of the suit in the script lead to the idea of having a more armored suit that over the course of battle would shed its ammo packs and additional armor. Styling elements from the first and third concepts were integrated and the design was revised as below...


The final design would incorporate a thruster backpack for the pivotal final battle, which wrapped around the "lats" and "serratus" areas under the arm to form flush mounted adjustable intake vanes. Much of the approach was based on the mantra of the "wearable Ferrari" so a lot of attention was spent on creating flowing lines from chest though the torso, pelvis, arms and legs. 


Final design detailing was painted over turnarounds of the Mk 4 suit, to keep proportions consistent and realistic.



Lastly elevations were painted at an extreme level of detail to make sure lines would resolve all the way around the surface, giving our modeler Josh Herman a solid foundation to build from. Even still a lot was resolved in the modeling process.

The final model below, digitally sculpted by Josh Herman, reflects a very tight collaborative process to create the final form. 






5 comments:

BurnZ said...

Hey Phil, thanks for the write up and a look at the images. Really appreciate it.

By any chance do you have a higher res image of the "Mk7ModelArmored.jpg"?

Hernan Saez said...

Excelent post! I always loved the different IronMan armors from the movies with all their technical bits that make them "believable".
Thanks for sharing!

Capes on Film said...

Hey Phil, first time reader here. Love seeing the evolution of these designs. Thanks for putting them up.

Roger Adams said...

Thanks from me too Phil. We all really appreciate the time to post and write up descriptions. I personally don't buy "Art of" books anymore. You get the real education from blogs like yours. Thanks!

Roger Adams said...
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