As far as I've noticed, you can only make fire look like this when shooting on arri alexa, usually when shooting on most other cameras the fire would have more highlight and look bright as hell so you have to watch out for stuff like that.
It's really wild how these DIY shorts and FX examples created by Ryan and the gang often look BETTER than things I'm seeing in "big budget" Hollywood material.
The guys in the industry are pretty talented and dedicated. Too bad they just begun like us, for the love of the art, and ended up being under the harshness of little time and studio notes, when they get into the business.
And it is doable.... I've tried his few tuts and applied his suggestions to different softwares(fusion or nuke)... And instead of packs,i create fire or rain or anything by myself in blender
That's what happens when you let the finance department decide where the film's budget will go - "the movie will look so much better with Ryan's team on production" , "But we will have more box office sales if we pay Leonardi di caprio for a cameo" , "hmm, you're right, let's just hire some inexperienced PA's and low budget video editors from a freelancer marketplace and see if we can get Tom Cruise to make one too!" ~this happens to be my imagined answer scenario for why some Netflix series have those obscenely jarring CGI scenes that look like they came from the early 2000s or something
@@chi11estpanda it's not so much them going cheap as it is the VFX studio not being given the proper time and practical effect aid they need to make their VFX look like they belong in the scene, producers just think that VFX can pull off actual magic with only a green screen for everything when that's obviously not the case, so that makes for really phony looking effects in movies and stuff.
Your tutorials are seriously so good and always seem to come at the perfect time! I was literally just trying to figure out a compositing dilemma last night for my star wars short film and this just cleared it up. THANK. YOU. FILM RIOT. You're never allowed to retire!
Minor fire science note: you won't see much of a heat shimmer in an enclosed fire because the distortion is caused by light bending as it moves between different densities of air which is caused by different temperatures. The higher the temperature gradient, the more the distortion. In a room, especially above the level of the fire itself, the air temperature gradient tends to be low so there isn't as much random light bending, thus reduced shimmering. That exact same fire outside, on the other hand, has the hot air above the fire mixing with the cold air around it, creating a stronger gradient that's always moving, thus the shimmer. So, if you were faking it digitally, you'd need a stronger effect for a medium sized campfire than you would for a blazing fire in an engulfed room.
It's crazy that even after 10 or so years of filmmaking, I still find myself coming back to film riot to get great solutions to things I'm stuck on. Thanks Ryan and company, you're an inspiration!
I'm not a videographer nor a film maker but I've seen this channel grow throughout the years (since 2009) learned so much from it and glad that I did. Also I have to add that Ryan is the goat
I wish Ryan had a school I could attend. Dude is so knowledgeable, it sucks that you only get bits and pieces of what he has to offer from time to time.
Oh man, that trick with the desk reflection texture gave me so many ideas for selling other effects. That's a tool I'll be keeping in my kit for a long time.
Hey Ryan, just want to thank you. I've watched every videos you make back in 2010-2012, you some other youtuber back then has inspired me to chase my dream in film making industry, then and landed a job working as a assistant camera and time gone by. Now I'm a fulltime VFX artist, going back to check on your channel and still learn something new. Cheers.
The best vfx/filmaking etc tuts for AE users! Thank you, keep it up! (...and please, if you ever consider moving to Nuke, try not to forget all of us who dont use Nuke!... just a thought...!)
I knew it was about fire effects, but the results are one of the most realistic examples I’ve ever seen. 👏 The only thing missing was an excuse to use turbulent displace. 😉
I clicked the link thinking quick simple tutorial using an example of stock assets, only to find my hand cramping up trying to take notes as fast as he's talking haha... Ryan always kills it and produces visual effects that big studios haven't mastered.
I love all your contents. On of the best VFX maker 👍👍👍👍 I have a question "how can make an invisble person grap and throw someone into the air in a room ? Thank you for answer me
Nice one Film Riot ! Did you try the new Matte track option in the latest update of After effect? Kind of a weird change in the way of compositing, but also a economy of layer duplication,
That’s the realest fire scene I’ve seen. Well done💯🔥
As far as I've noticed, you can only make fire look like this when shooting on arri alexa, usually when shooting on most other cameras the fire would have more highlight and look bright as hell so you have to watch out for stuff like that.
Needs to be more white.
unreal
@@markoj.98 that point that you say, that happend when you dont do color corretion to the fire
It's really wild how these DIY shorts and FX examples created by Ryan and the gang often look BETTER than things I'm seeing in "big budget" Hollywood material.
The guys in the industry are pretty talented and dedicated. Too bad they just begun like us, for the love of the art, and ended up being under the harshness of little time and studio notes, when they get into the business.
And it is doable.... I've tried his few tuts and applied his suggestions to different softwares(fusion or nuke)... And instead of packs,i create fire or rain or anything by myself in blender
unreal
That's what happens when you let the finance department decide where the film's budget will go - "the movie will look so much better with Ryan's team on production" , "But we will have more box office sales if we pay Leonardi di caprio for a cameo" , "hmm, you're right, let's just hire some inexperienced PA's and low budget video editors from a freelancer marketplace and see if we can get Tom Cruise to make one too!"
~this happens to be my imagined answer scenario for why some Netflix series have those obscenely jarring CGI scenes that look like they came from the early 2000s or something
@@chi11estpanda it's not so much them going cheap as it is the VFX studio not being given the proper time and practical effect aid they need to make their VFX look like they belong in the scene, producers just think that VFX can pull off actual magic with only a green screen for everything when that's obviously not the case, so that makes for really phony looking effects in movies and stuff.
For me a good measure of a VFX tutorial is whether it still looks believable after I’ve seen the step-by-step. This passes easily, stellar work.
Your tutorials are seriously so good and always seem to come at the perfect time! I was literally just trying to figure out a compositing dilemma last night for my star wars short film and this just cleared it up. THANK. YOU. FILM RIOT. You're never allowed to retire!
Minor fire science note: you won't see much of a heat shimmer in an enclosed fire because the distortion is caused by light bending as it moves between different densities of air which is caused by different temperatures. The higher the temperature gradient, the more the distortion. In a room, especially above the level of the fire itself, the air temperature gradient tends to be low so there isn't as much random light bending, thus reduced shimmering. That exact same fire outside, on the other hand, has the hot air above the fire mixing with the cold air around it, creating a stronger gradient that's always moving, thus the shimmer. So, if you were faking it digitally, you'd need a stronger effect for a medium sized campfire than you would for a blazing fire in an engulfed room.
I really rock with the way you explain everything in detail.
This episode is so timely for me. I put aside the feature screenplay I wrote because the two key scenes involved building fire. Thanks a ton.
I think you guys just made the best, most comprehensive fire vfx tutorial on RUclips :O
Not one word of this tutorial was comprehensible to me but somehow I found it fascinating haha
😂😂 i know that feeling
Looks incredibly realistic. Great combination of digital and real craft.
dude i love your channel
Film Riot's quality continues to skyrocket!
It's crazy that even after 10 or so years of filmmaking, I still find myself coming back to film riot to get great solutions to things I'm stuck on. Thanks Ryan and company, you're an inspiration!
I'm not a videographer nor a film maker but I've seen this channel grow throughout the years (since 2009) learned so much from it and glad that I did. Also I have to add that Ryan is the goat
Also not a videographer or filmmaker but I love these guys!
This is Brilliant! Such great work!
This channel is the best channel on youtube for VFX.
I wish Ryan had a school I could attend. Dude is so knowledgeable, it sucks that you only get bits and pieces of what he has to offer from time to time.
Literally this is the best tutorial for composting in after effects!
Man I love your guy's intro's... Epic!
This is 🔥🔥🔥... No, literally!! It is 🔥🔥
tutorials always seem overkill of fine tunings but at the end it becomes clearly reasonable :) deep respect!
Amazing results!! :O
I love the simulation of glossiness map on the table!
Nice to see that shot of Michael Myers at 1:14.
Oh man, that trick with the desk reflection texture gave me so many ideas for selling other effects. That's a tool I'll be keeping in my kit for a long time.
Hey Ryan, just want to thank you. I've watched every videos you make back in 2010-2012, you some other youtuber back then has inspired me to chase my dream in film making industry, then and landed a job working as a assistant camera and time gone by. Now I'm a fulltime VFX artist, going back to check on your channel and still learn something new. Cheers.
I always think how amazing it would be to watch one of your guys make something like this just as quickly as you narrate it.
Legit some of the best CG fire I've seen!
I needed this tutorial like you would not believe, thank you!!
love this channel so much
It’s cool to see how much you guys continue to improve!
This is what you call "Attention to details" 🙌
Honestly this looked super realistic!
this is so crazy. so much info in short period of time. thanks.
This channel is a masterpiece, pure joy!
loved it!
Incredible work
Wow, good job. That looks really impressive. It honestly looks better than some movies I've seen in the last couple of years.
Wow what a realistic fire, sir I admire your work and how u trying to give us knowledge
We love you so much, pray for us pray for Turkiye,😢There was an earthquake that affected 15 million people. we need support
Y'all killed it once again!
Mind Blown!!!
Awesome 👍🏼
Another excellent tut guys. Great job.
This one is ❤🔥!!
As always, great stuff guys!!!
This Episode was Fire!
The skills you have are truly insane. I would love to have even 10% of the talent this guy has in AE.
The best vfx/filmaking etc tuts for AE users! Thank you, keep it up! (...and please, if you ever consider moving to Nuke, try not to forget all of us who dont use Nuke!... just a thought...!)
Incredible job, guys!
Amazing job as always guys, thank you
Dude how the hell josh always chilling in a freakingly serious situations😂😂🔥
Great video! Looked so real! The dancing in the fog part was funny! 😂
Nice. I like it, dude. Keep it up. Can't wait to see more
Damn I'm watching Ryan's video since 2014, have learned a lot. Thanks for the epic stuff
Crazy how real it looks 🔥
I cannot stress this enough on how important practical lights is essential if you wanna do these
I knew it was about fire effects, but the results are one of the most realistic examples I’ve ever seen. 👏 The only thing missing was an excuse to use turbulent displace. 😉
good one guys! some nice comp tricks :)
I clicked the link thinking quick simple tutorial using an example of stock assets, only to find my hand cramping up trying to take notes as fast as he's talking haha... Ryan always kills it and produces visual effects that big studios haven't mastered.
Please don't stop making these!
This looks great!
Very cool!
So much cool info! Thanks FR
The most goated channel
The jokes in the beginning are always a pleasant surprise! Kudos to the writer 😊
I think this tutorial deserves a downloadable transcription.
This is absolutely insane. Great job! Don't stop making these :) ❤
Wow! It’s that I know it came from you guys. Otherwise I wouldn’t know it wasn’t digitally added. Really good job!🔥🔥
awesome work!
Ryan, do you have a channel where you teach more slowly, in the form of a tutorial, speaking more slowly, so we can do it together?
this video was fire
would love to see you guys do a review of Autograph the new vfx compositing tool by left angle
Wow so realistic. Brilliant!
This was super great, I want to make something with you guys, like a short film
dense AND clever ! thanks!!
Great one!!!
You guys are amazing❤️ Thanks y'all
Superb!!!!
I think you forgot the shadow movement, how to make it?
Wow super detailed tutorial please keep making these for us.👏👏👏
Amazing!
first i thought you shot it for real lol very nice
Is this possible in Davinci Resolve?? I would love a tutorial on Davinci for this! 😍😍
Me when I hear suspicious noises in the back rooms. Then there was fire
Holy shit guys this was amazing! Thanks!
King of after effect
I wonder, will you have a short film contest this year again?
It was time someone managed to make realistic fire using vfx, I knew it was possible.
holy shit, that looks real.
nice comp
Thank you so much! this is amazing!
I love all your contents. On of the best VFX maker 👍👍👍👍 I have a question "how can make an invisble person grap and throw someone into the air in a room ? Thank you for answer me
Nice one Film Riot ! Did you try the new Matte track option in the latest update of After effect? Kind of a weird change in the way of compositing, but also a economy of layer duplication,
Love motion array, discovered it at Uni
Compared to what y’all have gone through in your other skits, the begging of this was truly like, “Ah, just another day.😌” Awesome video though!
Awesome work as always guys! Can you share the link to that fog machine? That thing looks like it's a beast!
Dang! Brilliant!!!
This is good
Brilliant !
Incredible!!!
do you do a color correction on the footage first before you do the effects? or is it all on raw footage? That's the part I'm struggling with.
You are the Best!