Transitions (film)
Transitions | |
---|---|
Directed by | Colin Low, Tony Ianzelo |
Produced by | Mark Zannis |
Written by | Colin Low |
Music by | Eldon Rathburn |
Cinematography | Ernest McNabb |
Edited by | Michael McKennirey |
Production
company |
National Film Board of Canada
|
Release dates
|
1986 |
Running time
|
20 min 37 s |
Country | Canada |
Language | English |
Transitions is the first full colour 3D IMAX film, created for the Canada Pavilion at Expo 86, co-directed by Colin Low and Tony Ianzelo and produced by the National Film Board of Canada (NFB). It built upon We Are Born of Stars created for Expo '85 in Tskuba, Japan, which used anaglyph 3D. The film is also notable for the first use of stereoscopic computer animation.[1][2]
Production
Canadian National, the main sponsor of the Canada Pavilion, asked the NFB to produce a film about transportation in Canada, in keeping with the fair's theme “Transportation and Communications.”[2]
The film's computer animation sequence was produced by the Centre d'animatique unit of the NFB's French animation studio, credited to Daniel Langlois, shortly before he left the NFB to found Softimage.[3][4]
Projection
Transitions was projected on a 70-foot by 50 foot screen at the pavilion's CN IMAX Theatre, to over 1.75 million people, during a six-month run.[2][4]
See also
- Momentum, a 1992 NFB IMAX HD film for Seville Expo '92, by the same creative team as Transitions
- The Romance of Transportation in Canada, a 1952 NFB animated short about transportation in Canada, also directed by Colin Low
References
External links
- English-language films
- 1980s 3D films
- 1980s documentary films
- 1986 films
- 1986 in Canada
- 3D short films
- Canadian 3D films
- Canadian documentary films
- Canadian films
- Canadian National Railway
- Canadian short films
- Documentary films about transport
- Expo 86
- Films directed by Colin Low
- Films directed by Tony Ianzelo
- IMAX short films
- National Film Board of Canada documentaries
- Short documentary films
- Transport in Canada
- World's Fair films