Monday 3 December 2012

Cold Day in Concept Art

It has to be said, the River Styx never really seems to be a happy place.


In most media I've seen it in, the visual concensus seems to be washed-out colours and a kind of sparse, rocky landscape in the distance of a wide river, usually filled with writhing souls. In my early concepts, this is pretty much what I went for. Minus the writhing.

Styx represents despair; it is the point where it is simply too late to change whatever kind of life you have led, and all you can do is give in to the inevitable voyage towards your fate.

Of course, the difference between most stories that contain the Styx and Cold Day in Hell is the emotional shift. Once it starts to snow... Well, suddenly there's hope, there's something that makes you want to live again. I wanted to represent that emotional shift in the environment as well as the characters, so once the Styx has frozen over, the colours gradually take on a sort of dawn glow.

I was happy with these lighting ideas, but not with the environment itself. The mountains don't really say anything and they allow us to easily get visually lost in the world, with no real points to anchor the camera on, other than Charon's boat. So instead I started mixing up the ideas a bit and instead decided on the concept of the edges of the Styx being made up of ruined buildings.


I really liked this idea - coupled with the mist, it has a sort of graveyard look to it. Further to this, the Styx flows underground, but in a space large enough to have its own sky. The 'roof' above is cracked, which adds to the feeling of everything being broken and desolate here on the way to Hell. Moreover, the ruined buildings very much match Charon, but contrast with the ghosts, making them seem even more out of place.


I find I often add a lot of religious symbolism into my design ethos - so here, I chose to base the ruined buildings places of worship, such as churches, mosques and temples, to push the idea that this is a place shunned by God and gods alike, like the souls of the damned themselves. But with the coming of the snow, even Hell finds itself transformed into a powdered world of beauty and magic, like any dreary English city after a cold, cold winter's night.

This much lighting change is going to be quite a challenge - I'll be doing some tests on how to go about it this week, but I reckon it's possible by switching out lighting setups and textures gradually between shots. Greens will change out to blues and gradually to purples. This needs to create a kind of mid-point, where the river is frozen but the landscape is not yet totally covered in snow. I mashed up the two concepts I already had to make a third of what kind of look we'll be going for at this point in the story.


At the moment, it looks like the environment itself will be made mostly with a combination of some models and some matte paintings. The final look for Cold Day is also going to be quite painterly overall, so it should all fit together pretty well.

6 comments:

  1. In Ate de Jong's 1992 film 'Highway to Hell' (a sort of cross-denominational underworld), the Styx is represented as a river through a sun-blasted desert, which is unusual, as I've always imagined it as being underground (with stalactites etc). Charon and stop-motion Cerberus are there too!

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  2. Highway to Hell - 3 minutes in.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-0QtoSJiHYo

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    1. That looks amazing! :D Is the film any good?

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  3. nice illustrations Robin! I really like the ideas of the ruined buildings. Good luck with the rest of the movie!

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    1. Thanks, Florie! :) The work for your short looks amazing and really interesting, from the blog, hope that's going well.

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    2. Thanks Robin, I'm glad you like it! It's going very well at the moment, I've got more time to work on it, so getting more done than usual

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