Editing U-87 Cyber Combat Unit
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==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
[[File:U-87, 1x02.jpg|thumb|The physical U-87 prop {{CAP|Rebirth}}.]] | |||
*The U-87 was designed in the real world by ''[[Battlestar Galactica (TRS)|Battlestar Galactica]]'' and ''[[Caprica (series)|Caprica]]'' illustrator [[Richard Livingston]]<ref group="design" name="livingston_blog_caprica_u87_cylon_design_creation">{{cite_web|url=http://richardclivingston.wordpress.com/2010/06/26/caprica-u-87-cylon/#:~:text=U-87%20was%20designed%20in%20the%20real%20world%20by%20Battlestar%20Galactica%20and%20Caprica%20illustrator|title=Caprica U-87 Cylon|author=Richard Livingston|website=richardclivingston.wordpress.com|date=26 June 2010|accessdate=6 August 2025|archive=Y}}</ref> and rendered as a computer-generated character by [[Pierre Drolet]] and [[Gary Hutzel]]'s effects team. The producers noted that the visual effects for the U-87 were a significant challenge, particularly for the final scene of the pilot, and that the technology to make a CGI character so central to a dramatic moment had only recently become advanced enough to be effective.<ref group="production" name="podcast_caprica_pilot_visual_effects_challenge_cgi_character">{{cite_web|url=https://www.syfy.com/sites/syfy/files/podcast_caprica_pilot.mp3#:~:text=visual%20effects%20for%20the%20U-87%20were%20a%20significant%20challenge|title=Podcast for ''Caprica'' pilot|publisher=Syfy|accessdate=6 August 2025|note=timestamp 01:16:29|archive=Y}}</ref> To aid the actors and camera crew, a special effects team member would perform the robot's movements on set, and it was noted how closely the final animation matched the on-set stand-in's performance.<ref group="production" name="podcast_caprica_pilot_standin_performance_matched_animation">{{cite_web|url=https://www.syfy.com/sites/syfy/files/podcast_caprica_pilot.mp3#:~:text=how%20closely%20the%20final%20animation%20matched%20the%20on-set%20stand-in's%20performance|title=Podcast for ''Caprica'' pilot|publisher=Syfy|accessdate=6 August 2025|note=timestamp 01:23:29|archive=Y}}</ref> | |||
* | *Effects supervisor [[Doug Drexler]] led a team to create a physical version of the U-87 for scenes in which it was not required to move or act: | ||
::"Gary enlisted the aid of awe-inspiring model maker, Lou Zutavern. Lou and his guys built the U-87 in an unbelievably short time frame. What's really remarkable is that Lou and the crew built every part by hand with no computer prototyping of any kind. I might also add that Lou built the robot where no other shop could have pulled it off, meaning that they did it for a pittance. It's a regular Hollywood battle cry in our arena… no time and no money. Funny how sometimes the best stuff grows from those limitations. Lou and his guys made it happen because they thought it was cool."<ref group="production" name=" | ::"Gary enlisted the aid of awe-inspiring model maker, Lou Zutavern. Lou and his guys built the U-87 in an unbelievably short time frame. What's really remarkable is that Lou and the crew built every part by hand with no computer prototyping of any kind. I might also add that Lou built the robot where no other shop could have pulled it off, meaning that they did it for a pittance. It's a regular Hollywood battle cry in our arena… no time and no money. Funny how sometimes the best stuff grows from those limitations. Lou and his guys made it happen because they thought it was cool."<ref group="production" name="drexler_blog_u87_keeping_it_real_lou_zutavern">{{cite_web|url=http://drexfiles.wordpress.com/2009/10/11/the-u-87-keeping-it-real/#:~:text=Lou%20and%20his%20guys%20built%20the%20U-87%20in%20an%20unbelievably%20short%20time%20frame|title=The U-87: Keeping it Real|author=Doug Drexler|website=drexfiles.wordpress.com|date=11 October 2009|accessdate=6 August 2025|archive=Y}}</ref> | ||
*According to materials provided to the 2010 [[Wikipedia: Creative Arts Emmy Award|Emmy Awards]] voters, the CG model of the U-87 featured cables that "bend and articulate along with the character's actions, as do the translucent hoses which visually pump the robot's coolants... The CG model is exquisitely detailed to the point of obsession. It weighs in at 259774 [[Wikipedia: Polygon (computer graphics)|polygons]]."<ref group="technical" name="emmy_awards_u87_cg_model_obsessive_detail_polygons">{{cite_web|url=http://drexfiles.files.wordpress.com/2010/09/u87_pg02.jpg#:~:text=The%20CG%20model%20is%20exquisitely%20detailed%20to%20the%20point%20of%20obsession|title=Ghost In The Machine - U-87|author=Doug Drexler|website=drexfiles.wordpress.com|date=September 2010|accessdate=6 August 2025|archive=Y}}</ref> | *According to materials provided to the 2010 [[Wikipedia: Creative Arts Emmy Award|Emmy Awards]] voters, the CG model of the U-87 featured cables that "bend and articulate along with the character's actions, as do the translucent hoses which visually pump the robot's coolants... The CG model is exquisitely detailed to the point of obsession. It weighs in at 259774 [[Wikipedia: Polygon (computer graphics)|polygons]]."<ref group="technical" name="emmy_awards_u87_cg_model_obsessive_detail_polygons">{{cite_web|url=http://drexfiles.files.wordpress.com/2010/09/u87_pg02.jpg#:~:text=The%20CG%20model%20is%20exquisitely%20detailed%20to%20the%20point%20of%20obsession|title=Ghost In The Machine - U-87|author=Doug Drexler|website=drexfiles.wordpress.com|date=September 2010|accessdate=6 August 2025|archive=Y}}</ref> | ||