How was Animal's unibrow created to move?

mathlizard

New Member
Joined
Jun 11, 2013
Messages
2
Reaction score
1
Hello,
I'm wondering how animal's unibrow was created/ rigged to move?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=Eg25_aoWcwA#t=31s

I found how to make the standard muppet eye from plastic spoons, but there were no details on moving parts:

I was also looking at the yoda rig:
How do his eyes move and what's Yoda made out of? (rubber?) what's a process for creating a character similar to Yoda (other than lots of practice and skill) ?

^ this is a replica, any guesses to how it was made?
 

mathlizard

New Member
Joined
Jun 11, 2013
Messages
2
Reaction score
1
okay, I found the "making of" website for Yoda. I google searched "Jörg Steegmüller Yoda" and came up with this result eventually:
http://www.starwars-union.de/index.php?id=fan_makingyoda





http://www.yasni.de/ext.php?url=http://www.starwars-union.de/sw/fan_makingyoda/seite/fotos/&name=Jörg Steegmüller&cat=filter&showads=1
Where do I get the resources? any idea of how to get started?
from the pictures it looks like you start with a sculpt in clay, then create a caste, then replace that with silica rubber, then somehow create an eye rig . I'm most interested in the eye rig at this point.
 

Animal31

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 21, 2010
Messages
476
Reaction score
36
Animal is done with a pretty simple lever trick, if you look thru some of the older forums there are a few tutorials around. The one thing to point out is Animals eyes are round, not the flat spoon shape, more like Oscar...
 

Buck-Beaver

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 16, 2002
Messages
4,174
Reaction score
162
Yoda is a much, much more complicated puppet to build. Yoda's skin was cast in foam latex, although if he was made today he would probably be cast in silicone, which is a more life-like material to cast skin with. His "skull" underneath is cast in fibreglass I believe, which is very common with animatronic puppets.

A good source for information on building animatronic characters in the Stan Winston School of Character Arts, which offers a lot of great online video courses.
 
Top