No Real Animals Aboard Hollywood Noah's Ark
Are we at a tipping point in the use of wildlife in the movies?
 
                        
                        
                            
A crowd of computer-generated animals line up to board the ark in the movie Noah.
PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY PARAMOUNT PICTURES
Published March 28, 2014
One of the requisite qualities for any director undertaking
 the epic Old Testament tale of Noah's ark—and burning through $120 
million of studio money in the process—is a God complex. In Noah, which opens nationwide March 28, director Darren Aronofsky actually revises God's creations.
According to the Book of Genesis, the God of Abraham 
commanded that Noah's ark be filled with "two of every kind" of animal, 
bird, and creature that moves along the ground. But Aronofsky had a 
different idea about how the animals boarding the ark two by two should 
look. He created his own computer-generated imagery (CGI) of the animal 
kingdom, featuring creatures "slightly tweaked" so they don't resemble 
anything alive in the jungle today.
To be fair, there is nothing in the Ten Commandments—either
 Moses' or Cecil B. DeMille's—that says: Thou shalt not tweak. But 
Aronofsky's decision to create a wild kingdom all his own, then destroy 
it, may represent a tipping point in the way animals are used in movies 
and television. For reasons both political and practical, there are no 
live lions or tigers or bears in this Hollywood version of Noah's ark. 
Great and small, every animal in this picture—with the exception of some
 doves, a raven, and Russell Crowe, who plays the 600-year-old skipper 
of the ark—is the creation of a CGI artist at Industrial Light & Magic, a visual effects company.
Chance, a former pet, worked with Leonardo DiCaprio in The Wolf of Wall Street, prompting PETA to create a petition that garnered 40,000 signatures.
PHOTOGRAPH BY VINCENT J. MUSI, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
The Pitfalls of Using Live Animals
"Politically it's not a great thing to work with live 
animals and that's becoming more apparent to people as time goes by," 
Aronofsky explained in an interview with the quarterly journal of the Directors Guild of America. The politics of using animal actors grew much more complicated following an expose in the Hollywood Reporter last November, in which an intercepted e-mail from the American Humane Association monitor assigned to the Life of Pi
 set gave the impression that one of the Bengal tigers appearing in the 
film nearly drowned while shooting a scene in a huge water tank. The 
article quoted the AHA representative's admission that, instead of 
protecting the tiger, she attempted to cover up the incident.
But the AHA denied the Hollywood Reporter's charges
 and awarded Pi its coveted seal of approval. "The animal did not nearly
 drown," says Karen Rosa, senior adviser for the American Humane 
Association film and TV unit in Los Angeles. "There were safety 
precautions in place, and the animal was pulled out of the water 
unharmed."
The incident was the second recent blow to the credibility 
of the Humane Association, which was appointed guardian of animal actors
 by the Screen Actors Guild after two horses were pushed over a cliff to
 their deaths on the 1939 western Jesse James.
 The organization was also criticized last year for allegedly employing 
an on-set monitor who had no primate experience to oversee Leonardo 
DiCaprio's dance scene with a chimpanzee in The Wolf of Wall Street.
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) rebuked DiCaprio for
 his movie monkey business and mobilized members to produce 40,000 
signatures on a petition taking the actor to task for working with 
Chance, a 4-year-old chimpanzee. Chance was prepared for his star turn 
by the Rosaire family of Sarasota, Florida, which has trained circus 
animals for generations. (A photograph of Chance is featured in National Geographic's April cover story about exotic pets.)
"What's the line where use becomes abuse?" asks author Peter Laufer, whose book No Animals Were Harmed borrows
 the AHA's sought-after certification slogan. "And what's a wild animal?
 Here's a chimpanzee that's captive bred for sale. Is that a wild 
animal, or something else?"
Another reason film directors may choose to avoid working 
with live animals is that protecting the welfare of the wild animals on a
 film or TV set can be a time-consuming, and expensive, undertaking. 
"Technically, it would have been extremely difficult," Aronofsky told 
the Directors Guild. Animal actors cannot be counted on to perform the 
same scene over and over again, so an entire menagerie of look-alikes 
frequently is needed for a single movie.
To make Life of Pi, the filmmakers brought in four
 Bengal tigers, and finally settled on a 7-year-old tiger named King as 
the "reference" animal for his computerized counterpart. "They're very 
moody," says director Carroll Ballard, who has worked extensively with 
wild animals in his films, including four cheetahs for his 2005 film, Duma. "They get tired doing the same thing after a while, so you bring out another one."
Some of the shots of the realistic CGI tiger in Life of Pi took six months to create. But having a boy in a lifeboat with a live tiger—even a well-trained one—wasn't an option.
PHOTOGRAPH BY JAKE NETTER, 20TH CENTURY FOX VIA AP
When CGI Rivals the Real Thing
Computer-generated animals have come a long way from the 
low-res petting zoos of early computer programs to the pixel-perfect 
renderings allowed by massive server farms. Upon seeing the 
computer-created tiger in Life of Pi, New York Times critic A. O. Scott purred at its vividness.
 "His eyes, his fur, the rippling of his muscles and the skeleton 
beneath his skin," Scott wrote, "all of it is so perfectly rendered that
 you will swear that Richard Parker is real."
Although creating computer-generated imagery sounds like a highly automated process, some of the tiger shots in Life of Pi
 took up to six months to create, according to director Ang Lee. That 
was necessary because having a boy in a lifeboat with a live tiger—even a
 well-trained one—wasn't an option.
Despite the move toward CGI wildlife, few people in 
Hollywood expect live animals to be completely replaced by digital ones,
 except in special circumstances, such as the cavalcade needed for 
Paramount's potential biblical blockbuster, Noah.
"Real animals have an emotional impact that absolutely 
cannot be replaced," says the AHA's Rosa. "We advocate the use of CGI 
because it's very good at mitigating jeopardy to animals. But it's 
costly, and filmmakers are still using it selectively. I don't think 
it's going to replace the Lassies or the Benjis of the world."
It certainly didn't replace the very real tiger that startled Zach Galifianakis's character—and the audience—in the 2009 comedy The Hangover.
 The big cat in the bathroom was such a ridiculous visual non sequitur 
that it made audiences laugh. "We lust after the real factor. We want to
 know that it could be dangerous," says Laufer. "It's an ego point: 
'This film was made with a real tiger,' and that will be on the 
billboard."
Of course, as actors, some animals stink. "Highly trained 
animals tend to look a bit phony. They're usually trained with buzzers 
and bells, and they're always looking for the little goody," says 
director Ballard, who fired the trained wolves he initially hired for 
the Disney adventure film Never Cry Wolf.
 "I ended up replacing all the trained wolves with wild wolves, which we
 found in animal shelters after they had been hit by cars. Their acting 
was so much more natural. If you wanted them to howl, you just started 
howling."
That's why Ballard doesn't expect CGI to make wild animals 
extinct on movie sets anytime soon. "I think the new technology is 
great," he says, "but I also think whenever you want to have personality
 in an animal, you're going to want to have the real animal."
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