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  • Off we go.

  • Narrator: This year's Oscars won't include

  • a Popular Film category, like the Academy once proposed.

  • But, many of your favorites will still be there.

  • Campaigning for an Oscar takes a lot of work

  • but nothing like the work that went

  • into actually making the movie.

  • From groundbreaking visual effects

  • to daring stunts, to layers of makeup

  • there's a lot to admire from this year's Oscar nominees.

  • Here's what 2019 Oscar nominees

  • looked like behind the scenes.

  • Few movies in the last decade have altered our culture

  • as much as Black Panther did in 2018.

  • Its showing at the Oscars proves

  • that it took blockbuster filmmaking to new heights.

  • The movie involves a lot of demanding stunt work

  • from the cast for each intense fight scene.

  • Yes, Danai Gurira really did use a wig

  • as a defense mechanism. And yes, Chadwick Boseman

  • did kick a guy across a field, with the help of a few wires.

  • Meanwhile, Michael B. Jordan went to set every day

  • and was covered in around 3,000 prosthetic dots.

  • Makeup artist Joel Harlow told us

  • the fake scars were made to withstand

  • the actor's more physical scenes

  • as well as the ones where he got wet.

  • And a studio in Atlanta

  • was convincingly transformed into Wakanda.

  • That space came complete with bustling city streets

  • and a waterfall that would become Warrior Falls.

  • Horror movies are often overlooked during awards season

  • but this box office and critical success

  • was too impressive for the Oscars to ignore.

  • While the movie produced scares from its lack of sound

  • the ways it did use sound were impressive.

  • The film's sound team used a strange array

  • of objects to make Foley sounds.

  • Crab legs perfectly captured the sound

  • of the monsters walking.

  • A combination of celery and romaine lettuce

  • would make the sound of an ear opening.

  • To figure out the monsters' spine-chilling

  • echolocation sounds, the team did some experimenting

  • and discovered the best way to do it

  • was by tasering a patch of grapes

  • and then slowing the sound down.

  • There'll always be a place for period pieces at the Oscars.

  • The historical epic, centering around Mary Queen of Scots

  • and Queen Elizabeth I, and starring Margot Robbie

  • and Saoirse Ronan, is notable for its costumes

  • makeup, hairpieces, and sets.

  • The movie was shot on location

  • around the United Kingdom and Scotland.

  • The stars acted with a literal army of extras.

  • The Favourite plays a bit more fast and loose

  • with history, but it still flawlessly immerses

  • the audience in 18th-century British aristocratic life.

  • The costumes and wigs are eye-popping and elaborate.

  • The movie was shot at Hatfield House in England.

  • They stripped many of the beautiful rooms in the palace

  • and built a massive bath, as well as Abigail's room.

  • The reception of First Man, which chronicles

  • Neil Armstrong's trip to the moon, was mixed.

  • But one thing nobody can deny

  • is that it's visually stunning.

  • Its set pieces are as historically accurate as possible.

  • Production designer Nathan Crowley told us

  • that the lunar module and space capsule

  • were built to scale.

  • Meanwhile, the Saturn V model seen in the movie

  • was actually just 14 feet tall.

  • That's about 1/25th the size of the actual rocket.

  • Some of the models could even move.

  • In some scenes, to convincingly replicate zero gravity

  • they put the camera below the actors.

  • A technique that has been used in many movies set in space.

  • The moon landing sequence, which is shot in IMAX

  • will actually make you feel like you're walking on the moon.

  • Some parts of this sequence were shot in a quarry.

  • Other parts were shot on

  • a very convincing-looking soundstage.

  • The stunts were equally impressive.

  • Gosling allowed himself to be launched

  • out of a capsule, and then got dragged around

  • in the movie's most daring stunt.

  • What sets A Star is Born apart is that

  • all the concert scenes were filmed live

  • and Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga

  • are always performing together.

  • Even for two people as talented as them

  • they still had to rehearse a lot.

  • A big part of the production was sound editing

  • which required layering multiple sounds

  • in a single scene, including the vocals.

  • All of which were sung live.

  • Wes Anderson's second stop-motion animated feature

  • was one of the best animated movies of 2018.

  • It's staggering just to look at

  • the numbers behind the movie.

  • Isle of Dogs animators were working with

  • around 1,105 puppets on set.

  • A single sushi making sequence from the movie

  • took six to eight months to bring to life.

  • Animators, meanwhile, had to use pins and wooden sticks

  • to move the dogs' eyeballs and lips around

  • to make the characters move realistically.

  • The animators even painstakingly moved the fur around

  • to give the impression that dog's fur

  • was blowing in the wind.

  • Stop-motion animation requires faces to get changed out

  • for each different mood and emotion.

  • Andy Gent, the head of the movie's puppet department

  • told us that the character's fur made this process

  • much more difficult than usual.

  • Marvel's most ambitious movie yet

  • didn't quite get the same awards love as Black Panther

  • but it still managed to make an appearance.

  • The biggest standout technical aspect

  • of the latest Avengers was Josh Brolin's

  • towering performance as Thanos.

  • The actor performed in a motion capture suit

  • for a character who would then be created using CGI.

  • Because Thanos is so tall, Brolin often acted

  • with an object on top of his head.

  • That way, actors would know where exactly

  • they should be looking.

  • Motion-capture technology has gotten so good

  • that Thanos felt real.

  • Honestly, it's about time the Academy starts taking

  • motion-capture performances more seriously.

  • The long-awaited sequel involved

  • a cast of very committed actors.

  • Meanwhile, production designers created

  • a very accurate version of 1930s London inside a studio.

  • For this shot, in which Mary Poppins falls into a bathtub

  • they built a giant slide beneath the tub

  • that Emily Blunt had to slide down backwards.

Off we go.

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