X-Men: Apocalypse will be released on May 27th, 2016. Well, I'm excited to see how this new Quicksilver scene turns out! Peters seems to think they've come up with something pretty incredible. The scope of it - with the end of the world and Apocalypse coming - is going to be a very large, epic ’X-Men’ film.” I think it’s going to be a really fun sequence in what is going to be a massive X-Men movie. I’m really excited to see it all cut together, and I’m excited for people to see it, too. This year we’re working on something that’s bigger and better, keeping the same elements that worked, then adding a few new ones. The special effects guys, man, they absolutely nailed that and did a fantastic job on it. He was asked if he felt the pressure of topping the scene in Days of Future Past and he said, “Well, yeah, it’s always difficult to try to top something like that. Peters talked to MTV about how the new sequence they've developed will be bigger and better. His scene in X-Men: Days of Future Past was one of the best parts of the movie, and it's going to be hard to top, but it sounds like they will in the upcoming X-Men film. And now you have a better idea of how they filmed the most eye-popping scene of the summer – and possibly of the year.Evan Peters' Quicksilver is going to have another big sequence in X-Men: Apocalypse, and it was teased in a photo posted by director Bryan Singer about a month ago. X-Men: Days of Future Past is off to a red-hot start, and Quicksilver is the break-away star of the show (so much so that they’ve already confirmed he’ll get a much bigger part in X-Men: Apocalypse). And that’s what’s most impressive to me."Īnd to everyone else, as well. He and Tom Sigel, the DP, had such a clear focus from the beginning, which they manifested. He had been showing us photography tricks online. … Bryan had a very clear focus on what he wanted in that sequence. But some of the things in the air ARE real. I mean, some of the stuff that’s flying through the air isn’t real, because we couldn’t control rice particles. The only visual effect in that movie is some of the stuff in the air. It’s just because the camera has been so sped up. If you go on the Internet and search super-high-speed photography, it’s all of those effects like where he touches the guy’s cheek and it bends. Yeah, because it was shot at super-high speeds. Meaning we had a high-speed camera – a bunch of cameras – that were on rigs that were circling with him. What was amazing about the Quicksilver scene is that it’s somewhat visual effects, but it is mostly special effects and camera work. When I sat across from Kinberg in New York, the Quicksilver scene was all I wanted to discuss. Heres just a bit of it: This is depicted in freeze-frame and slow-mo moments, with Quicksilver effectively moving at normal speed amid water droplets from fire sprinklers, as well as flying. It’s a brilliant piece of movie magic… and one that X-Men writer Simon Kinberg was happy to explain. This allows Singer to let Peters manipulate his surroundings – moving a bullet or shifting a security guard’s arm – without disrupting the scene. By speeding up the frame rate on everything but Evan Peters, you could then film the actor at regular speed, and when combined together, it would make Quicksilver appear as if he’s moving 150-times faster than everything and everyone around him.
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