the eighties called...
Please hold the line while we transfer you back to late 80s Amsterdam... For this 6 episode First Dutch Netflix Original Series, we had the pleasure to work on a wide variety of VFX shots.
To sell the late 1980s we adjusted, replaced or removed a lot of modern elements in the street scenes, like cars, street signs, telephone boxes and added street waste, unfortunately a typical sign of late 80s Amsterdam.
Enjoy the VFX breakdown below for an overview of work done for Dirty Lines.
In the opening the first episode we see a guy nearly - very nearly - driving his brand-new Ferrari into the harbour. To pull this stunt off, we shot reverse footage: a pullback starting at the edge of the water and ending some hundred meters away. Into the match-moved reverse of that, we added our CG Ferrari. Then lots of elements to make the CG a believable part of the scene: rain on the car, splashes on the tarmac, smoke underneath the tires, sparks scraping off the cement.
Especially challenging was shooting several passes of the dancing crowd in the dynamic, fast moving and flashing lights of the club. Each pass had to seamlessly connect to the one next to it in the final result, and would the lights not be in sync and thus behave differently in all passes, that goal would be unachievable.
In order to prevent this, plans were made to link the designed light plan to the music that was played back during the recording of the shots, so the lights would repeat their program exactly the same, every time. The timecode source that controlled this synced playback was also stored in the metadata of the recorded camera clips to make it easier to sync them later during post-production.
We made use of Planet X Technologies' in-house DeepSpace VR system to previs the scene and make sure we would be able to make the passes work with the right lenses and conditions.