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Digital Force has its full fledged electronics shop to design and develop circuits and components as and when required by the industry. Given time and investments the facility can come up with miracles which when combined with physical / practical effects gives awesome screen presence.
The adjoining picture (top) shows a dummy nuclear bomb being rigged up for a shoot schedule. The bomb was researched and made along the lines of an original 1970's nuclear bomb from russia. The panel circuits and timer equipments look absolutely real and they do fuction for as screen presence as the actual bomb would have.
We can see in the picture (bottom) where one of our electronics engineers is rigging up a miniature Airbus A320 model for shoot. This model has been rigged up electronically to have as close a resemblence with the original one as possible. Circuits were specially developed to time coordinate it's flashers with the Motion Picture Camera during the time of shoot.
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In the picture here, our electronics expert is configuring a dummy nuclear warhead for a shot in a recent movie. As one can see, the connections are made to a Lap Top Computer carrying a complicated software interface and the nuclear warhead to have a convincing effect on screen. (Digital Force Copyrights 2000) |
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We can consider ourselves as the makers of innovative and useless bombs which are convincing on the screen. The adjoining photograph shows a few of us crowding over a suitcase bomb (dummy offcourse). This bomb featured a digital couter and a stop and go setup for onscreen coundowns. No digital compositing required for this kind of a bomb (except for the explosion). We even manipulate the LCD light intensity according to the camera requirements. (Digital Force Copyrights 1999)
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