Professor-Turned-Producer Learns the Movie Biz
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Richard W. Siegel
Photo Credit: Rensselaer/Daria Robbins |
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It’s not every day that a research scientist and university
professor gets to see his work on the silver screen.
But in just a few months, Richard W. Siegel will get to
watch his name scroll down the giant screen of a darkened IMAX
theater with a new title that seems light years away from
laboratory benches and lecture halls: Executive Producer.
The film, “Molecules to the MAX,” has been a three-year
labor of love for Siegel. From securing funding and hiring a
production company to negotiating post-production and
distribution deals, Siegel has been a champion and a driving
force behind the newest Molecularium movie. His enthusiasm and
vision have touched nearly every aspect of the 40-minute film,
which is set to be previewed for the first time this week.
“It’s been quite a ride, and we’re thrilled to introduce our
new movie to the world,” Siegel said.
The IMAX production was supported by a generous gift from
Rensselaer Trustee Curtis Priem ’82, co-founder of NVIDIA, a
world leader in visual computing technologies.
A world-renowned nanotechnology pioneer, Siegel is the
Robert W. Hunt Professor of Materials Science and Engineering
at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, as well as director of the
university’s nanotechnology center. The unique perspective from
the helm of the Molecularium project has put the lifelong
researcher in the unlikely situation of vetting the precision
and impact of this work not with journal editors and
peer-reviewers, but with an even cannier audience — his
grandchildren.
And so far, the reception of Siegel’s grandkids and the
children of colleagues to the latest exploits of Oxy, Hydro,
Hydra, and other Molecularium characters as they get an
up-close-and-personal view of the molecular landscapes of
snowflakes, chewing gum, a penny, among other environs, has
been outstanding.
But a more rigorous test will show itself this winter, when
the completed film version of “Molecules to the MAX” debuts,
and Siegel’s objective shifts from creating a memorable,
entertaining, and engaging film based on scientifically
accurate molecular modeling and simulations, to marketing the
film and filling IMAX and other giant-screen theaters with
eager moviegoers.
Siegel is intrigued to see how “Molecules to the MAX” will
fare not only against Hollywood blockbusters, but also against
the growing cadre of sharks, dinosaurs, insects, historic
sites, and heavenly bodies that have become the bread and
butter of the giant-screen movie industry. Though Siegel
concedes that “Molecules to the MAX” may not be on a trajectory
to become the next “Star Wars” or “Finding Nemo,” he is
confident that the new film is poised for considerable
long-term success — both in the entertainment world, and in
fulfilling the project’s paramount goal of boosting global
science literacy.
The first barometer of this success will come this week,
when Siegel and Jonathan Barker, president of “Molecules to the
MAX” distributor SK Films, unveil a clip from the film at the
Giant Screen Cinema Association’s 2008 International Conference
and Trade Show held in New York City. SK Films and Siegel will
also hold private screenings of a digital version of the full
movie for theater owners and other industry VIPs. These initial
viewings will be important not only for drumming up a buzz, but
for landing deals to show the film in giant-screen theaters
across the country and around the world.
“I may be somewhat biased, but I think the completed show,
with its high-quality visuals and sound, is going to excite the
giant-screen industry,” Siegel said.
A few years ago, the depth of Siegel’s knowledge and
experience of the film world was limited to watching the
occasional movie. But after his experience as executive
producer on “Molecules to the MAX,” alongside fellow
Molecularium project executive producers and Rensselaer
professors Linda Schadler and Shekhar Garde, he can now talk
shop with the best in the business. In addition to
establishing a distribution relationship with SK Films, Siegel
has successfully solicited the sound and film post-production
skills, respectively, of industry pros Cory Mandel at
Technicolor and Ampersand, as well as Patricia and David
Keighley at DKP 70MM Inc. and IMAX Corp. Along the way, Siegel
also became a charter member of the Giant Screen Cinema
Association, which was solidifying as an organization just as
Oxy, Hydra, and Hydro’s new adventure was moving from the
sketch pad to the storyboard.
“At first, I was totally inexperienced in the film world,”
Siegel said. “But I tackled the situation like I would any
scientific or business problem: I did as much research as
possible, and then I sought out the wisdom and advice of people
who know more about the subject than anyone else.”
Siegel’s motivation for this self-imposed crash course in
the movie biz is the same basic tenant at the very heart of the
Molecularium project: the critical need for instilling young
people of all ages with a passion for science and a lifelong
yearning to learn more about the world around them.
Embedded in the fabric of every creative and strategic
decision that Siegel, Schadler, and Garde made concerning
“Molecules to the MAX” was the notion of “stealth education.”
At the end of the day, “Molecules to the MAX” is about
educating viewers and raising public science literacy, Siegel
said. But to make the movie an effective vehicle to propagate
this important scientific and educational message, it was
imperative that the team not allow the core properties of the
medium — immersive, engaging entertainment — to take a back
seat.
“After watching the movie, parents, children, and teachers
all rave about the storyline, the characters, the songs, and
the animation — they just love it,” Siegel said. “But we’ve
also done before-and-after assessments that prove viewers
coming out of the theater know a great deal more about atoms
and molecules in the world around them than they did before
they experienced the movie. They learned without even trying.
That’s why we call it ‘stealth education.’”
“Molecules to the MAX” and Molecularium are owned, funded,
and managed by Rensselaer, with additional funding support from
the U.S. National Science Foundation and from Rensselaer
Trustee Curtis Priem ’82. Schadler, professor of materials
science and engineering at Rensselaer with a career-long
interest in science education outreach to young people, created
the concept of Molecularium circa 2001. She worked to develop
and expand it with Siegel and Garde, who is a computer modeling
expert and head of Rensselaer’s Department of Chemical and
Biological Engineering. Molecularium has since become the
flagship educational outreach project of Rensselaer’s
NSF-funded Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center for
Directed Assembly of Nanostructures, which is led by
Siegel.
Schadler, Garde, and Siegel released the first Molecularium
movie, “Riding Snowflakes,” in early 2005. This 23-minute
digital show, created specifically to be shown in planetarium
domes, is still in distribution worldwide and is currently in
the process of being translated into several different
languages. The award-winning movie has been lauded by both
educators and science advocacy groups as a triumph. Director V.
Owen Bush, producer Kurt Przybilla, and art director Chris
Harvey of the “Riding Snowflakes” production company, now
called Nanotoon Entertainment, returned to work on “Molecules
to the MAX,” but the quality, animation, and technology behind
the new show far outstrips the first, Siegel said. The script
for the new movie was created through a collaboration of
executive producers Siegel, Schadler, and Garde, along with
Bush and Przybilla.
When watching either movie, it’s easy for viewers to
overlook the fact that they’re witnessing some of the largest
and most complex scientific computations ever conducted. The
background animations of atoms and molecules in “Riding
Snowflakes” and “Molecules to the MAX” are derived from
accurate, state-of-the-art theoretical molecular modeling
simulations created in Garde’s laboratory. Creating this hidden
camera into the nanoscale universe required simulations massive
in both scale and complexity. For the new movie, it took five
computer-processing hours to render a single frame in normal
resolution and 50 hours to render a frame in the
high-definition IMAX format. Each second of the new 40-minute
movie is composed of 24 such frames.
While launching “Molecules to the MAX” in giant-screen
theaters this winter, Siegel will endeavor to bring Oxy, Hydra,
and Hydro to the small screen. He and the group are in
discussions to move the project forward and reach out to more
people by bringing the new movie to television, creating new
Molecularium shows for television, and also making all of the
new and previously released Molecularium content available on a
series of DVDs.
Promoting science literacy to the public is no easy task,
Siegel said, but he and his colleagues are in it for the long
haul.
“If you’re doing something that makes a positive impact, it
drives you to keep pushing that idea further to reach wider
audiences, and pushing yourself to do better,” Siegel said.
“And nothing justifies all of the effort and hard work more
clearly than catching a glimpse of a group of children who just
watched our movie, and seeing the excitement in their eyes and
hearing the thrill in their voices.”
For more information on “Molecules to the MAX” and the
Molecularium project visit: www.molecularium.com.
For more information on Rensselaer’s NSF Nanoscale Science
and Engineering Center for Directed Assembly of Nanostructures
visit: www.nano.rpi.edu.
For more information on the GSCA 2008 Conference visit: www.giantscreencinema.com.
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Published
September 26,
2008 |
Contact: Michael Mullaney
Phone: (518) 276-6161
E-mail: mullam@rpi.edu |
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