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Actor perfects the art of aping – Metro US

Actor perfects the art of aping

If any actor is an expert at performance-capture technology, it’s Andy Serkis. Despite popping up as himself plenty of times on screen, Serkis is best known for inhabiting Gollum in Lord of the Rings and as the big ape himself in King Kong, both for Peter Jackson. He suits up again for Rupert Wyatt’s Rise of the Planet of the Apes as Caesar, a chimp that starts a revolution.

But as much as he’s made a name for himself through performance capture, Serkis doesn’t think you should notice. “People aren’t so much wanting to celebrate the technology anymore. Really, that’s passe. It’s something that we need to get over, really,” he says.

Maybe Serkis is so over it because he’s had more to do with the technology than most actors. “On Lord of the Rings, my performance was shot on 35mm with all the other actors, then I had to go and reshoot in the performance-capture volume. There were not many cameras and the markers didn’t quite work and the real-time kept breaking down, so it was very, very early days,” he says.

For his latest bit of monkeying around, Serkis donned a motion-capture suit and head-mounted camera rig, interacting on-set with co-stars James Franco and Freida Pinto. “On Rise of the Planet of the Apes, it’s the first time that performance capture has existed on live-action sets,” he says. “We didn’t have to go back and repeat anything. We were in real locations with physical sets that were shot on film.”