Auana

A suite of CG animations, created as supporting imagery for Cirque du Soleil’s Auana, a tribute to Hawaiian culture.

Behind the Scenes

Auana unfolds in eight chapters, opening with this, the Polynesian migration to Hawaii and the genesis of the islands as the Demigod Maui pulled them up from the ocean floor.

Storyboard

The creative team had a storyboard outlining some ten to twelve shots that were needed. Collaborating closely, even when they moved onsite to Hawaii, the look, movement, sound and vision came together over the course of the project.


Motion On The Ocean

Most assets were built from scratch although a few purchased 3D models were used and modified. Cinema 4D’s cloth dynamics were leveraged for the sails and rigging on the canoes and X-Particles xpOcean was used for the sea.

The boat animation relied heavily on GSG Signal to control pitch, yaw and bank. The Fleet’s transit was a mixture of the fleet moving forward and the ocean moving backward. This helped with subtle camera animation as it’s overall position remained static.


Lighting

Working with Redshift, HDRIs handled most of the heavy lifting for the lighting and the sunsets in particular worked beautifully across the ocean. Problems arose when trying to get the same vibe from above. Some creative licence was taken by placing huge textured light sources which shone up from the depths to give enough light where there might otherwise be darkness.


Flock of Seagulls

Actually arctic terns, but heavily stylized to suit the Auana vibe. Working with the Creative Directors interactively, the birds positions, their numbers and flight characteristics were all fine tuned in the viewport before rendering for final quality.


The Curtain Drops

Final output involved projecting the imagery onto the Kabuki Curtain which would be dropped around the stage as required. More content was also supplied for LED screens at the venue including a huge screen behind the main stage. Rendering was aided enormously by Topaz Vide AI to upscale comparatively low res renders up to the required 5K 60fps output. The creative team in Hawaii took all of the content into After Effects to add a grade to compensate for the orange curtain and integrate into the broader piece.



Software

Cinema 4D

Redshift

After Effects

Topaz Video AI


Agency

Ravi Chandwani

Ryan Dilley


Client

Cirque Du Soleil

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