To film a stop-motion you need a space large enough for your set, lights, a camera, and a computer that has a stop-motion program like Dragonframe. You also need a completely blacked-out room so that the lighting stays consistent during filming.
Our stop-motion room was far from professional. It was just another studio in the Foundation building, the only difference being the blinds that were duct-taped to black out the room. Some mornings I arrived to find the tape peeling off and having to reattach everything before animating a single frame. You don’t necessarily need a fancy room to make a stop-motion, just some equipment and maybe a roll of duct tape.
Only having four days to film meant every moment in the studio mattered, especially when a scene lasting only a few seconds could take hours to animate. One second of animation in LAIKA Studios’ Coraline is 24 frames, but each of those frames took five minutes to set up.
Yep, that’s two hours of work for every second that appears on screen.
Spending hours at a time in a dark room with just two other equally immersed students, all of us moving figures millimetres at a time, does weird things to the brain. The repetitiveness of stop-motion makes music an essential lifeline for a student, which is how I listened to almost every playlist on my Spotify. I knew I had gone over the edge when I began to listen to Alvin and the Chipmunks on repeat.
The filming process was not without its catastrophes. On day two, one of my clay walls fell from my set and shattered on the floor. The studio went silent. The two girls in the room, my companions in this descent into madness, looked over with a look of shared panic. But it is important to accept whatever happens and keep animating, because the timeline is short.
Aardman director Sam Fell described the animating process of Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget as “like capturing lightning in a bottle, but just incredibly slowly.” While sometimes a painstakingly slow process, there’s nothing like seeing a collection of inanimate materials come to life on screen.