Interview with
SAM NICHOLSON
Conducted by Scott
Michael Bosco
NOTE: This interview was done prior when I located the
elements of the alternate endings.
SMB
Lets start with Kinetic
Light. You first developed it and used it
in STAR TREK: TIIE MOTION PICTURE?
SN
That's right. It was used in the engine room,
and the V’ger sequence when Decker and Ilia turn into light and then disappear. If you look at that set it has massive
amounts of Kinetic Lighting. They were
used under the V’ger set itself. That was over 100 kinetic projectors back
lighting, or really under lighting, the entire set.
SMB
Please explain what Kinetic Lighting is.
SN
It's light that moves.
I designed a lighting unit that we call, Light Gun. It's capable of putting out either water
patterns or fire. What
ever you like. I made a lot of
them up for STAR TREK then also for theme parks in Disney. It's a type of projection system where you
can really control light.
SMB
Is that you standing in front of the effect?
SN
Yeah, that's what it looks like when it's projected on a very
large screen. That was a test shot of
what we were planning to project in the set.
It was projected on Lynn‑Holly in the scene and was all inside the
spaceship.It was all Kinetic Light. The ship had a lot of beams and structures
but then we projected Kinetic Light on them and then put a matte on it, so you
would
see the
structure, but it would be translucent.
SMB
Giving the impression the ship was composed of
pure energy?
SN
Yeah!
SMB
Was it used in any other parts of the film?
SN
No, just the end scene. The river of light the
spaceship was supposed to be sitting on and the aurora borealis. We used it all through the atmosphere to create
the layer of the auroras. It was a lot
of effects, but just in the end the "Other World" sequence.
SMB
Had you made any enhancements in the usage of
the effect after STAR TREK that you were able to apply to WATCHER?
SN
Well we really refined the system. Then we turned them into motion control units
so we could shoot them stop motion and have very long exposures on the
set. For WATCHER we had a much more
controlled use of Kinetic Lighting. In the Vger set
we just pounded it with quantity. On
Watcher we shot the Kinetic Light as elements and later matted them in as
atmosphere effects which we had not done before. If you remember the Vger set, the atmosphere above was all black. There was no
background which is something we would have liked to have done ‑ big
auroras that would have been spectacular.
SMB
Is the process connected with lasers?
SN
Some what. You don't use lasers
per say but it's a culminated light source like a laser. It works off white
light, then you mix up the white light and spit it
out. Essentially like an illuminant
projector, created in the 1930's.
There's also a whole movement of kinetic lighting in abstract art.
SMB
By use of prisms?
SN
Yeah. I kind of derived
it from that abstract art approach and turned it into a tool.
SMB
Has it been used in any films since WATCHER?
SN
I used it extensively in STAR TREK II: THE WRATH OF KAHN and
MILLENNIUM.
SMB
Again in the engine room in STAR TREK II?
SN
Yes. Also
in the transporter bays. It's
also been used in the OLYMPICS during the openers. But a lot of people saw it, and don't even
realize it, in a CBS logo a couple of years ago. It was a really soft field of light floated
around the logo. It was part of their
major campaign and aired during commercial breaks almost every 60 seconds.
SMB
From what I remember the WATCHER had the head of
an alligator and its body was mostly wings ‑ which looked like sea weed?
SN
Yeah, you can say that. Its wings were very amorphous, not
that well defined. And it didn't have
that much of a body. It was more of head
with wings.
SMB
But it seemed wet, or it glistened.
SN
Well it
wasn't wet. It was kinda of dry.
SMB
As a rule Disney usually
used an in house effects team. How were
you called in?
SN
By Leon Harris, the production designer, who I
worked with on STAR TREK. I remember he called me and said we have this
wild set, come down and take a look at it.
SMB
... meaning the
"Other World" set?
SN
Yes.
SMB
How far into the production of that scene were
they when you came in?
SN
It was still in the planning stage. It was all on paper. Nothing had been started. It took us about six months from the time we first
started talking about it to realizing it. That's why it was a disappointment
when the studio said they were going to change the ending. We were working on one schedule and a mandate
came down from the studio that they wanted to release the picture on a sneak
preview, two weeks early. Of course none
of the opticals were ready so we showed them (Disney)
the opticals in progress, a first composition. It was meant to be a forty layer composite
and naturally it was only a test composite so the colors were all off. You generally composite something ten or
twelve times when you have a sequence that complicated. So they looked at the first composite and
said we don't want to put this in the movie for the sneak preview. Then they got a bad response when they did
that, particularly the ending ... an ending that wasn't there. I mean, it was missing an ending! So a week later they came back and said they
were going to change and re‑cut the whole film.
SMB
But this "Other World" ending was in
the original script?
SN
Well when I came on yes.
But there may have been something else planned before this, but I never
knew about it.
SMB
In the original print I saw Jan (Lynn‑Holly
Johnson) is picked up by "THE WATCHER” in the chapel and they both
disappear. Now, how did your "Other
World" sequence figure in?
SN
She's supposed to go with it.
It picks her up in the chapel and they fly across this landscape to its
spaceship.
SMB
How was that shot? I know stuff was filmed of Lynn‑Holly
on wires.
SN
It was seen
as if "you're"
flying with them over the alien landscape.
SMB
A long shot or over their
shoulders?
SN
Over their shoulders, flying with them as they
go over this landscape and towards the ship.
SMB
It was probably very impressive looking.
SN
Yeah, it was real cool.
It was a very exciting sequence.
They go inside the ship and you see the other girl (Karen) inside this
crystal pyramid. The ship had crashed landed,
that why it's seen in this river of fight.
For some reason, the girl (Karen) who disappeared imbalanced this
alien's craft when she went through this portal. Which in turn caused this
alien to crash.
SMB
Did you have any input in the design of the
space craft?
SN
Leon Harris designed the ship.
We meet on it for months. We
talked about what it would look like, what we could make the ship do. It was in the early days of motion control so
we had to design the whole thing to fit what was called the “A.C.E.S” set up.
SMB
That was the motion control camera system
originally made for film THE BACK HOLE.
SN
Yes. We built the
miniature set around that A.C.E.S. stage.
It was going to be a really cool set.
It finally came down to having a very interesting and complicated
effects composite, and not enough time to do it.
SMB
The ship is a very traditional "flying
saucer" design. Were other concepts considered?
SN
In the beginning yeah. But that one won
out. They were all variations of the same
thing.
SMB
There are pyramids seen spread out over the
"Other World" landscape. Which
makes sense because triangles and 3's figure throughout the film.
SN
Well, yeah it
was thematically tied in and part of this Being's world.
SMB
So then the "Other World" is the
WATCHER'S home?
SN
That's never said. It's
kinda left open.
It is where the alien is at the time it crashed.
SMB
Did the alien ever change form once in was in
its own dimension or world?
SN
No. It stayed the same.
SMB
Kinda monstrous
without being a monster.
SN
Yeah, that's
what they wanted.
SMB
I think that was part of the confusion… that
this thing may have looked one way but was really opposite.
SN
Yes, I think that's all part of it. People just don't get that. They seem to want either a black or white
representation.
SMB
Was there at anytime a voice over or a narration
in that scene to further explain what was going on visually?
SN
No. In retrospect it was a very visual and
cerebral approach.
Copyright©
Special thanks to Sam Nicholson for his
incredible personal photos.