A bee on a small iced tart, sitting on a kitchen counter

Man vs Bee

Framestore created a photorealistic bee for Man Vs Bee starring Rowan Atkinson. Using comp, animation, and virtual production techniques the team created 600 shots in this highly anticipated Netflix comedy. 

Concept Design
Animation
Creature Design/Art Department
Animation Supervisor
Visual Effects Supervisor
Creatures
The show was conceived and produced during Covid-19, so its scheduling was extremely challenging, but Framestore could not have been more helpful to the production and diligent in their dogged pursuit of excellence. The results, I think, are astonishing
Rowan Atkinson

Framestore’s core team consisted of VFX Supervisor Rob Duncan, who has worked on two films with Rowan Atkinson: Mr. Bean’s Holiday and Johnny English Reborn. Alongside him were Comp Supervisor, Ollie Bersey, CG Supervisor, Johannes Sambs, Animation Supervisor, Binal Shah and VFX Producer, Standish Millennas. Focussing on crafting the bee, together they brought a full suite of VFX skills to the production both on set and in post and delivered 600 shots in total with 202 shots of the bee.

close up of a cg animated photorealistic bee flying mid air looking directly into the camera

Framestore and their work, as ever, was exemplary. The show was conceived and produced during Covid-19, so its scheduling was extremely challenging, but Framestore could not have been more helpful to the production and diligent in their dogged pursuit of excellence. The results, I think, are astonishing.
Rowan Atkinson
actor rowan atkinson looking through a glass window with a bee perched in the middle of his eyebrows

As the bee was only one inch long it posed some interesting challenges. Rob was keen to use stand-in bees on the shoot, which were puppeteered by a professional puppeteer. This enabled Rob to direct their actions on-set, in anticipation of carrying the spirit of the bee’s movement all the way through to the CG character later on in post. The puppet bee gave Rowan the opportunity to react to something live on-set, which would be really useful in achieving believable interaction in the final scenes. 

We had some bee proxies made and placed on the end of a fishing rod, which sounds very simple, but it's got to behave like a bee, and when it's done poorly there can be a disconnect between what the actors are doing and how you are animating your character, so I decided to use puppeteering,” said Rob Duncan. “I’d done a lot of research into bees at this point, including how fast they move and how much they meander, so we had some basic ground rules locked in and as the puppeteer was a performer, they were able to subtly manipulate the one inch proxy and imbue a character into that.”

Running over nine episodes, Man Vs Bee is a brand-new comedy starring Rowan Atkinson, which marks the actor's debut on Netflix, reconnecting him with Will Davies and Chris Clark who he worked with on the Johnny English films. Within the comedy, the protagonist Trevor, played by Rowan Atkinson, enters into an unexpected clash with a plucky bee whilst housesitting a mansion.

“Framestore gave us our co-star: a bee so beautifully animated and richly-rendered it seems every bit as real and characterful as its human counterparts. Rob Duncan and his team were wonderful collaborators. From the outset, we worked hand-in-glove, choosing a specific real bee as our reference; finessing animation so that every detail could imply the bee’s attitude to Trevor; dreaming up ways the bee’s physicality could be transformed in reaction to Trevor’s attacks,” said David Kerr, Director. “The Framestore team worked not only on the bee, but on a host of other really ambitious VFX shots. At every stage of the process, working with them was a joy”. 

a bee standing on an orchid flower

A big bulk of the asset build was the groom variations created by Johannes’ team and animated by Binal’s team. However, they were careful to keep the character realistic and not stylised to make sure it always felt like an actual bee.

“We had a lot of different groom variations because the bee is going through so many different scenarios, which I think is one of the most exciting things about the job,” said Johannes Sambs. “It gets soaked in a shower, sucked up in a vacuum cleaner, blow dried into a puff ball, and picks up all sorts of debris and particles along the way.” 

“Part of the brief was that the bee shouldn't look menacing, but if you zoom into a bumble bee head it becomes quite alien looking and creepy, so we had to find a way of maintaining realism whilst ensuring a friendly-looking bee no matter how close up we are.” continued Johannes Sambs.

The groom variations helped convey a bit of subtlety and emotion without forcing the bee to do something that it wouldn't do otherwise in nature,” added Binal Shah. “In terms of animation, we didn't have a lot of reference for a sad bee, so we played around until we found a pose that looked like a forlorn bee, and it worked out well.” 

 

close up of a bee perched on a door handle
actor rowan atkinson looking confused at a bee flying in front of him

The team also created some beefy effects, with one sequence involving Trevor luring the bee into a beehive which was rigged with explosives, leaving the bee looking the worse for wear.

“It was a chance to have a bit of fun and a valid reason to change the look of the character. We wanted to feel like it had sustained some damage, but nothing too life threatening,” said Rob Duncan. “Really it was up to us to come up with those looks as they were not defined in the script and for us it seemed to be a good opportunity to add value to the character.”

From the outset it was clear that there would be many dozens, if not hundreds, of shots requiring a CG bee – so the investment was made up front to streamline the VFX workflow so that finished-level shots could be turned around quickly to put in front of the filmmakers for their comments. 

“Generally, there's quite a delay between the various stages, but for this project we could animate a bee in the morning and see it comped in the plate by the afternoon, which helped create an efficient feedback loop.” said Binal Shah.

actor rowan atkinson laying on the floor looking at a bee under a bed while holding a hair dryer on it

One of the biggest tests the team faced was portraying the bee's POV.

“There were a small selection of shots depicting the point of view of the bee in flight which was photographed using a camera normally used for VR capture, with a 360 degree field of view – this allowed us in post to very carefully adjust where the bee was "looking" as he flew around the house or the garden,” added Ollie Bersey. “This required quite a lot of look dev, which was all done in comp, to come up with a plausible representation of what a bee might see.”

actor rowan atkinson looking at a bee that is hovering near his face

For the car scenes, which involved Trevor driving and dodging traffic, the team looked to Framestore’s virtual production toolkit, opting to use an LED Volume, shot at 80six, which gave them increased flexibility especially when it came to interactive lighting and ultimately helped them support the actors' performance.

“LED work does bring an awful lot to a piece, particularly in a car where you’ve got loads of chrome, interactive lighting and reflections,” said Ollie Bersey. “If you used a conventional green screen stage you would really miss the detail.” 

Rowan Atkinson attended most of the team's reviews with the majority of his feedback focussed on the timing of the bee, down to the most minute level. 

“It was a thrill and an honour to work with Rowan Atkinson, he’s very experienced with the post production process and understood the stages we needed to get through before presenting a finalled shot, so he was happy to see work in progress and understand its potential,” added Standish Millennas. “He is the master of physical comedy and has an extraordinary attention to detail, which pushed us repeatedly in a good way.” 

“I think our reputation at Framestore is very much in creative character animation whilst also ensuring that those characters can behave exactly like the real thing if required,” said Rob Duncan. “We had to stay on the right side of the line of it being a believable insect rather than a caricature. There is a real skill in understanding the difference between the two, and knowing when we're taking it too far and need to rein it back in.”

Man Vs Bee aired in June on Netflix

roman atkinson looking at a bee hovering near his face

Credits

Client
Netflix
Director
David Kerr
VFX Supervisor
Animation Supervisor
Binal Shah
Data Wranglers
Aadel Matoorianpour, Basim Kadhim, Sherrine Byfield
Capture Lab
Megan Elliott
VFX Line Producers
Hannah Critchley, Megan De Wolf, Paul Schleicher
VFX Outsource Producer
Natasha Shetye
Layout
David Cattermole, Jack Colquhoun, Zoe Woods
Generalist TD
Elpida Kyriakou
Animators
Bruno Buzinkay, Jessica Kersey-Preston, Jon Munarriz Senosiain, Nathan Thompson, Rebecca Meilak, Sofia Llobregat, Umit Calik
Compositors
Aadel Matoorianpour, Adam Tennant, Adriano Mule, Alice Locuratolo, Cristina Recuero Esquina, Denis Sanchez, George Palcut, Giso Spijkerman, Jack Pond, Julia Caram, Mark Yfantidis, Sam Meisels, Sherrine Byfield, Simon Stoney
Head of Rigging
Brad Noble
CG Supervisor
Johannes Sambs
On-set VFX Co-ordinator
Mia Price
Capture Lab Supervisor
Richard Graham
Lidar Scanner
Helder Pestana Tomas
VFX Production Coordinators
Chloe Dunn, Mia Price
Previz Artists
Alicia Saleh, Ashley Reemul
VFX Editors
Andrew Fineberg, Matthew Collins, Richard Gao
Modelling / Texture Artist
Victoria Stuart
Lighting
Ed Mykolaitis, Eleonora D'Onofrio, Finella Fan, Giovanni Bianchet, Jochem Aarts, Joel Savage
Paint Artist
Basim Kadhim
Rigging TD
Lisa Weber
VFX
Framestore
2D Supervisor
Oliver Bersey
Lead Data Wrangler
Nick Brown
Capture Lab TD
Jack Elworthy
VFX Producer
Standish Millennas
VFX Production Assistants
Charlene Faure-Berichi, Stephanie McDaid
Senior Layout TD
Paul Amiras
Creature Artist
Bruno Reis Coimbra
Animators
Alberto Genk, Alejandro Santamarina Hidalgo, Aleksa Radunovic, Alexandr Pogrebnicenco, Antonio Guidetti, Daniel Bielawski, Bharat Gour
FX
Gareth Bell, Owain Peake, Shahid Malik, Tobias Groenbeck Andersen
Digital Matte Painter
Harry Wormald
Supporting VFX
22Dogs, Basilic Fly, BOT VFX, Cumulus VFX, Dazzle Pictures, Hotspring, Rotomaker, Wonderlab Vfx S.r.l., Yannix