Michael Joyce has been making models for movies since 1978. (First flick: Buck Rogers in the 25th Century.) The miniature-effects specialist describes his job this way: “A production company comes in and says, we want to build this, film it, and blow it up—and we want you to handle everything.” Now 60 and running his own shop, Joyce is something of a rare breed these days. When modern moviemakers want to obliterate Manhattan, it’s easier and cheaper to fire up a PC than to assemble a little Big Apple from scratch. Still, for explosions, some directors insist on models. “In a computer,” Joyce says, “you don’t get that randomness, that haphazard commotion of a nice explosion.” Although his most famous kablooey moment might be the iconic scene in Independence Day when aliens demolish the White House, Joyce is up for laying waste to just about anything he can build.
Independence Day
MODEL: White House
SIZE: 5 feet high
The camera cut away quickly so the audience wouldn’t see the explosion petering out—that can reveal the scale.
Mr. & Mrs. Smith
MODEL: Suburban house
SIZE: ¼ scale
Joyce had to construct only the rear of the home—the Smiths race into the backyard as it’s detonating.
Live Free or Die Hard
MODEL: Power station
SIZE: 14 feet high
Five cameras captured the two-second blast at 120 fps, resulting in 50 seconds of explosive film.
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen
MODEL: Blimp
SIZE: 1/12 scale
The craft was rigged with spray cement coated in gunpowder so it would “burn like the Hindenburg.”