The Most Daring Mission of the Civil War....History Channel

Upper Left is the Albemarle firing sequence. Since the iron clad it was of a reduced scale,  the cannons didn’t work. We matted out the muzzle flash of a artillery cannon and pasted right on the Albamare’s cannon. A little flame red smoke for seasoning and that’s how we made the main gun fire.
 
Upper Right is the picket boat issue... these shots needed two layers of tracking color correction to tone down the white of the boat, and actually bring up mid tones to see the people in the boat.
Gen Arts Sapphire effects clouds to create a blue mist on the river...
The bottom picture is the final composite

The Title sequence was done with Apple’s Motion.

AIR DATE: Sunday May 22, 2005, 8PM EST

This 90-minute special explores Civil War naval history, specifically the exploits of the war's greatest naval hero, Lieutenant William B. Cushing. The high point of his daring career was the attack on the Confederate ironclad CSS Albemarle at Plymouth, North Carolina. On a cold, rainy night in late October 1864, Cushing and a group of volunteers used a tiny steam launch and spar torpedo in a surprise attack. Their virtual suicide mission succeeded and the warship was destroyed. Of the 13 men in the launch, Cushing was the only one to successfully escape from the rebel-held river where the attack took place. The others were drowned, shot, or captured. From Naval Academy wash-out to flamboyant warrior, this is the story of the celebrated hero's bold raid that freed the Roanoke of the obstacle that had prevented Union forces from advancing in to eastern North Carolina.

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