Originally used in static photography to achieve blurriness or deformity, the slit-scan technique was perfected for the creation of spectacular
animations. It enables the cinematographer to create a
psychedelic flow of colors. Though this type of effect is now often created through computer animation, slit-scan is a mechanical technique.
John Whitney developed it for the opening credits of the
Alfred Hitchcock film
Vertigo. After he sent some test sequences on film to
Stanley Kubrick, the technique was adapted by
Douglas Trumbull for
2001: A Space Odyssey in 1968 for the "star gate" sequence, which required a custom-built machine. This type of effect was used in other films and television productions. Slit-scan was used by
Bernard Lodge to create the
Doctor Who title sequences for
Jon Pertwee and
Tom Baker used between December 1973 and January 1980. Slit-scan was also used in
Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987–1994) to create the "stretching" of the starship
Enterprise-D when it engaged
warp drive. Due to the expense and difficulty of this technique, the same three warp-entry shots, all created by
Industrial Light and Magic for the series pilot, were reused throughout the series virtually every time the ship went into warp. Slit-scan photography was also used on
Interstellar for scenes in the
tesseract at the end of the movie. ==Description==