
A CG test for Thing in ‘Wednesday’ involved several tests including animating a short with a dancing appendage
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- February 8, 2023
One of the stand-out characters in Netflix’s Wednesday series is, of course, the sentient disembodied hand called Thing.
Largely brought to life by performer Victor Dorobantu on set with make-up and prosthetic effects, Thing was also realized as a completely CG ‘creature’ for certain sequences.
Here, befores & afters speaks to MARZ visual effects producer Casey Sincic, lighting supervisor James Higuchi, and compositing lead Rodrigo Paiva about what it took to match Dorobantu’s exquisite on-set performance with their synthetic hand.
b&a: Casey, maybe you could talk about the brief for Thing in terms of what MARZ was asked to do.
Casey Sincic: The idea was that Tim Burton always wanted to shoot Thing as a real life actor with a real life hand. But there are shots and there are sequences and there are moments where that wasn’t possible. And then there are, of course, sequences where they film it on set and for whatever reason, Victor Dorobantu, the actor who played Thing, his performance doesn’t line up with what they were looking for and so they come to us to recreate that.
The work that we did on Thing is a combination of those two aspects. It was us building these shots from scratch, essentially, and building Thing’s action from scratch and almost directing how Thing would act. There are some shots, too, where we had reference of the live action performance of the hand and our job was to tweak it, make it look more realistic, or recreate it in a slightly different way.
James Higuchi: The initial ask was if we wanted to be involved and everybody here said, ‘We want to do Thing. Let’s try and get the Thing asset and as much of that scope of work as possible!’ So what we ended up doing was a little short film based off of one of several initial test models that we did.
And of course we got the gig!

b&a: What happened when MARZ then came on board the show?
Rodrigo Paiva: Then there was a second test, where they had shot some live action for the actual show with Victor Dorobantu, who performed with his own hand with make-up and prosthetics and wearing a bluescreen outfit. Our job was to mimic what he did and do a side-by-side to match exactly to the ‘real’ Thing.
James Higuchi: We were dialing in the thickness of the geo by half a millimeter by the end of it just to get the volume retention and making sure everything was one-to-one, for that second test. I think the best shows do a mix of practical and VFX. To me, there is nothing that sells an effect more than both actual captured on-set photography mixed with CG.
If you do one or the other, there’s always going to be a shortcoming, but together, they really can produce something that is just completely believable. So they spent a lot of time on set with a practical prosthetic where Victor had this little hump on the back of his hand for the truncated wrist, and the make-up and onset work that they did was fantastic reference.
One of the stand-out characters in Netflix’s Wednesday series is, of course, the sentient disembodied hand called Thing.
Largely brought to life by performer Victor Dorobantu on set with make-up and prosthetic effects, Thing was also realized as a completely CG ‘creature’ for certain sequences