How do they move puppets inside the car?
Best Answer
Well, there might not be a ceiling.
Generally just like in puppet shows, there are no ceilings because it can make difficult to pass the strings to control movements of puppets.
For eg.
The effect of darkness like in second image can easily be achieved by paint and VFX.
Removal of string can easily be achieved in different ways. They can use VFX to remove strings or use the color similar to surrounding.
Though I couldn't find any definitive source about how they filmed it in this show.
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How do marionettes work?
Puppetry is a form of theatre or performance that involves the manipulation of puppets \u2013 inanimate objects, often resembling some type of human or animal figure, that are animated or manipulated by a human called a puppeteer. Such a performance is also known as a puppet production.What is puppet manipulation?
In a simple marionette, the strings are attached in nine places: to each leg, hand, shoulder, and ear and at the base of the spine.What are puppets attached to?
Puppeteers wear a black, ninja-like costume called "kurogo" and hide their faces so as not to interfere with the Bunraku viewing experience.Sesame Street Puppeteers Explain How They Control Their Puppets | WIRED
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Answer 2
A possibility is that you do not need strings in that scene. I did not see this episode, so it boils down to the question "Did these characters need to move around while in the car"? It looks like they did not; so on that assumption:
The characters were moved by the puppeteers, from behind the car's seat. All the puppeteers need is a way to reach the characters so that they, and their limbs, can be moved around. If the puppet needs to walk and move in the scene, then you have to use strings from above or sticks from below (or something like that). But if the characters stay stationary, it's possible to eliminate seeing the strings/sticks by hiding them (or by having the puppeteer directly manipulating them with his hands). In this case, it would be "through" the car's seat.
Answer 3
Most likely that's not a car at all, and is just a prop/set on a green/blue screen (so they can perform a chroma key if the outside environment needs to move as in driving). In which case it's just like any conventional marionette-puppeteering stage where the operator is above the puppets.
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