The 21st annual International Monitor Awards ceremony was held this past weekend (7/15) at the Beverly Hilton, capping off an eventful four days for the Association of Imaging Technology and Sound (ITS) during its annual Forum & Exposition (see separate story, page 1).
The 2000 Monitor Awards honored more than 90 recipients for creative excellence. The big winner was London post/effects shop Framestore, with a whopping dozen Monitor Awards, including four bestowed upon the acclaimed BBC series Walking With Dinosaurs, which earned distinction for best achievement in a film-originated TV series as well as topping the visual effects, 3-D animation and sound design categories.
Framestore also scored in the film-originated TV specials bracket, with best visual effects, best color correction, best 3-D animation and best editing for Alice in Wonderland. Also in TV specials, Framestore copped Monitors for its work on Arabian Nights, earning distinction in the color corection and visual effects categories. Rounding out Framestore’s Monitor tally was the tape-originated TV special entitled Millennium, which was singled out in the 3-D animation and graphic design categories.
The Monitor for best achievement in a national commercial went to 525 Studios, Santa Monica, for Mercedes-Benz USA’s "They Invented," directed by Bruce Dowad of Bruce Dowad Associates, Los Angeles.
The national spot honor in 3-D animation went to A52, Santa Monica, for Toyota’s "More Spectacular" helmed by Lance Kelleher via Ritts/Hayden, Los Angeles. The Ford Motor Company’s "Goodbye/Hello" topped the editing category; it was cut by Barry McMann at Third Floor Editing, Toronto, and directed by Edouard Nammour of bicoastal/international Cylo. "Goodbye/Hello" also took the best original scoring category for national commercials. The composer was Danny Beckerman of Yessian Music, Farmington Hills, Mich.
The latter honor is part of a precedent-setter for the Monitor Awards in that this is the first year that the competition was expanded to recognize achievements in sound design, audio mixing and original scoring. In that vein, best audio mixing in a national commercial went to Peter Rincon of POP Sound, Santa Monica, for Sega’s "Apocalypse," which was directed by John Moore of bicoastal Headquarters, with visual effects by Sight Effects, Venice, Calif.
Best achievement in a local commercial went to Quokka’s "Quokka Sports Launch," directed by David Shane of bicoastal/international hungry man, with the graphics and design done by Razorfish, New York.
The special achievement in engineering Monitor went to Silicon Graphics Inc. (sgi), Mountain View, Calif., for its HD I/O Board.
Here’s a rundown of the 2000 International Monitor Award winners: