Autodesk Inc. media and entertainment software played a supporting role in the creation of many of this year’s most acclaimed movies, including all five Best VFX Oscar nominees. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences also recognized Autodesk technology with a Scientific and Technical Achievement Award (Sci-Tech Award).
“It’s an honor to contribute to such a creative community in which the Best VFX Oscar-winning movie for 20 consecutive years has used Autodesk software,” said Chris Bradshaw, Autodesk sr. VP. “We’re also so pleased the Academy recognized Robert Bridson on our R&D team for his voxel data structures technology.”
In the Best Visual Effects category, all five film nominees –“Captain America: The Winter Soldier,” “Dawn of the Planet of the Apes,” “Guardians of the Galaxy,” “Interstellar” and “X-Men: Days of Future Past”–used sophisticated technology to help bring these films to audiences worldwide. The phenomenal work contained in these five movies was created by thousands of talented artists working at 25 visual effects studios on four continents with work spanning the production process from previsualization through virtual cinematography, post-production and color grading.
This year’s nominees for Best Animated Feature show off a broad range of animation styles from hand-drawn, to stop-motion to CG. Autodesk software played a role in four of the five Best Animated Feature nominees: “Big Hero 6,” “The Boxtrolls,” “How to Train Your Dragon 2,” and “The Tale of The Princess Kaguya;” two Best Animated Short contenders: “Feast” and “The Dam Keeper;” and seven of the eight movies nominated for Best Picture: “American Sniper,” “Birdman,” “Boyhood,” “The Grand Budapest Hotel,” “The Imitation Game,” “Selma” and “The Theory of Everything.”
The following studios used Autodesk and/or Shotgun software to contribute movie magic to this year’s Academy Award-nominated films: Alchemy 24, Animal Logic, The Artery, BlueBolt, Cantina Creative, Cinesite, CoSA Visual Effects, Digital Domain, Double Negative, DreamWorks Animation, EFILM, Encore, Finland Finish, Framestore, Fuel VFX, Hydraulx, Industrial Light & Magic, LAIKA, Lola Visual Effects, LOOK! Effects, Luma Pictures, Luxx Studios, Method Studios, Modern VideoFilm, Mokko Studio, Moving Picture Company, Prime Focus, Proof, Rhythm & Hues, RISE VFX Studio, Rising Sun Pictures, Rodeo FX, Sony Pictures Imageworks, Studio Ghibli, Technicolor, The Third Floor, Tonko House, Union, Vision Globale, Walt Disney Animation Studios, Weta Digital and Whiskytree.
Sci-Tech Award
The Academy hosts a special awards ceremony annually to recognize individuals whose achievements “demonstrate a proven record of contributing significant value to the process of making motion pictures.”
This year the Academy awarded a Technical Achievement Award to Robert Bridson, a senior principal research scientist at Autodesk, for his “pioneering work on voxel data structures and its subsequent validation in fluid simulation tools [that] have had a significant impact on the design of volumetric tools throughout the visual effects industry. This voxel technology (aka 3D pixel) has been used throughout the industry with Weta Digital in New Zealand as one of the earliest adopters for “Avatar.” Autodesk scientists, designers and technologies have been similarly recognized seven times in past Sci-Tech Award ceremonies.