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skullman80 wrote:I think she used a body double in that movie for those scenes.
Edit: I take that back I don't think she did.

Eismann wrote: And I have a renewed respect for M. Tomei's goodies.

eddysnake wrote:Don't the VFX teams bid out for these projects essentially putting themselves into these positions? I don't doubt that this is a serious issue, but I'd worry less about what Ang Lee said and more about the VFX industry with technology being where it is today. That was a dick move by the academy producers though.

Pavel Bure wrote:skullman80 wrote:I think she used a body double in that movie for those scenes.
Edit: I take that back I don't think she did.
I think in this instance, "I take that back." translates to, "I just went and watched those scenes again just to make sure... for research... in the interest of being thorough."

tifosi77 wrote:eddysnake wrote:Don't the VFX teams bid out for these projects essentially putting themselves into these positions? I don't doubt that this is a serious issue, but I'd worry less about what Ang Lee said and more about the VFX industry with technology being where it is today. That was a dick move by the academy producers though.
A big part of the problem is something like $400 million in "subsidies" from the Canadian government to lure post production companies up north. This allows the post houses to underbid projects by absolutely ridiculous amounts. It goes like this: Canadian gov't will give a U.S. post house a $5 million tax credit to move their operations to Vancouver (hiring local artists, compositors, animators, etc) for the eighteen months needed to complete their work, which allows said house to underbid a job by that $5 million...... a job which might be worth $12 million on the 'fair' market. That's a 40% discount.
It would be one thing if the Canadian gov't was offering the subsidies to Canadian businesses. That's kosher. But by offering the subsidies to U.S. companies to lure them up north, that is against the express provisions of the WTO agreement, and it needs to be called out. It has had a really deleterious effect on the local entertainment industry. This practice has been going on since the late 90s when so-called 'runaway productions' were gaining in popularity. For example, almost all of "The X-Files" was shot in Canada, thanks to these massive government subsidies. It's only just recently that it's really coming to the VFX community.
There is also a growing practice of U.S. post houses winning bids by matching the subsidy-bolstered bids, and then using unpaid college interns to do a huge chunk of the work. That's not cool, either. But it's one of the only ways the U.S. companies can compete. Sucks.



tifosi77 wrote: This practice has been going on since the late 90s when so-called 'runaway productions' were gaining in popularity. For example, almost all of "The X-Files" was shot in Canada, thanks to these massive government subsidies.



pittsoccer33 wrote:how long until cgi is a commodity or close to it? how long until a small independent production company can effectively pull off a movie like Transformers or Avatar?
I think it will be much sooner than later. It's happened in the music industry - a group like Breathe Carolina releases professional sounding recordings that were made with nothing more than a Macbook.
pittsoccer33 wrote:This film is getting some interest in Hollywood. It was something a single german animation student put together. Alone, without a kabillion dollars worth of servers.
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-v ... ing-411105

tifosi77 wrote:Turn off the internet, this is as good as it gets.

tifosi77 wrote:pittsoccer33 wrote:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-v ... ing-411105
That's a wonderful reel, a résumé to get a job at a shop that has a kabillion dollars worth of servers. Because it still takes that to make photo-real imagery.

pittsoccer33 wrote:tifosi77 wrote:pittsoccer33 wrote:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-v ... ing-411105
That's a wonderful reel, a résumé to get a job at a shop that has a kabillion dollars worth of servers. Because it still takes that to make photo-real imagery.
How far away are we from budget effects studios being able to use relatively mainstream CGI tools to create digital characters and environments with proper 3D lighting, shading, etc?



eddysnake wrote:I get that Ang Lee is a producer on Life of Pi, so he probably had a hand in hiring the VSX team, but it feels like he's getting a bad rap by doing business as usual.

tifosi77 wrote:eddysnake wrote:I get that Ang Lee is a producer on Life of Pi, so he probably had a hand in hiring the VSX team, but it feels like he's getting a bad rap by doing business as usual.
That's kind of the problem.... this is business as usual. It's just now, business as usual is forcing some major effect houses (Digital Domain, Rhythm & Hues) into Chapter 11.
Should also point out that VFX is one of the few (only?) disciplines in the movie industry that has no collective bargaining arrangement. Not sure why that is, in a town that will literally shut down a set if it is learned that an actor drove themselves to the lot that morning.
That's where the term "TMZ" comes from, for the uninitiated. Productions that take place within a Thirty Mile Zone surrounding the intersection of Beverly and La Cienega (near the Beverly Center mall, which was destroyed in the movie "Volcano") are subject to the full panoply of union rates for everything from Teamsters to craft services to the Director of Photography to the Director to the actors on set.
R&H's financial downward financial spiral began in 2011 when Universal cancelled part of a contract on "Snow White and the Huntsman" after staffing and R&D were under way. Company sought an equity investor but their first deal fell through when the Digital Domain bankruptcy frightened off the potential partner. By January Warner, Fox and Universal had to step in to keep work moving. Fox and U. wanted R&H to declare bankruptcy, but Warners insisted it would pull its work if that happened. The trio settled on a financial mechanism one insider described as "neither a loan nor an investment."
Prime Focus stepped in as a potential buyer but was unable to raise the necessary funds to acquire R&H. At that point, R&H management decided bankruptcy was the best option. Warners is weighing its decision on how to proceed and negotiations with all three studios on the future of R&H's projects are ongoing.


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