Santa Clara, Calif. - Each of the films nominated for an Academy Award for Visual Effects in this year's competition depended on Nvidia Quadro professional graphics to power their stunning special effects, reveals an Nvidia representative.
The nominated films -
Avatar,
District 9, and
Star Trek - all delivered unprecedented levels of sophistication and realism to the screen in the form of computer-generated fantasy and science-fiction worlds. The winner will be announced at the 82nd Academy Awards ceremony on March 7th
at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood, Calif.
Weta Digital Ltd., of Wellington, New Zealand, served as the primary visual effects vendor on
Avatar and is a longtime Nvidia customer. It deploys both Quadro professional graphics solutions and Nvidia Tesla high-performance computing solutions in its visual effects (VFX) production pipeline. The computational complexity of its "Avatar" shots was significantly higher than any project Weta had ever faced.
"We needed to think about rendering in a completely different way, given the complexity of
Avatar," says Sebastian Sylwan, Weta's head of research and development. "By working together with Nvidia, we found a way to render incredibly sophisticated scenes in far less time, giving artists the critical ability to freely experiment with different lighting and iterate faster."
Industrial Light & Magic (ILM), based in San Francisco, produced 850 of the approximately 1,000 shots in the most recent
Star Trek film and had created visual effects for six of the previous 10 editions in the series. The work required extensive demolition of planets, the creation of the Starship Enterprise and other spacecraft and creatures, as well as extensive digital matte paintings.
"This project marked our most ambitious effort on a
Star Trek film to date. We tapped the iconic references from the series and previous films and really took them to the next level driven by J.J. Abrams' creative vision," says Michael DiComo, ILM digital production supervisor.
"Our teams at ILM have established a solid development partnership with NVIDIA to help move the boundaries of visual effects technology to the next level. In the facility, there is an NVIDIA Quadro FX 5800 card sitting on each of our top end workstations to provide the kind of real-time visualizations of the high-fidelity and very complex level of work that a film like 'Star Trek' demands."
Image Engine Design Inc. of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, led the visual effects work on
District 9, which seamlessly integrates an alien race into gritty documentary-style footage of Johannesburg, South Africa. The firm deployed nearly 100 Nvidia Quadro professional graphics cards in Linux workstations in producing every alien shot in the film.
"The decision to standardize on Nvidia Quadro graphics for
District 9 and other film projects was very simple_they just work really well," says B. Terry Bates, head of systems, Image Engine.
The Embassy Visual Effects Inc., also based in Vancouver, completed the climactic Exo-suit sequence in the film and also used Nvidia processors.
"We were faced with animating a very complex, high-poly count character featured in over 100 shots," says Simon Van de Lagemaat, The Embassy's CG supervisor. "Nvidia graphics cards were essential in giving our artists the speed and feedback they needed to produce amazing animation on an extremely tight deadline."
Dan Vivoli, senior vice president, Nvidia, says: "The intricate and immersive computer generated worlds created by this year's visual effects nominees have amazed theater goers and shattered box-office records. While we don't know who will take home the Oscar, we do know that Nvidia is honored to partner with all of them. The Embassy VFX, ILM, Image Design, and Weta Digital challenge us to create technologies that, in turn, enable them to evolve their craft in ways we could never imagine."