Thursday, May 26, 2011

FILM - SPECIAL EFFECTS



Special effects (or SFX) are used in the film and entertainment industry to create effects that cannot be achieved by normal means, such as travel to other star systems.
They are also used when creating the effect by normal means is prohibitively expensive, such as an enormous explosion. They are also used to enhance normal visual effects.


Many different visual special effects techniques exist, ranging from traditional theater effects, through classic film techniques invented in the early 20th century, to modern computer graphics techniques (CGI). Often several different techniques are used together in a single scene or shot to achieve the desired effect.

Special effects are often "invisible." That is to say that the audience is unaware that what they are seeing is a special effect. This is often the case in historical movies, where the architecture and other surroundings of previous eras is created using special effects.

Visual special effects techniques (in rough order of invention):

practical effects - 
in - camera effects - 
miniature effects 
matte paintings - 
Hitchcock zoom 
optical effects 
travelling matte - 
bluescreen 
prosthetic makeup effects 
motion control photography 
animatronic - models 
digital compositing 
wire removal 
morphing 
Computer Generated Imagery


Notable special effects artists:

Richard Edlund - 
Ray Harryhausen 
Derek Meddings - 
Ken Ralston - 
Douglas Trumbull - 


Notable special effects companies:

Cinesite - 
Computer Film Company 
Digital Domain - 
Industrial Light and Magic 
SGI 

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