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Rising Sun Pictures Nominated for VES Award for ‘X-Men: Apocalypse’

Nomination for Outstanding Composition in a Photoreal Feature comes for RSP’s work on the Quicksilver Extraction sequence in ‘X-Men: Apocalypse.’

ADELAIDE, Australia -- Rising Sun Pictures has been nominated for Outstanding Compositing in a Photoreal Feature in the Visual Effects Society’s 15th Annual VES Awards. The nomination comes for the studio’s work on the Quicksilver Extraction sequence from the 20th Century Fox film X-Men: Apocalypse. Nominees include Alana Newell and Compositors Jess Burnheim, Andy Peel and Matthew Shaw.

“We extend our heartiest congratulations to Alana, Jess, Andy and Matthew on this wonderful honor,” said RSP’s Managing Director Tony Clark. “It’s very rewarding to see their hard work, dedication and creativity recognized by their industry peers. It inspires us to continue to produce excellence.” Winners will be announced February 7 in Los Angeles where members of the RSP team will be in attendance.

See Rising Sun Pictures’ VFX breakdown for X-Men: Apocalypse in the player below:

In the Extraction sequence, Quicksilver (Evan Peters) uses his hyper-speed ability to rescue mutants—and a bulldog—from an exploding building. The sequence builds on a notable scene from the preceding X-Men: Days of Future Past (an Academy Award nominee for Best Achievement in Visual Effects), also executed by RSP.

Practical stunts, motion control cinematography, slow motion, CG environments, effects simulations and re-timed footage are seamlessly composited to tell the story. “Each shot was creatively designed to conform to ‘Quicksilver time,’” explains Newell. “Our compositors worked with the layout and effects teams to calibrate the timing and composition of the explosions. Debris and re-timed plates were laid out to plot how they would work with the live action footage. Passes were rendered in deep, which was especially useful in dealing with characters that move in and out spaces that are filled with fire, debris, volumetric and other characters.”

The aesthetic balance of each shot was driven in compositing to create the most appealing balance of elements. “There were a large number of source frames due to plates that were shot at high frame rates and multiple motion control passes,” Newell notes. “The team had to ensure that composites were efficient and flexible enough to quickly respond to client timing and layout changes.”

Stabilization was a significant challenge. In order to make actors appear frozen in time, compositors had to rotoscope individual body parts for control and stabilization. Subtle motion was then applied to each character to give the impression that they were being affected, slowly, by the pressure wake of the explosion.

Source: Rising Sun Pictures