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7:23 pm - 02/25/2013

VFX Artist Writes Open Letter to Ang Lee

VFX-Oscar-goes-to-Life-of-001




Dear Mr. Lee,

When asked about the bankruptcy of Rhythm + Hues, the visual effects house largely responsible for making your film “life of Pi” as incredible as it was, you said:

“I would like it to be cheaper and not a tough business [for VFX vendors]. It’s easy for me to say, but it’s very tough. It’s very hard for them to make money. The research and development is so expensive; that is a big burden for every house. They all have good times and hard times, and in the tough times, some may not [survive].”


I just want to point out that while, yes R&D can be expensive and yes it takes a lot of technology and computing power to create films like yours, it is not computer chips and hard drives that are costing you so very much money.  It is the artists that are helping you create your film.


So when you say  “I would like it to be cheaper,” as an artist I take that personally.   It took hundreds of hours from skilled artists and hard-working coordinators and producers to craft the environments and performances in life of Pi.  Not to mention the engineers that wrote all of that proprietary code and build the R+H pipeline.  That is where your money went.  I’d say, judging from the night you just had, you got one hell of a deal.


Incidentally, those were the same gorgeous sunsets and vistas that your DP Claudio Miranda took credit for without so much as a word of thanks to those artists. And the same animated performances that helped win you the best director statue.  Nice of you to mentionthe pool crew, but maybe you could have thanked the guys and gals who turned that pool in to an ocean and put a tiger in to that boat?


It was world class work, after all.  And after a fabulously insulting and dismissive introduction from the cast of the avengers, at least two of whom spent fully half of their film as a digitally animated character, R+H won for it’s work on your very fine piece of cinema. And just as the bankruptcy was about to be acknowledged on a nationally-televised platform, the speech was cut short.  By the Jaws theme.


If this was meant as a joke, we artists are not laughing.


Mr. Lee, I do believe that you are a thoughtful and brilliant man. And a gifted filmmaker. But I also believe that you and everyone in your tier of our business is fabulously ignorant to the pain and turmoil you are putting artists through.  Our employers scramble to chase illegal film subsidies across the globe at the behest of the film studios.  Those same subsidies raise overhead, distort the market, and cause wage stagnation in what are already trying economic times.  Your VFX are already cheaper than they should be.  It is disheartening to see how blissfully unaware of this fact you truly are.


By all accounts, R+H is a fantastic place to work; a truly great group of people who treat their employees with fairness and respect.  Much like Zoic Studios, the fabulous company that I am proud to work for. But I am beginning to wonder if these examples of decency will be able to survive in such a hostile environment.  Or if the horror stories of unpaid overtime and illegal employment practices will become the norm, all because you and your fellow filmmakers “would like it to be cheaper.”


I for one won’t stand for it.  Please join me.



Warmest regards and congratulations,
Phillip Broste
Lead Compositor




source

baboona 26th-Feb-2013 01:16 am (UTC)
And just as the bankruptcy was about to be acknowledged on a nationally-televised platform, the speech was cut short. By the Jaws theme.


If this was meant as a joke, we artists are not laughing.


is he being dense on purpose? ang lee was not in charge of producing the oscars afaik
saltireflower 26th-Feb-2013 01:32 am (UTC)
Yeah, I didn't get that part. Ang Lee had nothing to do with the speech getting cut.
improved 26th-Feb-2013 10:42 pm (UTC)
I work in the VFX industry and no one holds Ang Lee accountable for that. That was completely on the producers of the Oscars queuing the music and cutting the mic. The problem is that after that happened, when Ang Lee had the opportunity to thank the VFX artists for their work/mention his thoughts out to them since 250 of them had lost their jobs, he thanked the Thailand crew and the tank crew, but none of the people that helped bring his second main character, Richard Parker, to life. Then Ang Lee had to go and say he wishes VFX were cheaper. VFX are not just buttons pressed into a computer and then rendered out. It takes dozens and dozens of skilled artists, technicians and producers to do what seems like the Impossible (speaking of the Impossible, it took 4 VFX companies a year to create the 10 minute tsunami sequence in that movie, which I'm sure most viewers didn't even think about when they saw it).

So anyways, I digressed, but no, the guy isn't being dense. The VFX industry is in a seriously frail state and I hope that this situation highlights the problems in the last film industry with no union protection.
kissoffools 27th-Feb-2013 12:25 am (UTC)
Bless this comment. I don't work in VFX but I work on a tv show that deals heavily with VFX, and it's really opened my eyes to how much work, time and skill goes into stuff like this.
homicidalslayer 1st-Mar-2013 04:16 am (UTC)
the last film industry with no union protection.

http://www.aflcio.org/Learn-About-Unions/How-to-Join-or-Form-a-Union
ediesedgwick 1st-Mar-2013 02:53 pm (UTC)
Well thank god it's so cut and dry. I'm sure just starting a union has never occurred to anyone until you posted this link just now
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