95th Academy Awards

Check out our interactive timeline

There is no greater achievement for VFX pioneers than recognition at the Academy Awards®️. Here at Foundry, we're proud to have provided the VFX tools behind almost every film nominated in the Best Visual Effects category for over a decade.

This year marks 95 years of the Academy Awards. To celebrate this special anniversary, we've taken a look back at some of the most spectacular nominees and winners in the Best Visual Effects category. Explore the list on our interactive timeline below.

2022

We see you…

And just like 13 years ago, Avatar: The Way of Water is the winner! Congratulations to Wētā FX and all the VFX creatives that brought a mesmerizing story to our screens.

James Cameron’s sci-fi epic was led by Production Senior VFX Supervisor Joe Letteri, alongside VFX Supervisors Richard Baneham and Eric Saindon, as well as Senior Animation Supervisor Daniel Barrett. Similarly to Jake Sully’s saying, “Let’s get it done”, the VFX team indeed got it done. By combining enormous water tanks, real-size boats, and underwater performance capture, as well as bringing majestic creatures such as Tulkun, they created 192 minutes of pure aquatic and terrestrial magic.

2021

And the winner is...

Dune! Congratulations to DNEG and all the VFX creatives involved in the retelling of this beloved sci-fi epic!

Led by Production VFX Supervisor Paul Lambert, alongside VFX Supervisors Tristan Myles and Brian Connor, the VFX elements in Dune were meticulously designed to immerse audiences into the dystopian world based on Frank Herbert’s novel. With a mix of practical effects, impressive sets, FX simulations, and photorealistic VFX, it is truly a well-deserved Academy Award for the team at DNEG.

2020

Tenet

This sci-fi, action-adventure sees another Oscar win for Christopher Nolan and the fantastic DNEG VFX team. With six wins in the past ten years, the creatives at DNEG played an integral part in executing the film's complex time-traveling narrative.

2019

1917

Creating the illusion that 1917 had been captured in one continuous shot proved no easy feat, but VFX supervisor Guillaume Rocheron and his team at Moving Picture Company rose to the challenge, digitally stitching together scores of invisible moments and creating entire digital environments from scratch to win over worthy contenders such as The Lion King and The Irishman.

2018
Blade Runner Crew Receiving Oscar

First Man

The tale of Neil Armstrong in the launchpad years before his historic voyage took the honours in what was an eclectic but incredibly strong field for 2019’s visual effects gong. The team at DNEG pushed the boundaries of in-camera shooting for First Man, eschewing green screens in favour of a giant LED screen which featured subtle, true-to-life use of lighting, enhancing the realism of an otherwise fantastical spacecraft.

2017
Blade Runner Crew Receiving Oscar

Blade Runner 2049

Last year's winner was the sci-fi epic Blade Runner 2049. Make sure you check out how deep compositing with Foundry’s Nuke helped Atomic Fiction bring the eerie cityscapes of the film to life in our case study.

Read the case study

2016

The Jungle Book

Jon Favreau’s The Jungle Book put a modern spin on the Disney classic. Shot entirely against a blue screen, the only live action element came in the form of Mowgli (Neel Sethi), with the rest of the animals, jungle and environments being computer-generated. The deserved VFX victor at the 89th Academy Awards had its innovative work led by the team at MPC.

2015

Ex Machina

VFX Winner

Alex Garland made his directorial debut with the breathtaking sci-fi thriller Ex Machina. Telling the story of a programmer who is invited by his CEO to administer the Turing test to an intelligent humanoid robot, Ex Machina broke new ground in CGI. Double Negative were instrumental in bringing the Ava robot to life, using CG-rendered parts that moved internally. The result was the creation of the most realistic-looking humanoid in cinematic history, and won the company their third Best Visual Effects Oscar®.

The Martian

VFX Nominee

The Martian picked up 26 Best Picture award nominations in 2015, including at the Academy Awards and Golden Globes. The Mars scenes were filmed in the Wadi Valley in Jordan, with the Moving Picture Company tackling the epic job of creating a realistic Martian world by adding mountains, hills and the iconic red tint to replicate the color of the planet.

Star Wars: The Force Awakens

VFX Nominee

JJ Abrams’ epic film blew away audiences and set new global box-office records. In order to create a film that fans would remember and love, ILM used Foundry tools to bring their ideas to life. From the vivid textures of the Millennium Falcon, to the droid lighting and the immersive blast fire in the opening sequence, The Force Awakens was worthy of its Best Visual Effects nomination at the 88th Academy Awards.

Read more about the VFX tools used in this film in our case study.

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2014

Interstellar

VFX Winner

Interstellar was another Christopher Nolan blockbuster to challenge the boundaries of visual effects technology. Using projectors to eliminate the need for green screens, actors were able to see the near-final result during production. Visual effects company New Deal Studios used Modo to engineer overall models of the film's spaceships part by part. That work, along with Double Negative's, helped earn the film a Best Visual Effects award.

Read our case study to find out more about New Deal Studio's work on Interstellar.

Read the case study

2013

Gravity

VFX Winner

After opening the 70th Venice International Film Festival, Gravity—Alfonso Cuarón’s science fiction blockbuster—won the Best Visual Effects Oscar® in 2013. British visual effects company Framestore spent over three years creating scenes that were both literally and figuratively out of this world.

You can read how Nuke was fundamental in creating realistic outer space in Gravity in our case study.

Read the case study

2012

Life of Pi

VFX Winner

Winning Rhythm & Hues their third Academy Award, Ang Lee’s survival drama film Life of Pi earned great acclaim for its mesmerising visual effects. The giant Bengal tiger present throughout the film never needed to appear on set, yet it roams the boat in post-production as if it had been there all along.

2011

Hugo

VFX Winner

In Martin Scorsese’s first 3D film, Hugo—the tale of a young boy living in the Gare Montparnasse railway station in the 1930s—a total of 800 visual effects shots were used in the final cut of the epic adventure film. Visual effects company Pixomondo used a mix of Nuke, Ocula and Mari to innovate and develop new approaches as they brought Hugo to life.

Read the case study

2010

Inception

VFX Winner

Christopher Nolan’s science fiction blockbuster Inception took audiences into a series of riveting dream worlds. With Double Negative's spectacular visuals that see Parisian architecture flipped upside down and a gravity-defying fist fight, the fast-paced thriller pushed the boundaries of physics, and with it the abilities of visual effects.

Alice in Wonderland

VFX Nominee

In Tim Burton’s brilliantly bizarre fantasy film Alice in Wonderland, visual effects pioneers Sony Pictures Imageworks paved the way for the weird and wonderful. Using Nuke, artists were able to distort proportions, creating the Red Queen’s larger-than-life head, Alice’s ever-changing dimensions, and the Mad Hatter’s outsized eyes.

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Nominated for the Best Visual Effects Academy Award in 2010, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part One is one of the most celebrated films of the franchise for its visual effects work. While several companies contributed to the visual effects, boutique house Baseblack used Mari to perfect the texture of Dumbledore’s tomb.

Read the case study

2009

Avatar

VFX Winner

James Cameron’s first feature film since Titanic in 1997, Avatar raised the bar for visual effects forever. Taking almost 10 years to create, Cameron and the team at Weta Digital evolved the use of visual effects tools to create this epic.

You can read how Nuke and Ocula helped to deliver James Cameron’s award-winning vision for Avatar in our case study.

Read the case study

2008

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

VFX Winner

Reversing the aging process is something many people dream of achieving, but the visual effects in David Fincher's The Curious Case of Benjamin Button not only make the feat look possible, but positively seamless. The team at Digital Domain employed astounding new "emotion capture" techniques to recreate Brad Pitt's facial expressions in CGI.

2007

The Golden Compass

VFX Winner

The Golden Compass won the Best Visual Effects category at the 80th Academy Awards. Set in a parallel universe, Rhythm & Hues' extensive VFX work helped create everything from battling armored polar bears, to the magical alethiometer from which the film takes its name.