VES Awards 2023 Winners List – Deadline

VES Awards 2023 Winners List – Deadline

Avatar: The Way of Water dominated the 21st annual VES Awards tonight, swimming away with nine trophies at the Beverly Hilton. See the full winners list below.

James Cameron’s smash sequel came into the Visual Effects Society’s ceremony with a record 14 nominations. That shattered the old VES Awards mark for films, set by — no big surprise here — the original Avatar, which amassed 11 noms in 2010. It also won the society’s marquee award that night ahead of a VFX win at the Oscars.

Thirteen Lives — the harrowing story of the 2018 Thai cave rescue from Amazon Studios, MGM and United Artists Releasing — won for Supporting Visual Effects in a Photoreal Feature, and Netflix’s Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio led the toon feature field with three wins including Visual Effects in an Animated Feature.

‘Avatar: The Way of Water’ (Disney)

Disney

Along with the marquee prize for Outstanding Visual Effects in a Photoreal Feature, The Way of Water snagged statuettes for character, environment, model and virtual cinematography, among others. Since the VES Awards launched in 2002, its main film winner has gone on to take the Visual Effects Oscar in 11 of the 20 years. Last year, Universal’s Dune won the top VES honor en route to Academy Award glory.

The Disney sequel from 20th Century Studios also won this year’s new VES Awards category. The Emerging Technology Award celebrates the creators of the technology behind the visuals and honors the inventors of a novel and uniquely innovative tool, device, software or methodology of outstanding value to the art and science of visual effects, gaming or animation.

The only other film winner tonight was Universal and DreamWorks Animation’s Puss in Boots: The Last Wish for Effects Simulations in an Animated Feature.

Elsewhere, Prime Video’s The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power took three trophies to pace the TV winners. Other small-screen shows taking home VES statuettes include HBO’s The Last of Us, Hulu’s Five Days at Memorial and Netflix’s The Umbrella Academy and Love, Death + Robots.

The show opened with a thrilling visual effects clips reel from nominated movies and shows set to Stevie Ray Vaughan’s “Rude Mood.” Win-win. Patton Oswalt, hosting the show for a 10th time, opened his monologue by reminding the crowd that Cameron calls him “The Shape of Pudding” before roasting recently retired VES exec director Eric Roth.

Oswalt later closed the show by saying: “I’m just seeing on Twitter that Avatar: The Way of Water also won a Tony tonight and Playmate of the Year. I’ll see you all again in 2035 for Avatar 3.”

Rian Johnson presented the night’s first award for Outstanding Visual Effects in a Special Venue Project to the team behind ABBA: Voyage, offsetting the semi-reunited Swedish quartet’s snubs at the Grammys this month. He then presented the award for Visual Effects in a Real-Time Project to video game The Last of Us, Part I.

On the small-screen side, Created Environment in an Episode, Commercial or Real-Time Project, which went to The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power, which later also won a pair of other awards including Visual Effects in a Photoreal Episode.

Love, Death + Robots won for Compositing and Lighting in an Episode, and The Umbrella Academy took Outstanding Animated Character in an Episode, Commercial or Real-Time Project for the character Pogo. Five Days at Memorial won Supporting Visual Effects in a Photoreal Episode.

Cameron presented the VES Lifetime Achievement Award to Gale Anne Hurd, calling her “my friend, my mentor and my very first producer. He noted that they met when both were working on low-budget Roger Corman films. They went on to work together on such classics as the first two Terminator films, Aliens and The Abyss. A clips reel reminded of how deserving she is for a VFX career nod.

After saying she “couldn’t imagine getting this award from anybody else,” Hurd said her local movie theater was “essentially my baby-sitter.” She then discussed her mentor Julian Blaustein and said she wrote her first college paper on 2001: A Space Odyssey — and ended working for Corman because he’d read the paper.

“You are my heroes, one and all,” she told the crowd, “and this honor means more to me than you could ever imagine.”

Later it was hugs all around later when Roth, the VES’ former 19-year executive director, took the stage to accept its 2023 VES Board of Directors Award. After warning of a “very long speech” ahead, he thanked “everyone who ever stepped up and made a difference” for the society and those who work hard on its awards show.

After calling this “the golden age of visual effects,” he got very serious, talking about how many VFX pros are “expected to work 14-plus-hour days and 90-hour weeks to deliver their shots.”

Roth said many visual effects pros have to put off retirement “because of the fragile nature of their work reality,” adding, “companies just need to do the right thing because doing the right this is just the right thing to do.”

Here are the winners announced so far tonight at the 2023 VES Awards, along with the previously announced juried winners:

OUTSTANDING VISUAL EFFECTS IN A PHOTOREAL FEATURE

Avatar: The Way of Water
Richard Baneham
Walter Garcia
Joe Letteri
Eric Saindon
JD Schwalm

OUTSTANDING VISUAL EFFECTS IN AN ANIMATED FEATURE

Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio
Aaron Weintraub
Jeffrey Schaper
Cameron Carson
Emma Gorbey

OUTSTANDING VISUAL EFFECTS IN A COMMERCIAL

Frito-Lay; Push It
Tom Raynor
Sophie Harrison
Ben Cronin
Martino Madeddu

OUTSTANDING VISUAL EFFECTS IN A PHOTOREAL EPISODE

The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power; Udûn
Jason Smith
Ron Ames
Nigel Sumner
Tom Proctor
Dean Clarke

OUTSTANDING SUPPORTING VISUAL EFFECTS IN A PHOTOREAL FEATURE

Thirteen Lives
Jason Billington
Thomas Horton
Denis Baudin
Michael Harrison Brian Cox

OUTSTANDING SUPPORTING VISUAL EFFECTS IN A PHOTOREAL EPISODE

Five Days at Memorial; Day Two
Eric Durst
Danny McNair
Matt Whelan
Goran Pavles
John MacGillivray

OUTSTANDING ANIMATED CHARACTER IN AN ANIMATED FEATURE

Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio; Pinocchio
Oliver Beale
Richard Pickersgill
Brian Leif Hansen
Kim Slate

OUTSTANDING ANIMATED CHARACTER IN AN EPISODE, COMMERCIAL OR REAL-TIME PROJECT

The Umbrella Academy; Pogo
Aidan Martin
Hannah Dockerty
Olivier Beierlein
Miae Kang

OUTSTANDING ANIMATED CHARACTER IN A PHOTOREAL FEATURE

Avatar: The Way of Water; Kiri
Anneka Fris
Rebecca Louise Leybourne
Guillaume Francois
Jung Rock Hwang

OUTSTANDING EFFECTS SIMULATIONS IN A PHOTOREAL FEATURE

Avatar: The Way of Water; Water Simulations
Johnathan Nixon
David Moraton
Nicolas James Illingworth
David Caeiro Cebrian

OUTSTANDING EFFECTS SIMULATIONS IN AN ANIMATED FEATURE

Puss in Boots: The Last Wish
Derek Cheung
Michael Losure
Kiem Ching Ong
Jinguang Huang

OUTSTANDING EFFECTS SIMULATIONS IN AN EPISODE, COMMERCIAL, OR REAL-TIME PROJECT

The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power; Udûn; Water and Magma
Rick Hankins
|Aron Bonar
Branko Grujcic
Laurent Kermel

OUTSTANDING COMPOSITING & LIGHTING IN A FEATURE

Avatar: The Way of Water; Water Integration
Sam Cole
Francois Sugny
Florian Schroeder
Jean Matthews

OUTSTANDING COMPOSITING & LIGHTING IN A COMMERCIAL

Ladbrokes; Rocky
Greg Spencer
Theajo Dharan
Georgina Ford
Jonathan Westley

OUTSTANDING COMPOSITING & LIGHTING IN AN EPISODE

Love, Death + Robots; Night of the Mini Dead
Tim Emeis
José Maximiano
Renaud Tissandié
Nacere Guerouaf

OUTSTANDING SPECIAL (PRACTICAL) EFFECTS IN A PHOTOREAL PROJECT

Avatar: The Way of Water; Current Machine and Wave Pool
JD Schwalm
Richard Schwalm
Nick Rand
Robert Spurlock

OUTSTANDING MODEL IN A PHOTOREAL OR ANIMATED PROJECT

Avatar: The Way of Water; The Sea Dragon
Sam Sharplin
Stephan Skorepa
Ian Baker
Guillaume Francois

EMERGING TECHNOLOGY AWARD

Avatar: The Way of Water; Water Toolset
Alexey Dmitrievich Stomakhin
Steve Lesser
Sven Joel Wretborn
Douglas McHale

OUTSTANDING VIRTUAL CINEMATOGRAPHY IN A CG PROJECT

Avatar: The Way of Water
Richard Baneham
Dan Cox
Eric Reynolds
A.J Briones

OUTSTANDING CREATED ENVIRONMENT IN A PHOTOREAL FEATURE

Avatar: The Way of Water; The Reef
Jessica Cowley
Joe W. Churchill
Justin Stockton
Alex Nowotny

OUTSTANDING CREATED ENVIRONMENT IN AN ANIMATED FEATURE

Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio; In the Stomach of a Sea Monster
Warren Lawtey
Anjum Sakharkar
Javier Gonzalez Alonso
Quinn Carvalho

OUTSTANDING CREATED ENVIRONMENT IN AN EPISODE, COMMERCIAL, OR REAL-TIME PROJECT

The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power; Adar; Númenor City
Dan Wheaton
Nico Delbecq
Dan Letarte
Julien Gauthier

OUTSTANDING VISUAL EFFECTS IN A REAL-TIME PROJECT

The Last of Us Part I
Erick Pangilinan
Evan Wells
Eben Cook
Mary Jane Whiting

OUTSTANDING VISUAL EFFECTS IN A SPECIAL VENUE PROJECT

ABBA: Voyage
Ben Morris
Edward Randolph
Stephen Aplin
Ian Comley

OUTSTANDING VISUAL EFFECTS IN A STUDENT PROJECT (AWARD SPONSORED BY AUTODESK)

A Calling. From the Desert. To the Sea
Mario Bertsch
Max Pollmann
Lukas Löffler
Till Sander-Titgemeyer

WINSOR McCAY AWARD (Juried winners)

Pete Docter
Evelyn Lambart
Craig McCracken

UB IWERKS AWARD (Juried winner)

Visual Effects Reference Platform

CERTIFICATE OF MERIT AWARD (Juried winner)

John Omohundro



Share This Article