Sony Pictures Imageworks Inc. is a Canadian visual effects and computer animation studio headquartered in Vancouver , British Columbia and Montréal, Québec, with an additional office on the Sony Pictures Studios lot in Culver City, California.[2] SPI is a unit of Sony Pictures Entertainment's Motion Picture Group.[3][4]
The company has been recognized by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences with Oscars for their work on Spider-Man 2 and the computer-animated short film The ChubbChubbs!, and received many other nominations for their work.
SPI has provided visual effects for many films; most recent include The Meg, Men in Black: International, and Spider-Man: Far From Home. They also provided services for several of director Robert Zemeckis' films, including Contact, Cast Away, The Polar Express, and Beowulf.
Since the foundation of its sister company Sony Pictures Animation in 2002, SPI would go on to animate nearly all of SPA's films, including Open Season, Surf's Up, Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, and films in the Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs, Smurfs and Hotel Transylvania franchises, in addition to animating films for other studios such as Arthur Christmas for Aardman Animations (co-produced by SPA), Storks and Smallfoot for Warner Animation Group (now known as Warner Bros. Pictures Animation), The Angry Birds Movie for Rovio Animation and its sequel (co-produced by SPA and Rovio), Over the Moon for Netflix and Pearl Studio, and The Sea Beast for Netflix Animation.
Sony Pictures Imageworks was formed in 1992 with five employees to use computers to help plan complicated scenes for live-action films.[5] Located in the former TriStar building, their first work was a previsualization for the 1993 film Striking Distance.[6]
To fill the gaps between VFX jobs, SPI decided to partake in a more profitable animation business.[7] Its first independent animated effort was the 5-minute short The ChubbChubbs! directed by Eric Armstrong. In 2002, it won the Oscar for Best Animated Short. Early Bloomer, released in 2003, was the division's second short film and originally made as a storyboarding exercise.[8] SPI completed its first feature animation project in 2006 with the release of Open Season, which was produced by sister company Sony Pictures Animation.
In 2007, SPI acquired Indian visual effects studio FrameFlow to take advantage of lower labor costs.[7][9] Renamed to Imageworks India, a modern facility was opened in Chennai a year later.[10] To leverage New Mexico's tax rebates and talent base,[11] a satellite production facility was opened in 2007 in Albuquerque,[12] becoming the largest post-production operation in the state.[13] In 2010, SPI opened a production studio in Vancouver , British Columbia, in order to take advantage of the local talent pool and government film production incentives.[14] Two years later, the studio doubled its Vancouver facilities.[15] At the same time, the Albuquerque studio was closed down due to declining New Mexico's subsidies and difficulty with attracting artists to move there.[11]
In the beginning of 2014, as part of Sony's cost-cutting move, SPI transferred a portion of its technology team from its headquarters in Culver City to Vancouver.[7] By May 2014, entire headquarters and production had been moved to Vancouver, with only a small office remaining in Culver City.[16] At the same time, SPI closed down its Indian studio, laying off around 100 employees[17] A year later, over 700 artists moved into a new 74,000-square feet headquarters in Vancouver.[18][19]
On October 6, 2023, Cartoon Brew reported that DreamWorks Animation was moving away from producing films in-house at their Glendale campus to rely more heavily on outside studios after 2024, as part of a layoff by chief operating officer Randy Lake in a series of meetings the previous month. According to the report, SPI was named as the animation service for an unannounced DreamWorks sequel scheduled for 2025.[20]
Technology
During 2009-2010, SPI made transition from traditional biased, multi-pass rendering system to a largely singlepass, global illumination system incorporating modern ray-tracing and physically based shading techniques. They have achieved that with Arnold Renderer, an unbiasedstochasticray tracer. Arnold, started in 1997 by Marcos Fajardo, was co-developed between 2004 and 2009 with SPI, where Marcos was employed, and a commercial branch is being developed by Marcos' Madrid based company Solid Angle SL (now owned by Autodesk). Arnold was used on projects such as Monster House, Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs, 2012, Alice in Wonderland, The Smurfs, Arthur Christmas and is being used on all upcoming SPI's films.[21]
Filmography
Sony Pictures Imageworks has provided visual effects and digital animation for the following films:[22]
Year
Films
1993
Last Action Hero In the Line of Fire So I Married an Axe Murderer Striking Distance (CGI previsualization, uncredited) Mr. Jones (titles only) Rudy (titles only) Look Who's Talking Now (CGI titles and CGI visual effects) My Life The Pelican Brief (falcon jet air to air shot)
1994
Guarding Tess (CGI titles only) Speed Wolf Blankman (CGI blankwheel screen graphics and CGI plate supervision)
1995
Hideaway Tall Tale Die Hard with a Vengeance Johnny Mnemonic (CGI cyberspace sequence) Judge Dredd (CGI additional digital compositing) The Net (CGI plane crash sequence) Virtuosity (CGI tendril animation) Money Train (CGI money train wreck sequence/CGI digital composites) Wings of Courage
1996
James and the Giant Peach The Craft The Cable Guy Phenomenon The Ghost and the Darkness Michael
1997
Anaconda Contact Starship Troopers The Postman As Good as It Gets
1998
The Replacement Killers Sphere (CGI end sequence) City of Angels Paulie The Big Hit Godzilla You've Got Mail (titles only) Patch Adams Star Trek: Insurrection
1999
Big Daddy The Astronaut's Wife (CGI alien effects) The Ninth Gate Jakob the Liar Stuart Little Snow Falling on Cedars
2000
What Planet Are You From? What Lies Beneath Hollow Man Charlie's Angels Cast Away
2001
Evolution (CGI flatworm animation sequence) America's Sweethearts Riding in Cars with Boys Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
2002
Spider-Man Men in Black II Stuart Little 2 The Tuxedo I Spy The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
2003
Darkness Falls Anger Management Identity (CGI digital color timing) The Matrix Reloaded Hollywood Homicide Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle Bad Boys II Seabiscuit Matchstick Men The Matrix Revolutions The Haunted Mansion Big Fish Peter Pan
2004
50 First Dates Spider-Man 2 Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy Little Black Book The Forgotten The Polar Express Christmas with the Kranks The Aviator Spanglish
2005
Cursed Bewitched Zathura The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
2006
Click Superman Returns Monster House Open Season Last Holiday
2007
Ghost Rider Spider-Man 3 Surf's Up Blade Runner: The Final Cut (CGI visual effects enhancement)[23] The Jane Austen Book Club Beowulf I Am Legend
2008
Speed Racer You Don't Mess with the Zohan Hancock Eagle Eye Body of Lies Valkyrie
2009
Jonas Brothers: The 3D Concert Experience Watchmen G-Force Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs Michael Jackson's This Is It 2012
2010
Alice in Wonderland Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore
2011
The Green Hornet Just Go with It Green Lantern Zookeeper Captain America: The First Avenger The Smurfs Arthur Christmas
2012
Men in Black 3 The Amazing Spider-Man Hotel Transylvania Here Comes the Boom
2013
Oz: The Great and Powerful The Smurfs 2 Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2
2014
Captain America: The Winter Soldier The Amazing Spider-Man 2 Blended Edge of Tomorrow 22 Jump Street Deliver Us from Evil Guardians of the Galaxy Fury American Sniper The Interview
2015
Pixels Hotel Transylvania 2 Concussion
2016
The Angry Birds Movie Alice Through the Looking Glass Ghostbusters Suicide Squad Storks
2017
Smurfs: The Lost Village Spider-Man: Homecoming The Emoji Movie Kingsman: The Golden Circle Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle
2018
Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation The Meg Smallfoot Venom Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse
2019
Men in Black: International Spider-Man: Far From Home The Angry Birds Movie 2 Zombieland: Double Tap (Columbia Pictures CGI opening variant only) Jumanji: The Next Level
2020
Mulan Over the Moon
2021
The Mitchells vs. the Machines Vivo Spider-Man: No Way Home
2022
Hotel Transylvania: Transformania Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness The Sea Beast Thor: Love and Thunder
2023
Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse The Marvels
Upcoming
Year
Films
2024
Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire In Your Dreams
2025
Untitled DreamWorks Animation project
Television
The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest ("The Edge of Yesterday")
Stuart Little: The Animated Series (CGI animation and visual effects)
Love, Death & Robots ("Lucky 13" and "In Vaulted Halls Entombed")
The Falcon and the Winter Soldier ("One World, One People")
Hawkeye (2 episodes)
The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special (TV special)
Controversy
In an article published by Vulture, several animators quit Across the Spider-Verse due to unstable working conditions. According to the Animation Guild, while Imageworks is associated with Sony Animation, Imageworks remains non-union.[24]
It is a single internal entity overseeing all wholly owned development studios within SIE. It is responsible for the creative and strategic direction of development and production of all computer entertainment software by all SIE–owned studios, all of which is typically produced exclusively for the PlayStation family of consoles.
With the launch of the PlayStation 5 in 2020, Worldwide Studios brands all releases be it internal or externally developed under the "PlayStation Studios" label.[3]
History
SCE Worldwide Studios (SCE Worldwide Studios) was established on September 14, 2005, with Phil Harrison being appointed as president.[4] On May 16, 2008, Shuhei Yoshida became president.[5] In April 2016, Sony's Sony Computer Entertainment (SCE) and Sony Network Entertainment International (SNEI) divisions merged, creating SIE Worldwide Studios.[5] Hermen Hulst succeeded Shuhei Yoshida as president of SIE Worldwide Studios on November 7, 2019, with Yoshida being delegated to lead Sony's indie development.[6]
Naughty Dog is home to the ICE Team, one of Sony's Worldwide Studios central technology groups. The term ICE originally stands for Initiative for a Common Engine which describes the original purpose of the group.[25] The ICE Team focuses on creating core graphics technologies for Sony's worldwide first party published titles, including low-level game engine components, graphics processing pipelines, supporting tools, and graphics profiling and debugging tools. The ICE Team also supports third party developers with a suite of engine components, and a graphics analysis, profiling, and debugging tool for the RSX. Both enable developers to get better performance out of PlayStation hardware.[26][27]
XDev
XDev Europe, established in 2000 and based in Liverpool, England,[7] collaborates with independent development studios across Europe and other PAL territories to publish content to PlayStation platforms all over the world. XDev has helped to create and publish, titles such as the LittleBigPlanet, Buzz!, MotorStorm and Invizimals series, Super Stardust HD, Heavenly Sword, Heavy Rain, Beyond, Tearaway and Resogun. Partners include independent developers such as Quantic Dream, Magenta Software, Climax Studios, Novarama, Supermassive Games and Sumo Digital, as well as SCE subsidiaries such as Media Molecule and Guerrilla Games. In addition to funding projects, XDev offer full production, project management and game design support. Titles are also supported with community management, online production and dedicated outsourcing management facilities. XDev work directly with Marketing and PR teams in all Sony territories to promote and publish games worldwide.[28][29]