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    • No official visual effects nominees

      • Although the Best Visual Effects category has typically been very competitive over the last few decades, the 1991 Academy Awards ceremony was one of several in which there were no official visual effects nominees.
      www.digitaltrends.com › movies › visual-effects-oscar-history-vfx-academy-awards
  1. * Special Achievement Award (Visual Effects) - Eric Brevig, Rob Bottin, Tim McGovern, Alex Funke Sound - Michael J. Kohut, Carlos de Larios, Aaron Rochin, Nelson Stoll Sound Effects Editing - Stephen H. Flick

    • Are there any visual effects nominees at the 1991 Academy Awards?1
    • Are there any visual effects nominees at the 1991 Academy Awards?2
    • Are there any visual effects nominees at the 1991 Academy Awards?3
    • Are there any visual effects nominees at the 1991 Academy Awards?4
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    Despite a long list of films from the Golden Age of Hollywood that made innovative use of visual effects, it wasn’t until 1964 that the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences gave visual effects its own, dedicated category at the Academy Awards ceremony. Prior to that year, the Academy Awards honored various films with the Special Achievement ...

    During the very first Academy Awards ceremony, held in 1929, the silent film Wings won both the inaugural Best Picture category and the award in the Best Engineering Effects category, which would eventually evolve into the modern Best Visual Effects category. Almost a decade later, 1938’s Spawn of the North was given the first Special Achievement A...

    The first race to win the Academy Award in the Best Visual Effects category was a two-film competition, pitting two of Hollywood’s most acclaimed filmmakers against each other. The nominees in the category that year were George Lucas’ genre-defining space opera Star Wars and Steven Spielberg’s thrilling extraterrestrial drama Close Encounters of th...

    Among all the nominees and winners in the Best Visual Effects category over the years, one name is a recurring presence: Dennis Muren. Beginning with 1980’s Star Wars: Episode V – The Empire Strikes Back, which earned the visual effects artist his first Academy Award, Muren has won eight Academy Awards in the Best Visual Effects category and been n...

    The 1987 Academy Awards ceremony was notable for featuring the first woman nominated in the Best Visual Effects category, Suzanne M. Benson, who went on to take home an Oscar for her work on James Cameron’s Aliens. Only three other women have been nominated in the category since Benson’s win: Pamela Easley for the 1993 thriller Cliffhanger, Sara Be...

    The criteria and rules surrounding the Best Visual Effectscategory have changed at various points over the years, allowing for different numbers of nominees, named individuals, and other elements. The current rules regarding the category were updated in 2010, and allow for 10 “shortlist” finalists identified several weeks before the nominations are...

    Despite an acclaimed career as a director, Stanley Kubrick’s only Academy Award was won in the Best Special Visual Effects category for 1968’s 2001: A Space Odyssey. At the time, most films submitted just one name to represent the collective work of the special effects team, so Kubrick was nominated for 2001 instead of the film’s four-person effect...

    Three fully animated films have been nominated in the Best Visual Effects category over the years, beginning with stop-motion adventure The Nightmare Before Christmas in 1994. More than two decades later, another stop-motion film was nominated in the category: 2016’s Kubo and the Two Strings. Three years later, Disney’s remake of The Lion Kingalso ...

    Although the Best Visual Effectscategory has typically been very competitive over the last few decades, the 1991 Academy Awards ceremony was one of several in which there were no official visual effects nominees. It wasn’t due to any lack of potential nominees, either. Of the four films under consideration for a nomination that year — Back to the F...

    • Rick Marshall
  3. The nominees for the 63rd Academy Awards were announced on February 13, 1991, at 5:38 a.m. PST (13:38 UTC) at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills, California, by Karl Malden, president of the Academy, and actor Denzel Washington.

  4. List of 1991 Academy Award Winners & Nominees. The 1991 Academy Award Winners are listed first and highlighted in bold. The nominees are listed below the winners in their respective categories.

    Best Picture
    Best Director
    The Silence of the Lambs Beauty and the ...
    Jonathan Demme – The Silence of the Lambs ...
    Anthony Hopkins – The Silence of the ...
    Jodie Foster – The Silence of the Lambs ...
    Jack Palance – City Slickers Tommy Lee ...
    Mercedes Ruehl – The Fisher King Diane ...
    Thelma & Louise – Callie Khouri Boyz n ...
    The Silence of the Lambs – Ted Tally ...
  5. In 1977, the category was given its current name " Best Visual Effects ." For decades, shortlisted finalists were selected by a steering committee. They are presently chosen by the visual effects branch executive committee. [4] 1990 was the last year there were no official nominees.

  6. Feb 17, 2020 · Potential nominees for the Academy Award for Best Visual Effects are presented to an audience at an event called the Visual Effects Bake-off, attended by members of the Academy's Visual Effects Branch.

  7. Feb 5, 2014 · BEST PICTURE. Beauty and the Beast – Don Hahn. Bugsy – Mark Johnson, Barry Levinson, Warren Beatty. JFK – A. Kitman Ho, Oliver Stone. The Prince of Tides – Barbra Streisand, Andrew Karsch. The Silence of the Lambs – Edward Saxon, Kenneth Utt, Ron Bozman.

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